A snapshot of the rich plant diversity in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Gui Becker, CC BY-SA
It seems like each day scientists report more dire consequences of climate change on animals and plants worldwide. Birds that are migrating later in the year can’t find enough food. Plants are flowering before their insect pollinators hatch. Prey species have less stamina to escape predators. In short, climatic shifts that affect one organism are likely to trigger ripple effects that can disturb the structure and functioning of entire ecosystems.
One component of animal health that largely reflects the surrounding environment is the microbiome, the consortium of microbes now known to aid in food digestion, regulating the immune system and protecting against pathogens. The species of bacteria that make up the microbiome are primarily recruited from the environment. Thus, food webs and other animal interactions that influence environmental bacteria have the potential to shape animals’ microbiomes.
But what happens when climate change disturbs the environment, causing shifts in animals’ microbiomes that prevent the microbes from performing the key functions that animals need to survive and thrive?
I am an ecologist in the laboratory of Gui Becker specializing in tropical research at the intersection of emerging amphibian disease and climate change. Hundreds of amphibians across the global tropics are facing mounting pressures from disease and climate change. And there is growing evidence that environmental stressors are changing animals’ microbiomes, contributing to the challenges they face.
Related Content
Building an ecosystem
In a recent experiment designed to figure out how the microbiome of tadpoles was influenced by other animal species in the environment, my colleagues and I studied healthy communities of freshwater bacteria, crustaceans and insects from wetland habitats in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. We focused on their feeding activities – how they filtered water to get their food and broke down dead plant material.
It is well known that these feeding activities are essential for ecosystem functions such as decomposition. But we found that these food webs also served another purpose: They boosted growth of “good” bacterial species in the environment, such as species that fight pathogenic microbes.
As a result, tadpoles sharing the ecosystem with these microorganisms and invertebrates had healthier gut microbiomes. This provided a strong defense against pathogens, compared with tadpoles that weren’t sharing their habitat with diverse networks of organisms.
Our latest work took this research a step farther by testing how a disturbance such as climate warming could influence these food webs that help ensure the health of vertebrate microbiomes in the wild.
Mapping species interactions in diverse ecosystems is difficult under field conditions, where the environment is unpredictable, and replicating experiments to confirm findings is challenging.
Related Content
To address this problem, we used plants from the bromeliad family to function as mini-ecosystems so that my colleagues and I could study the effects of a warming climate on species interactions in the more controlled conditions of a laboratory.
Tightly whorled leaves of bromeliad plants provide a mini-aquarium for tadpoles, invertebrates and microorganisms. Sasha Greenspan, CC BY-SA
Bromeliads are ideal for experimental work on community interactions because they are natural microcosms and their small dimensions allow for us to grow many of them in a small space. Our study sites in Brazil’s tropical rainforests support extremely high densities of bromeliads from ground to canopy, often resembling a Dr. Seussian wonderland.
To recreate natural ecosystems for our experiment, we planted a garden of 60 identical bromeliads outdoors in the shade of a small tropical forest in São Paulo, Brazil. We then allowed the bromeliads to be naturally colonized by invertebrates and microorganisms for three months. Some of the plants were exposed to ambient temperatures, and others were warmed up to six degrees above ambient – with a custom outdoor heating system – to match predicted global climate change trends.
Nearby, we collected our model host species for the experiment – tadpoles of the treefrog species Ololygon perpusilla that breed only in the mini-aquariums created by the leaves of bromeliads.
We then transferred the bromeliads from outdoors into the lab, added a tadpole to the tiny pool of water at the center of each plant and applied the same heating system to simulate warming. After a few weeks, we inventoried the bacterial species in the tadpole intestines as well as the bacteria and invertebrate species living in the bromeliads.
Setup of the experiment with 60 bromeliads and a custom heating system. Gui Becker, CC BY-SA
The domino effects of climate change
In this study, published in Nature Climate Change, we found that warming effects on ecological community networks – including environmental bacteria, worms, mosquito larvae and other aquatic invertebrates – compromised tadpole gut flora, leading to reduced growth, which is a proxy for fitness.
The health of tadpole gut microbiomes was specifically linked to changes in the community of aquatic bacteria and invertebrates living alongside tadpoles within the bromeliads. That is, warming supported growth and reproduction of certain species of bacteria and invertebrates and inhibited others, and these environmental changes disturbed the tadpole gut microbiome.
The higher temperatures also led to faster development of filter-feeding mosquito larvae. Our results suggest that higher rates of filter-feeding also altered the species composition of bacteria in the environment in ways that further disturbed the tadpole microbiome.
In fact, tadpole growth – a proxy for the species’ health – was more strongly associated with warming-induced shifts in their gut microbiomes than with direct effects of warming on growth that are expected in cold-blooded animals like tadpoles or effects of warming on the tadpoles’ algal food resources.
Our work demonstrates how global-scale climate change can impact even the smallest levels of biological organization, including the symbiotic bacteria living within the digestive tract of a tiny frog species.
Looking at these processes within the context of an entire ecological community helps widen our perspective on microbiome health under global change.
Related Content
Studies investigating effects of warming on vertebrate microbiomes typically focus on direct temperature responses of host flora rather than situating hosts within the complex and intertwined communities where they live in the wild.
Our findings support a growing consensus among scientists that, while climate warming is expected to push some animals beyond their thermal thresholds, a far more ubiquitous consequence of warming is that it may trigger an ecological domino effect, disrupting the species interactions that ecosystems need to function properly.
About The Author
Sasha Greenspan, Research Associate, University of Alabama
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Related Books
The Uninhabitable Earth: Life After Warming Kindle Edition
by David Wallace-WellsIt is worse, much worse, than you think. If your anxiety about global warming is dominated by fears of sea-level rise, you are barely scratching the surface of what terrors are possible. In California, wildfires now rage year-round, destroying thousands of homes. Across the US, “500-year” storms pummel communities month after month, and floods displace tens of millions annually. This is only a preview of the changes to come. And they are coming fast. Without a revolution in how billions of humans conduct their lives, parts of the Earth could become close to uninhabitable, and other parts horrifically inhospitable, as soon as the end of this century. Available On Amazon
The End of Ice: Bearing Witness and Finding Meaning in the Path of Climate Disruption
by Dahr JamailAfter nearly a decade overseas as a war reporter, the acclaimed journalist Dahr Jamail returned to America to renew his passion for mountaineering, only to find that the slopes he had once climbed have been irrevocably changed by climate disruption. In response, Jamail embarks on a journey to the geographical front lines of this crisis—from Alaska to Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, via the Amazon rainforest—in order to discover the consequences to nature and to humans of the loss of ice. Available On Amazon
Our Earth, Our Species, Our Selves: How to Thrive While Creating a Sustainable World
by Ellen MoyerOur scarcest resource is time. With determination and action, we can implement solutions rather than sit on the sidelines suffering harmful impacts. We deserve, and can have, better health and a cleaner environment, a stable climate, healthy ecosystems, sustainable use of resources, and less need for damage control. We have so much to gain. Through science and stories, Our Earth, Our Species, Our Selves makes the case for hope, optimism, and practical solutions we can take individually and collectively to green our technology, green our economy, strengthen our democracy, and create social equality. Available On Amazon
From The Publisher:
Purchases on Amazon go to defray the cost of bringing you InnerSelf.comelf.com, MightyNatural.com, and ClimateImpactNews.com at no cost and without advertisers that track your browsing habits. Even if you click on a link but don't buy these selected products, anything else you buy in that same visit on Amazon pays us a small commission. There is no additional cost to you, so please contribute to the effort. You can also use this link to use to Amazon at any time so you can help support our efforts.