College of Science, Health, Engineering and Education, Murdoch University, Perth, W. Australia.
Department of Biological Sciences and Environment Program, Loyola University, New Orleans, USA.
Photochem Photobiol Sci. 2019 Mar 1;18(3):681-716. doi: 10.1039/c8pp90061b. Epub 2019 Feb 27.
Exposure of plants and animals to ultraviolet-B radiation (UV-B; 280-315 nm) is modified by stratospheric ozone dynamics and climate change. Even though stabilisation and projected recovery of stratospheric ozone is expected to curtail future increases in UV-B radiation at the Earth's surface, on-going changes in climate are increasingly exposing plants and animals to novel combinations of UV-B radiation and other climate change factors (e.g., ultraviolet-A and visible radiation, water availability, temperature and elevated carbon dioxide). Climate change is also shifting vegetation cover, geographic ranges of species, and seasonal timing of development, which further modifies exposure to UV-B radiation. Since our last assessment, there has been increased understanding of the underlying mechanisms by which plants perceive UV-B radiation, eliciting changes in growth, development and tolerances of abiotic and biotic factors. However, major questions remain on how UV-B radiation is interacting with other climate change factors to modify the production and quality of crops, as well as important ecosystem processes such as plant and animal competition, pest-pathogen interactions, and the decomposition of dead plant matter (litter). In addition, stratospheric ozone depletion is directly contributing to climate change in the southern hemisphere, such that terrestrial ecosystems in this region are being exposed to altered patterns of precipitation, temperature and fire regimes as well as UV-B radiation. These ozone-driven changes in climate have been implicated in both increases and reductions in the growth, survival and reproduction of plants and animals in Antarctica, South America and New Zealand. In this assessment, we summarise advances in our knowledge of these and other linkages and effects, and identify uncertainties and knowledge gaps that limit our ability to fully evaluate the ecological consequences of these environmental changes on terrestrial ecosystems.
植物和动物暴露在紫外线-B 辐射(UV-B;280-315nm)下的情况受到平流层臭氧动态和气候变化的影响。尽管平流层臭氧的稳定和预计的恢复预计将遏制未来地球表面 UV-B 辐射的增加,但正在发生的气候变化正在使植物和动物越来越多地暴露于 UV-B 辐射和其他气候变化因素(例如,紫外线-A 和可见光、水分可用性、温度和升高的二氧化碳)的新组合中。气候变化还在改变植被覆盖、物种的地理范围和发育的季节时间,这进一步改变了对 UV-B 辐射的暴露。自上次评估以来,人们对植物感知 UV-B 辐射的潜在机制有了更多的了解,这些机制引发了生长、发育以及对非生物和生物因素的耐受性的变化。然而,仍有一些重大问题悬而未决,例如 UV-B 辐射如何与其他气候变化因素相互作用,从而改变作物的产量和质量,以及植物和动物竞争、病虫害相互作用以及死植物物质(凋落物)分解等重要生态系统过程。此外,平流层臭氧消耗直接导致南半球的气候变化,使得该地区的陆地生态系统面临着降水、温度和火灾模式以及 UV-B 辐射的变化。这些由臭氧驱动的气候变化,导致南极洲、南美洲和新西兰的植物和动物的生长、存活和繁殖增加或减少。在本次评估中,我们总结了对这些和其他联系和影响的认识进展,并确定了限制我们全面评估这些环境变化对陆地生态系统的生态后果的不确定性和知识空白。