| Literature DB >> 32274066 |
Elizabeth M Ames1, Meaghan R Gade1, Chelsey L Nieman1, James R Wright1, Christopher M Tonra1, Cynthia M Marroquin2, Annalee M Tutterow1, Suzanne M Gray1.
Abstract
The field of conservation physiology strives to achieve conservation goals by revealing physiological mechanisms that drive population declines in the face of human-induced rapid environmental change (HIREC) and has informed many successful conservation actions. However, many studies still struggle to explicitly link individual physiological measures to impacts across the biological hierarchy (to population and ecosystem levels) and instead rely on a 'black box' of assumptions to scale up results for conservation implications. Here, we highlight some examples of studies that were successful in scaling beyond the individual level, including two case studies of well-researched species, and using other studies we highlight challenges and future opportunities to increase the impact of research by scaling up the biological hierarchy. We first examine studies that use individual physiological measures to scale up to population-level impacts and discuss several emerging fields that have made significant steps toward addressing the gap between individual-based and demographic studies, such as macrophysiology and landscape physiology. Next, we examine how future studies can scale from population or species-level to community- and ecosystem-level impacts and discuss avenues of research that can lead to conservation implications at the ecosystem level, such as abiotic gradients and interspecific interactions. In the process, we review methods that researchers can use to make links across the biological hierarchy, including crossing disciplinary boundaries, collaboration and data sharing, spatial modelling and incorporating multiple markers (e.g. physiological, behavioural or demographic) into their research. We recommend future studies incorporating tools that consider the diversity of 'landscapes' experienced by animals at higher levels of the biological hierarchy, will make more effective contributions to conservation and management decisions.Entities:
Keywords: Biological Hierarchy; conservation; physiology; scaling up
Year: 2020 PMID: 32274066 PMCID: PMC7125044 DOI: 10.1093/conphys/coaa019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conserv Physiol ISSN: 2051-1434 Impact factor: 3.079
Resources for integrating Conservation Physiology with other disciplines
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| Integration of physiological methods with conservation biology and using these links to inform cause-and-effect relationships amid anthropogenic environmental change. |
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| Synopsis of ways in which ecotoxicology and conservation biology can converge using common physiological approaches, introduce the term conservation physiology. | |
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| Placement of physiological ecology at the base of conservation as means for understanding mechanisms of response to anthropogenic environmental change. | |
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| First formal definition of Conservation Physiology. | |
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| Revision of Conservation Physiology definition as an applied subdiscipline of ecophysiology (marine fish example). | |
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| Revision of Conservation Physiology definition with a focus on human impacts on the environment and conceptualized mechanistic approach. | |
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| Refinement of original | |
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| Placement of physiological ecology at the base of conservation as means for understanding mechanisms of response to anthropogenic environmental change. | |
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| Analysis of literature that seeks to integrate conservation and physiology. | |
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| Synopsis of ways that physiological tools can be used to integrate over multiple disciplines, not just conservation biology. | |
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| Review of successful conservation physiology studies (i.e. projects successfully use physiological principles to inform conservation initiatives, human behaviour changes and policy. | |
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| Evaluation of progress of Conservation Physiology as a field. | |
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| Perspective on how conservation physiology can, as a field, support a positive outcome for understanding how the natural world responds to anthropogenic environmental change. | |
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| Synthetic review of physiological approaches, or ‘tools’, that can effectively be used for bridging disciplines and advancing the field of conservation physiology. | |
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| Review of ways in which conservation physiology borrows tools (crosses boundaries) from across disciplines to enhance our ability to detect individual-level responses and apply it to conservation of declining populations. | |
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| Perspective on using oxidative stress markers as links between individual fitness and population demographics. |
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| Review of utility of specifically incorporating the use of oxidative stress markers to scale from individuals to populations in conservation physiology studies. | |
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| Review and meta-analysis linking stress responses (e.g. glucocorticoid levels) with human disturbance of the environment in a conservation physiology context. | |
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| Review on the temporal relationships between nutritional ecology and conservation physiology. |
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| Review on the effects of rapid environmental change on animal diets. | |
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| Perspective paper assessing the influence of environmental stressors on correlations between behaviour and physiology. |
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| Perspective on the need to integrate the disciplines of physiological and behavioural ecology to better meet the aims of conservation physiology. | |
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| Review of physiological metrics that could inform population vital rates and habitat quality, thus providing needed links for conservation goals. |
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| Perspective on the need to integrate physiology into assessment of habitat quality in studies of birds. | |
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| Review of the integration of physiological information with spatial information can lead to a better understanding of landscape effects on population persistence |
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| Conceptual framework for integrating landscape ecology (heterogeneous/fragmented landscapes) and physiology (life history/reproductive output) | |
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| Perspective on how variation in population parameters can determine range shifts. |
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| Perspective on the ability of macrophysiology, combined with physiology, to understand threats to biodiversity. | |
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| Review of the applications and challenges facing macrophysiology. | |
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| Review of studies that include considerations of scale in solving conservation problems. |
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| Review of conservation literature from marine systems that integrate scale, including examples of scale of policy and policy application. | |
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| Review of case studies that have successfully scaled from individual-level physiological measures to population-level conservation. | |
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| Perspective on how animal responses to increased temperature are largely physiologically based in basis and understanding physiology can reveal key insights into future ecological trends. |
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| Perspective on the need for integrated, system-based approaches to predicting animal responses to changing climate, as responses are likely to be driven by physiology and not by simple abiotic gradients. | |
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| Perspective on the need to incorporate physiology to understand the full effects of climate change on ecology and evolutionary biology. | |
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| Perspective on the need to incorporate physiology into mechanistic models to understand range distributions in a changing climate. | |
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| Perspective on benefits of integrating physiology with restoration efforts. |
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| Review and integration of physiological metrics in translocation studies for restoration of rare and endangered species. | |
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| Review of recent advances in understanding of physiology can inform studies on animal movement. |
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| Perspective on the use of physiological and behavioural mechanisms to understand animal migration and interactions with anthropogenic threats. | |
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| Cooke and O’Connor, 2010 | Perspective on the challenges in adopting management strategies based on conservation physiology. |
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| Perspective on the use of sensory ecology to inform conservation and management. | |
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| Perspective on the need to adopt multidisciplinary approaches that bridge disciplines as well as engage policy makers and other stakeholders in conservation. | |
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| Review of the use of physiology to inform species recovery plans, revealing a disconnect between conservation physiology and their use in development of management plans. |
A non-exhaustive list of papers that define and refine conservation physiology for practitioners interested in starting to incorporate conservation physiology in their own research or management practices. We also include references, organized by discipline or specific topic of interest, that provide useful information or examples for combining conservation physiology with other fields to facilitate crossing disciplinary boundaries and scaling up the biological hierarchy
Figure 1A conceptual diagram of the complexities of scaling up the biological hierarchy from individuals through ecosystems. A major aim of conservation physiology is to provide mechanistic links between physiological responses to human-induced environmental change (underlying green hexagon; key inset, bottom right) and population declines, and further to the ecosystem level response. Each biological level in the hierarchy (far left) occurs at increasingly broader spatial and temporal scales (blue boxes; Spatiotemporal Landscapes) and are linked to each other through various biological processes (examples given in grey arrows; Linking Processes). The green hexagon represents major human-induced environmental stressors that are known, or are expected, to influence these processes. For example, if habitat quality is degraded such that temperature extremes are common throughout the habitat, then individuals may shift patterns of behavioural thermoregulation by choosing new habitats that optimize their performance locally. Scaling up to the population level, though, requires information about the availability of preferred habitat and how that might be altered, for example by intraspecific interactions and how this affects reproductive output (i.e. fitness). As we strive to understand how individual-level responses to altered environments scale up to species, integration of not just how animals use the fine scale habitat but how they move throughout the entire landscape (e.g. movement ecology) is critical. Each step-up in the hierarchy results in a more complex abiotic and biotic landscape that influences the processes guiding interactions among individuals and species. For example, at the community level, the landscape represents layers of individual-level habitat choice that are dictated by physiological state, interactions among conspecifics and interspecific (e.g. predator-prey) dynamics. Finally, at the ecosystem level, we expect the entire suite of interactions to be reflected in the way that an ecosystem functions—or does not function—depending on the scope of environmental change. Finding these links and scaling up will require collaboration and integration across disciplines (examples given in italics, far right).
Tools for scaling up the biological hierarchy
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| Individual to population | Multiple physiological markers | Sampling a suite of physiological markers from individuals can strengthen interpretations of fitness consequences or lead to discoveries of unanticipated fitness consequences of stressors. |
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| Individual to population | Spatial modelling | When used carefully while accounting for greater heterogeneity at larger scales, various spatial modelling techniques can allow small-scale studies to make inferences at larger spatial scales. |
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| Individual to population to species | Data sharing | Online data repositories of individual physiological measurements, or population demographic metrics, can help researchers spatially or temporally expand their study. Particularly important for meta-analyses, or when research is not published. | Dryad [ |
| Individual to population to species | Bridging disciplines | Crossing disciplinary boundaries, through interdisciplinary collaborations or incorporating measures outside of one’s area of expertise (e.g. physiologists incorporating behavioural observations and vice versa), can ultimately link changes in population demographics to physiological effects, or elucidate physiological mechanisms for observed population changes. | See |
| Individual to population to species to Community | Agent-Based Modelling | ABM can be used to integrate individual-level behaviours and physiological response with multiple environmental conditions (abiotic and social) and may therefore prove useful in combining multiple landscapes at multiple scales. |
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| Individual to population to species to Ecosystem | Macrophysiology | Investigating physiological variation across large spatial, temporal or phylogenetic scales ( |
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| Individual to population to species to ecosystem | Collaboration | Large networks of organizations, or smaller working groups of researchers, are an effective means of increasing the spatial scale of data collection and conservation inferences. | Partners in Flight; |