Climate-Induced Physiological Stress Drives Rainforest Mammal Population Declines

de la Fuente Pinero, Alejandro, Briscoe, Natalie J., Kearney, Michael R., Williams, Stephen E., Youngentob, Kara N., Marsh, Karen J., Cernusak, Lucas A., Leahy, Lily, Larson, Johan, and Krockenberger, Andrew K. (2025) Climate-Induced Physiological Stress Drives Rainforest Mammal Population Declines. Global Change Biology, 31 (5). e70215.

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Abstract

Climate change is a major driver of global biodiversity loss, yet the precise mechanisms linking climate change to population declines remain poorly understood. We developed a novel, broadly applicable framework that integrates biophysical, nutritional, and population modeling to capture fundamental physiological constraints on mammalian herbivores and applied it to investigate the causes of declines in ringtail possums of the Australian Wet Tropics (Pseudochirops archeri and Hemibelideus lemuroides). Our approach bridges the gap between mechanistic (“bottom-up”) models, which simulate species' responses based solely on their traits and local microclimates, and the more common (“top-down”) statistical models, which infer species' responses from occurrence or abundance data and standard environmental variables. We quantified population dynamics over a 30-year period by generating species-specific estimates of temperature and water stress, foraging limitations, and linking these with annual monitoring and nutritional quality within an open population model. Our findings demonstrate that climate change has impacted populations through physiological stress, but in a species-specific manner. Both species have experienced population collapses at lower elevations and in low-nutritional sites. For P. archeri, we found evidence that population changes were driven by reduced survival due to overheating and dehydration, alongside diminished recruitment from limited foraging. In contrast, our model suggests that H. lemuroides populations were primarily affected by foraging constraints, emphasizing the importance of considering climate-driven limitations on foraging activity in addition to direct physiological stress. These mechanistic insights offer a foundation for targeted conservation strategies to mitigate the impacts of climate pressures on wild populations.

Item ID: 88104
Item Type: Article (Research - C1)
ISSN: 1365-2486
Keywords: Australian Wet Tropics, biophysical ecology, climate change, foraging constraints, population dynamics, process-explicit models, tropical mammals
Copyright Information: © 2025 The Author(s). Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
Date Deposited: 24 Mar 2026 00:50
FoR Codes: 31 BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES > 3103 Ecology > 310308 Terrestrial ecology @ 50%
41 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES > 4101 Climate change impacts and adaptation > 410102 Ecological impacts of climate change and ecological adaptation @ 50%
SEO Codes: 19 ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY, CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURAL HAZARDS > 1901 Adaptation to climate change > 190102 Ecosystem adaptation to climate change @ 100%
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