Impacts of climate change on herpetofauna diversity in the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau

被引:9
作者
Karuno, Alex Plimo [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Mi, Xue [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Chen, Youhua [4 ]
Zou, Da-Hu [1 ,2 ,5 ]
Gao, Wei [1 ,2 ]
Zhang, Bao-Lin [1 ,2 ]
Xu, Wei [1 ,2 ]
Jin, Jie-Qiong [1 ,2 ]
Shen, Wen-Jing [1 ,2 ]
Huang, Song [6 ]
Zhou, Wei-Wei [1 ,2 ,7 ,8 ]
Che, Jing [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, State Key Lab Genet Resources & Evolut, Kunming Inst Zool, Kunming 650223, Peoples R China
[2] Chinese Acad Sci, Kunming Inst Zool, Yunnan Key Lab Biodivers & Ecol Conservat Gaoligon, Kunming 650223, Peoples R China
[3] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Kunming Coll Life Sci, Kunming, Peoples R China
[4] Chinese Acad Sci, Chengdu Inst Biol, Chengdu, Peoples R China
[5] Tibet Univ, Coll Sci, Res Ctr Ecol, Lhasa, Peoples R China
[6] Anhui Normal Univ, Coll Life Sci, Wuhu, Peoples R China
[7] Lanzhou Univ, Inst Innovat Ecol, State Key Lab Grassland Agroecosyst, Lanzhou, Peoples R China
[8] Lanzhou Univ, Coll Life Sci, Lanzhou, Peoples R China
关键词
global climate change; intraspecific diversity; species distribution modeling; population-level models; environmental heterogeneity; mountainous regions; plateau regions; MODELS; PHYLOGEOGRAPHY; PREDICTION; MOUNTAINS; CHINA;
D O I
10.1111/cobi.14155
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Although numerous studies on the impacts of climate change on biodiversity have been published, only a handful are focused on the intraspecific level or consider population-level models (separate models per population). We endeavored to fill this knowledge gap relative to the Qinghai-Tibetan plateau (QTP) by combining species distribution modeling (SDMs) with population genetics (i.e., population-level models) and phylogenetic methods (i.e., phylogenetic tree reconstruction and phylogenetic diversity analyses). We applied our models to 11 endemic and widely distributed herpetofauna species inhabiting high elevations in the QTP. We aimed to determine the influence of environmental heterogeneity on species' responses to climate change, the magnitude of climate-change impacts on intraspecific diversity, and the relationship between species range loss and intraspecific diversity losses under 2 shared socioeconomic pathways (SSP245 and SSP585) and 3 future periods (2050s, 2070s, and 2090s). The effects of global climatic change were more pronounced at the intraspecific level (22% of haplotypes lost and 36% of populations lost) than the morphospecies level in the SSP585 climate change scenario. Maintenance of genetic diversity was in general determined by a combination of factors including range changes, species genetic structure, and the part of the range predicted to be lost. This is owing to the fact that the loss and survival of populations were observed in species irrespective of the predicted range changes (contraction or expansion). In the southeast (mountainous regions), climate change had less of an effect on range size (>100% in 3 species) than in central and northern QTP plateau regions (range size <100% in all species). This may be attributed to environmental heterogeneity, which provided pockets of suitable climate in the southeast, whereas ecosystems in the north and central regions were homogeneous. Generally, our results imply that mountainous regions with high environmental heterogeneity and high genetic diversity may buffer the adverse impacts of climate change on species distribution and intraspecific diversity. Therefore, genetic structure and characteristics of the ecosystem may be crucial for conservation under climate change.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 59 条
[1]   spThin: an R package for spatial thinning of species occurrence records for use in ecological niche models [J].
Aiello-Lammens, Matthew E. ;
Boria, Robert A. ;
Radosavljevic, Aleksandar ;
Vilela, Bruno ;
Anderson, Robert P. .
ECOGRAPHY, 2015, 38 (05) :541-545
[2]   Cryptic biodiversity loss linked to global climate change [J].
Balint, M. ;
Domisch, S. ;
Engelhardt, C. H. M. ;
Haase, P. ;
Lehrian, S. ;
Sauer, J. ;
Theissinger, K. ;
Pauls, S. U. ;
Nowak, C. .
NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2011, 1 (06) :313-318
[3]   Selecting pseudo-absences for species distribution models: how, where and how many? [J].
Barbet-Massin, Morgane ;
Jiguet, Frederic ;
Albert, Cecile Helene ;
Thuiller, Wilfried .
METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2012, 3 (02) :327-338
[4]   Changes in plant community composition lag behind climate warming in lowland forests [J].
Bertrand, Romain ;
Lenoir, Jonathan ;
Piedallu, Christian ;
Riofrio-Dillon, Gabriela ;
de Ruffray, Patrice ;
Vidal, Claude ;
Pierrat, Jean-Claude ;
Gegout, Jean-Claude .
NATURE, 2011, 479 (7374) :517-520
[5]   Optimizing ensembles of small models for predicting the distribution of species with few occurrences [J].
Breiner, Frank T. ;
Nobis, Michael P. ;
Bergamini, Ariel ;
Guisan, Antoine .
METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 9 (04) :802-808
[6]   Overcoming limitations of modelling rare species by using ensembles of small models [J].
Breiner, Frank T. ;
Guisan, Antoine ;
Bergamini, Ariel ;
Nobis, Michael P. .
METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2015, 6 (10) :1210-1218
[7]   Genes on the edge: A framework to detect genetic diversity imperiled by climate change [J].
Carvalho, Silvia Benoliel ;
Torres, Joao ;
Tarroso, Pedro ;
Velo-Anton, Guillermo .
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2019, 25 (12) :4034-4047
[8]   Universal COI primers for DNA barcoding amphibians [J].
Che, Jing ;
Chen, Hong-Man ;
Yang, Jun-Xiao ;
Jin, Jie-Qiong ;
Jiang, Ke ;
Yuan, Zhi-Yong ;
Murphy, Robert W. ;
Zhang, Ya-Ping .
MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES, 2012, 12 (02) :247-258
[9]   The impacts of climate change and human activities on biogeochemical cycles on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau [J].
Chen, Huai ;
Zhu, Qiuan ;
Peng, Changhui ;
Wu, Ning ;
Wang, Yanfen ;
Fang, Xiuqing ;
Gao, Yongheng ;
Zhu, Dan ;
Yang, Gang ;
Tian, Jianqing ;
Kang, Xiaoming ;
Piao, Shilong ;
Ouyang, Hua ;
Xiang, Wenhua ;
Luo, Zhibin ;
Jiang, Hong ;
Song, Xingzhang ;
Zhang, Yao ;
Yu, Guirui ;
Zhao, Xinquan ;
Gong, Peng ;
Yao, Tandong ;
Wu, Jianghua .
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2013, 19 (10) :2940-2955
[10]   Rapid Range Shifts of Species Associated with High Levels of Climate Warming [J].
Chen, I-Ching ;
Hill, Jane K. ;
Ohlemueller, Ralf ;
Roy, David B. ;
Thomas, Chris D. .
SCIENCE, 2011, 333 (6045) :1024-1026