Czech University of Life Sciences Prague, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Department of Ecology, Kamýcká 129, 160 00 Prague 6-Suchdol, Czech Republic.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2010 Dec;57(3):1245-52. doi: 10.1016/j.ympev.2010.09.017. Epub 2010 Sep 29.
Understanding how species responded to past climate change can provide information about how they may respond to the current global warming. Here we show how a European reptile species responded to the last natural global warming event at the Pleistocene-Holocene transition that led to the Holocene climatic optimum approximately 5000-8000 years ago. The Aesculapian snake, Zamenis longissimus, is a thermophilous species whose present-day distribution in the southern half of Europe is a remnant of much wider range during the Holocene climatic optimum when populations occurred as far north as Denmark. These northern populations went extinct as the climate cooled, and presently the species is extinct from all central Europe, except few relic populations in locally suitable microhabitats in Germany and the Czech Republic. Our phylogenetic and demographic analyses identified two major clades that expanded from their respective western and eastern refugia after the last glacial maximum (18,000-23,000 years ago) and contributed approximately equally to the present range. Snakes from the relic northern populations carried the Eastern clade, showing that it was primarily the snakes from the eastern, probably Balkan, refugium that occupied the central and northern Europe during the Holocene climatic optimum. Two small, deep-branching clades were identified in near the Black Sea and in Greece. These clades provide evidence for two additional refugia, which did not successfully contribute to the colonization of Europe. If, as our results suggest, some populations responded to the mid-Holocene global warming by shifting their ranges further north than other populations of the same species, knowing what populations were able to expand in different species may provide information about what populations will be important for the species' ability to cope with the current global warming.
了解物种如何应对过去的气候变化,可以为它们如何应对当前的全球变暖提供信息。在这里,我们展示了一种欧洲爬行动物如何应对上一个全新世过渡期的自然全球变暖事件,该事件导致了大约 5000-8000 年前的全新世气候最优期。石龙子,Zamenis longissimus,是一种喜温物种,其现今在欧洲南部的分布是全新世气候最优期分布范围更广的残余,当时该物种的分布范围远至丹麦北部。随着气候变冷,这些北部种群灭绝了,目前该物种除了在德国和捷克共和国的一些局部适宜的小栖息地仍有少数残余种群外,已经从整个中欧灭绝。我们的系统发育和人口分析确定了两个主要的分支,它们在上一个冰期最大值(18000-23000 年前)后从各自的西部和东部避难所扩张,并对现今的分布范围做出了大致相同的贡献。来自遗留北部种群的蛇携带了东部分支,表明主要是来自东部,可能是巴尔干半岛避难所的蛇,在全新世气候最优期占领了中欧和北欧。在黑海附近和希腊发现了两个小的、深分支的分支。这些分支为另外两个避难所提供了证据,这两个避难所没有成功地为欧洲的殖民做出贡献。如果像我们的结果所表明的那样,一些种群通过将其范围进一步向北移动来应对中全新世的全球变暖,那么了解哪些种群能够在不同的物种中扩张,可能会为了解哪些种群对物种应对当前全球变暖的能力很重要提供信息。