Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado 80309, USA.
Ecology. 2011 Sep;92(9):1730-5. doi: 10.1890/11-0175.1.
Alpine species are among those most threatened by climatic shifts due to their physiological and geographic constraints. The American pika (Ochotona princeps), a small mammal found in mountainous, rocky habitats throughout much of western North America, has experienced recent population extirpations in the Great Basin linked to climatic drivers. It remains unclear whether these patterns of climate-related loss extend to other portions of the species' range. We investigated the distribution of the American pika and the climatic processes shaping this distribution within the Southern Rocky Mountain region. Results from a survey of 69 sites historically occupied by pikas indicate that only four populations have been extirpated within this region over the past few decades. Despite relatively few extirpations, low annual precipitation is implicated as a limiting factor for pika persistence in the Southern Rockies. Extirpations occurred only at sites that were consistently dry over the last century. While there was no climate change signal in our results, these data provide valuable insight into the potential future effects of climate change on O. princeps throughout its range.
高山物种由于其生理和地理限制,是受气候变化威胁最大的物种之一。美洲旱獭(Ochotona princeps)是一种小型哺乳动物,分布于北美洲西部的多山多石的栖息地,近年来由于气候驱动因素,在大盆地地区已经灭绝。目前还不清楚这些与气候相关的损失模式是否会扩展到该物种分布范围的其他部分。我们调查了美洲旱獭的分布情况以及在南落基山脉地区形成这种分布的气候过程。对历史上曾有旱獭栖息的 69 个地点进行的调查结果表明,在过去几十年中,该地区只有四个种群灭绝。尽管灭绝的数量相对较少,但较低的年降水量被认为是旱獭在南落基山脉地区生存的限制因素。灭绝只发生在过去一个世纪持续干旱的地点。虽然我们的研究结果没有气候变化信号,但这些数据为气候变化对整个范围的 O. princeps 未来潜在影响提供了有价值的见解。