Leach Katie, Kelly Ruth, Cameron Alison, Montgomery W Ian, Reid Neil
Quercus, School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland.
School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland; Institute for Global Food Security (IGFS), Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, Northern Ireland.
PLoS One. 2015 Apr 15;10(4):e0122267. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0122267. eCollection 2015.
Climate change during the past five decades has impacted significantly on natural ecosystems, and the rate of current climate change is of great concern among conservation biologists. Species Distribution Models (SDMs) have been used widely to project changes in species' bioclimatic envelopes under future climate scenarios. Here, we aimed to advance this technique by assessing future changes in the bioclimatic envelopes of an entire mammalian order, the Lagomorpha, using a novel framework for model validation based jointly on subjective expert evaluation and objective model evaluation statistics. SDMs were built using climatic, topographical, and habitat variables for all 87 lagomorph species under past and current climate scenarios. Expert evaluation and Kappa values were used to validate past and current models and only those deemed 'modellable' within our framework were projected under future climate scenarios (58 species). Phylogenetically-controlled regressions were used to test whether species traits correlated with predicted responses to climate change. Climate change is likely to impact more than two-thirds of lagomorph species, with leporids (rabbits, hares, and jackrabbits) likely to undertake poleward shifts with little overall change in range extent, whilst pikas are likely to show extreme shifts to higher altitudes associated with marked range declines, including the likely extinction of Kozlov's Pika (Ochotona koslowi). Smaller-bodied species were more likely to exhibit range contractions and elevational increases, but showing little poleward movement, and fecund species were more likely to shift latitudinally and elevationally. Our results suggest that species traits may be important indicators of future climate change and we believe multi-species approaches, as demonstrated here, are likely to lead to more effective mitigation measures and conservation management. We strongly advocate studies minimising data gaps in our knowledge of the Order, specifically collecting more specimens for biodiversity archives and targeting data deficient geographic regions.
过去五十年来的气候变化对自然生态系统产生了重大影响,当前的气候变化速度引起了保护生物学家的高度关注。物种分布模型(SDMs)已被广泛用于预测未来气候情景下物种生物气候包络的变化。在此,我们旨在通过使用一种基于主观专家评估和客观模型评估统计的联合模型验证新框架,评估整个兔形目哺乳动物生物气候包络的未来变化,从而改进这项技术。利用过去和当前气候情景下所有87种兔形目物种的气候、地形和栖息地变量构建了物种分布模型。使用专家评估和卡帕值来验证过去和当前的模型,并且仅在我们的框架内被认为“可建模”的物种在未来气候情景下进行预测(58种)。系统发育控制回归用于检验物种特征是否与对气候变化的预测响应相关。气候变化可能会影响超过三分之二的兔形目物种,兔科动物(兔子、野兔和长耳大野兔)可能会向极地转移,范围大小总体变化不大,而鼠兔可能会向更高海拔剧烈转移,伴随着范围显著缩小,包括柯氏鼠兔(Ochotona koslowi)可能灭绝。体型较小的物种更有可能出现范围收缩和海拔升高,但向极地移动较少,而繁殖力强的物种更有可能在纬度和海拔上发生转移。我们的结果表明,物种特征可能是未来气候变化的重要指标,并且我们认为,如此处所示的多物种方法可能会带来更有效的缓解措施和保护管理。我们强烈主张开展研究,尽量减少我们对该目的认识中的数据空白,特别是为生物多样性档案收集更多标本,并针对数据缺乏的地理区域。