Jezkova Tereza, Jaeger Jef R, Oláh-Hemmings Viktória, Jones K Bruce, Lara-Resendiz Rafael A, Mulcahy Daniel G, Riddle Brett R
School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, 4505 South Maryland Parkway, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89154-4004, USA; Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, P.O. Box 210088, Tucson, Arizona, 85721-0088, USA.
School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, 4505 South Maryland Parkway, Las Vegas, Nevada, 89154-4004, USA.
Ecography. 2016 May;39(5):437-448. doi: 10.1111/ecog.01464. Epub 2015 Jun 2.
During climate change, species are often assumed to shift their geographic distributions (geographic ranges) in order to track environmental conditions - niches - to which they are adapted. Recent work, however, suggests that the niches do not always remain conserved during climate change but shift instead, allowing populations to persist in place or expand into new areas. We assessed the extent of range and niche shifts in response to the warming climate after the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) in the desert horned lizard (), a species occupying the western deserts of North America. We used a phylogeographic approach with mitochondrial DNA sequences to approximate the species range during the LGM by identifying populations that exhibit a genetic signal of population stability versus those that exhibit a signal of a recent (likely post-LGM) geographic expansion. We then compared the climatic niche that the species occupies today with the niche it occupied during the LGM using two models of simulated LGM climate. The genetic analyses indicated that persisted within the southern Mojave and Sonoran deserts throughout the latest glacial period and expanded from these deserts northwards, into the western and eastern Great Basin, after the LGM. The climatic niche comparisons revealed that expanded its climatic niche after the LGM towards novel, warmer and drier climates that allowed it to persist within the southern deserts. Simultaneously, the species shifted its climatic niche towards greater temperature and precipitation fluctuations after the LGM. We concluded that climatic changes at the end of the LGM promoted both range and niche shifts in this lizard. The mechanism that allowed the species to shift its niche remains unknown, but phenotypic plasticity likely contributes to the species ability to adjust to climate change.
在气候变化期间,人们通常认为物种会改变其地理分布(地理范围),以便追踪它们所适应的环境条件——生态位。然而,最近的研究表明,在气候变化期间,生态位并非总是保持不变,而是会发生变化,从而使种群能够原地生存或扩张到新的区域。我们评估了末次盛冰期(LGM)之后,沙漠角蜥(一种分布于北美西部沙漠的物种)在气候变暖时其分布范围和生态位的变化程度。我们采用系统发育地理学方法,利用线粒体DNA序列,通过识别表现出种群稳定性遗传信号的种群与表现出近期(可能是末次盛冰期之后)地理扩张信号的种群,来估算末次盛冰期期间该物种的分布范围。然后,我们使用两种模拟末次盛冰期气候的模型,将该物种如今占据的气候生态位与末次盛冰期时占据的生态位进行了比较。遗传分析表明,在整个末次冰期,沙漠角蜥一直存在于莫哈韦沙漠南部和索诺兰沙漠,并在末次盛冰期之后从这些沙漠向北扩张,进入大盆地西部和东部。气候生态位比较结果显示,末次盛冰期之后,沙漠角蜥扩大了其气候生态位,转向了新的、更温暖和更干燥的气候,这使其能够在南部沙漠持续生存。同时,该物种在末次盛冰期之后将其气候生态位转向了温度和降水波动更大的环境。我们得出结论,末次盛冰期末期的气候变化促进了这种蜥蜴的分布范围和生态位的变化。该物种改变其生态位的机制尚不清楚,但表型可塑性可能有助于该物种适应气候变化的能力。