Castillo Andrea G, Alò Dominique, González Benito A, Samaniego Horacio
Laboratorio de Ecoinformatica, Universidad Austral de Chile, Valdivia, Los Ríos, Chile.
Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Departamento de Ecología, Santiago, Chile.
PeerJ. 2018 May 28;6:e4907. doi: 10.7717/peerj.4907. eCollection 2018.
The main goal of this contribution was to define the ecological niche of the guanaco (), to describe potential distributional changes, and to assess the relative importance of niche conservatism and divergence processes between the two lineages described for the species ( and ).
We used maximum entropy to model lineage's climate niche from 3,321 locations throughout continental Chile, and developed future niche models under climate change for two extreme greenhouse gas emission scenarios (RCP2.6 and RCP8.5). We evaluated changes of the environmental niche and future distribution of the largest mammal in the Southern Cone of South America. Evaluation of niche conservatism and divergence were based on identity and background similarity tests.
We show that: (a) the current geographic distribution of lineages is associated with different climatic requirements that are related to the geographic areas where these lineages are located; (b) future distribution models predict a decrease in the distribution surface under both scenarios; (c) a 3% decrease of areal protection is expected if the current distribution of protected areas is maintained, and this is expected to occur at the expense of a large reduction of high quality habitats under the best scenario; (d) current and future distribution ranges of guanaco mostly adhere to phylogenetic niche divergence hypotheses between lineages.
Associating environmental variables with species ecological niche seems to be an important aspect of unveiling the particularities of, both evolutionary patterns and ecological features that species face in a changing environment. We report specific descriptions of how these patterns may play out under the most extreme climate change predictions and provide a grim outlook of the future potential distribution of guanaco in Chile. From an ecological perspective, while a slightly smaller distribution area is expected, this may come with an important reduction of available quality habitats. From the evolutionary perspective, we describe the limitations of this taxon as it experiences forces imposed by climate change dynamics.
本研究的主要目标是确定原驼()的生态位,描述其潜在的分布变化,并评估该物种所描述的两个谱系(和)之间生态位保守和分化过程的相对重要性。
我们利用最大熵模型,根据智利大陆3321个地点的数据来模拟谱系的气候生态位,并针对两种极端温室气体排放情景(RCP2.6和RCP8.5),开发了气候变化下的未来生态位模型。我们评估了南美洲南锥体最大哺乳动物的环境生态位变化及其未来分布。生态位保守和分化的评估基于同一性和背景相似性测试。
我们发现:(a)谱系目前的地理分布与不同的气候需求相关,这些需求与这些谱系所在的地理区域有关;(b)未来分布模型预测,在两种情景下分布面积都会减少;(c)如果维持保护区的当前分布,预计保护区面积将减少3%,并且在最佳情景下,这预计将以大量优质栖息地的减少为代价;(d)原驼目前和未来的分布范围大多符合谱系之间的系统发育生态位分化假说。
将环境变量与物种生态位相关联,似乎是揭示物种在不断变化的环境中所面临的进化模式和生态特征特殊性的一个重要方面。我们报告了这些模式在最极端气候变化预测下可能如何表现的具体描述,并提供了智利原驼未来潜在分布的严峻前景。从生态角度来看,虽然预计分布面积会略小,但这可能伴随着可用优质栖息地的大幅减少。从进化角度来看,我们描述了这个分类单元在经历气候变化动态力量时的局限性。