Department of Biology, 371 Serra Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, 94305, U.S.A.
La Brea Tar Pits & Museum, 5801 Wilshire Boulevard, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, CA, 90036, U.S.A.
Conserv Biol. 2019 Jun;33(3):500-510. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13290. Epub 2019 Feb 28.
Island species are difficult to conserve because they face the synergy of climate change, invasive species, deforestation, and increasing human population densities in areas where land mass is shrinking. The Caribbean island of Hispaniola presents particular challenges because of geopolitical complexities that span 2 countries and hinder coordinated management of species across the island. We employed species distribution modeling to evaluate the impacts of climatic change and anthropogenic activities on the distribution of an endemic mammal of conservation concern, the Hispaniolan solenodon (Solenodon paradoxus). We aggregated occurrence points for this poorly known species for the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and the present (1975-2016) based on museum collections, online biodiversity databases, and new field surveys. We quantified degree of overlap between periods and scenarios with Schoener's D. Through a conservation paleobiology lens, we found that over time humans played an increasing role in shaping the distribution of S. paradoxus, thus, providing a foundation for developing conservation strategies on appropriate spatiotemporal scales. Human population density was the single most important predictor of S. paradoxus occurrence. Densities >166 people/km corresponded to a near-zero probability of occurrence. Models that accounted for climate but not anthropogenic variables falsely identified suitable habitat in Haiti, where on-the-ground surveys confirm habitat is unavailable. Climate-only models also significantly overestimated the potential for habitat connectivity between isolated populations. Our work highlights that alternative fates for S. paradoxus in the Anthropocene exist across the political border between the Dominican Republic and Haiti due to the fundamentally different economic and political realities of each country. Relationships in the fossil record confirm that Hispaniola's sociopolitical boundary is not biologically significant but instead represents one imposed on the island's fauna in the past 500 years by colonial activity. Our approach reveals how a paleontological perspective can contribute to concrete management insights.
由于面临气候变化、入侵物种、森林砍伐以及人类在土地面积不断减少的地区的人口密度不断增加等因素的综合影响,岛屿物种难以得到保护。由于跨越两个国家的地缘政治复杂性,以及阻碍整个岛屿物种协调管理的因素,加勒比海的伊斯帕尼奥拉岛尤其具有挑战性。我们采用物种分布模型来评估气候变化和人为活动对保护关注的特有哺乳动物——伊斯帕尼奥拉针鼹(Solenodon paradoxus)分布的影响。我们根据博物馆收藏、在线生物多样性数据库和新的实地调查,汇总了该物种在末次冰期最大值(LGM)和现在(1975-2016 年)的出现点。我们通过 Schoener 的 D 值量化了不同时期和情景之间的重叠程度。通过保护古生物学的视角,我们发现随着时间的推移,人类在塑造 S. paradoxus 分布方面发挥了越来越重要的作用,从而为制定适当时空尺度的保护策略提供了基础。人类人口密度是 S. paradoxus 出现的唯一最重要的预测因子。人口密度>166 人/km 对应于几乎为零的出现概率。仅考虑气候而不考虑人为变量的模型错误地确定了海地的适宜栖息地,而实地调查证实那里没有栖息地。气候模型也大大高估了隔离种群之间的潜在栖息地连通性。我们的工作表明,由于两国的经济和政治现实存在根本差异,在多米尼加共和国和海地之间的政治边界上,S. paradoxus 在人类世可能存在不同的命运。化石记录中的关系证实,伊斯帕尼奥拉岛的社会政治边界在生物上并不重要,而是过去 500 年殖民活动对该岛动物群施加的一种边界。我们的方法揭示了古生物学视角如何为具体的管理见解做出贡献。