Department of Biology, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Dr., San Diego, CA, 92182, USA.
FamilyTreeDNA, Gene by Gene, 1445 N Loop W, Houston, TX, 77008, USA.
Heredity (Edinb). 2022 Nov;129(5):257-272. doi: 10.1038/s41437-022-00561-x. Epub 2022 Sep 8.
Climate change is expected to have a major hydrological impact on the core breeding habitat and migration corridors of many amphibians in the twenty-first century. The Yosemite toad (Anaxyrus canorus) is a species of meadow-specializing amphibian endemic to the high-elevation Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. Despite living entirely on federal lands, it has recently faced severe extirpations, yet our understanding of climatic influences on population connectivity is limited. In this study, we used a previously published double-digest RADseq dataset along with numerous remotely sensed habitat features in a landscape genetics framework to answer two primary questions in Yosemite National Park: (1) Which fine-scale climate, topographic, soil, and vegetation features most facilitate meadow connectivity? (2) How is climate change predicted to influence both the magnitude and net asymmetry of genetic migration? We developed an approach for simultaneously modeling multiple toad migration paths, akin to circuit theory, except raw environmental features can be separately considered. Our workflow identified the most likely migration corridors between meadows and used the unique cubist machine learning approach to fit and forecast environmental models of connectivity. We identified the permuted modeling importance of numerous snowpack-related features, such as runoff and groundwater recharge. Our results highlight the importance of considering phylogeographic structure, and asymmetrical migration in landscape genetics. We predict an upward elevational shift for this already high-elevation species, as measured by the net vector of anticipated genetic movement, and a north-eastward shift in species distribution via the network of genetic migration corridors across the park.
预计气候变化将对 21 世纪许多两栖动物的核心繁殖栖息地和迁徙走廊产生重大水文影响。约塞米蒂蟾蜍(Anaxyrus canorus)是一种专门生活在草地的两栖动物,是加利福尼亚州内华达山脉高海拔地区的特有物种。尽管它完全生活在联邦土地上,但最近却面临着严重的灭绝,然而,我们对气候对种群连通性影响的了解是有限的。在这项研究中,我们使用了之前发表的双消化 RADseq 数据集以及景观遗传学框架中的许多遥感栖息地特征,来回答约塞米蒂国家公园的两个主要问题:(1) 哪些细尺度的气候、地形、土壤和植被特征最有利于草地连通?(2) 气候变化将如何影响遗传迁移的幅度和净不对称性?我们开发了一种同时模拟多个蟾蜍迁移路径的方法,类似于电路理论,只是可以分别考虑原始环境特征。我们的工作流程确定了草地之间最可能的迁移走廊,并使用独特的立体主义机器学习方法来拟合和预测连通性的环境模型。我们确定了与积雪相关的众多特征的排列建模重要性,例如径流量和地下水补给。我们的研究结果强调了在景观遗传学中考虑系统发生结构和不对称迁移的重要性。我们预测,由于预期遗传运动的净矢量,这个已经高海拔的物种将向上海拔迁移,并且通过公园内的遗传迁移走廊网络,物种分布将向东北方向迁移。