Pilliod David S, Jeffries Michelle I, Arkle Robert S, Olson Deanna H
U.S. Geological Survey, Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center Boise Idaho USA.
Pacific Northwest Research Station U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service Corvallis Oregon USA.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Oct 13;14(10):e70379. doi: 10.1002/ece3.70379. eCollection 2024 Oct.
We assessed changes in fundamental climate-niche space for lizard and snake species in western North America under modeled climate scenarios to inform natural resource managers of possible shifts in species distributions. We generated eight distribution models for each of 130 snake and lizard species in western North America under six time-by-climate scenarios. We combined the highest-performing models per species into a single ensemble model for each scenario. Maps were generated from the ensemble models to depict climate-niche space for each species and scenario. Patterns of species richness based on climate suitability and niche shifts were calculated from the projections at the scale of the entire study area and individual states and provinces, from Canada to Mexico. Squamate species' climate-niche space for the recent-time climate scenario and published known ranges were highly correlated ( = 0.81). Overall, reptile climate-niche space was projected to move northward in the future. Sixty-eight percent of species were projected to expand their current climate-niche space rather than to shift, contract, or remain stable. Only 8.5% of species were projected to lose climate-niche space in the future, and these species primarily occurred in Mexico and the southwestern U.S. We found few species were projected to lose all suitable climate-niche space at the state or province level, although species were often predicted to occupy novel areas, such as at higher elevations. Most squamate species were projected to increase their climate-niche space in future climate scenarios. As climate niches move northward, species are predicted to cross administrative borders, resulting in novel conservation issues for local landowners and natural resource agencies. However, information on species dispersal abilities, landscape connectivity, biophysical tolerances, and habitat suitability is needed to contextualize predictions relative to realized future niche expansions.
我们评估了在模拟气候情景下,北美西部蜥蜴和蛇类物种基本气候生态位空间的变化,以便让自然资源管理者了解物种分布可能发生的变化。我们针对北美西部130种蛇和蜥蜴物种中的每一种,在六种时间-气候情景下生成了八个分布模型。我们将每个物种表现最佳的模型合并为每个情景下的单一集合模型。从集合模型生成地图,以描绘每个物种和情景的气候生态位空间。根据整个研究区域以及从加拿大到墨西哥的各个州和省份尺度上的预测,计算基于气候适宜性和生态位转移的物种丰富度模式。有鳞目物种在近期气候情景下的气候生态位空间与已发表的已知分布范围高度相关(= 0.81)。总体而言,预计爬行动物的气候生态位空间未来将向北移动。预计68%的物种会扩大其当前的气候生态位空间,而不是发生转移、收缩或保持稳定。预计只有8.5%的物种在未来会失去气候生态位空间,这些物种主要分布在墨西哥和美国西南部。我们发现,尽管预计物种通常会占据新的区域,如更高海拔地区,但在州或省层面预计很少有物种会失去所有适宜的气候生态位空间。在未来气候情景下,大多数有鳞目物种预计会扩大其气候生态位空间。随着气候生态位向北移动,预计物种会跨越行政边界,给当地土地所有者和自然资源机构带来新的保护问题。然而,需要有关物种扩散能力、景观连通性、生物物理耐受性和栖息地适宜性的信息,以便将预测与未来实际的生态位扩张情况相结合。