Ferrer Obiol Joan, Bounas Anastasios, Brambilla Mattia, Lombardo Gianluca, Secomandi Simona, Paris Josephine R, Iannucci Alessio, Whiting James R, Formenti Giulio, Bonisoli-Alquati Andrea, Ficetola Gentile Francesco, Galimberti Andrea, Balacco Jennifer, Batbayar Nyambayar, Bragin Alexandr E, Caprioli Manuela, Catry Inês, Cecere Jacopo G, Davaasuren Batmunkh, De Pascalis Federico, Efrat Ron, Erciyas-Yavuz Kiraz, Gameiro João, Gradev Gradimir, Haase Bettina, Katzner Todd E, Mountcastle Jacquelyn, Mikulic Kresimir, Morganti Michelangelo, Pârâu Liviu G, Rodríguez Airam, Sarà Maurizio, Toli Elisavet-Aspasia, Tsiopelas Nikos, Ciofi Claudio, Gianfranceschi Luca, Jarvis Erich D, Olivieri Anna, Sotiropoulos Konstantinos, Wink Michael, Trucchi Emiliano, Torroni Antonio, Rubolini Diego
Dipartimento di Scienze e Politiche Ambientali, Università degli Studi di Milano, Milano, Italy.
Department of Biological Applications and Technology, University of Ioannina, Ioannina, Greece.
Nat Commun. 2025 Apr 13;16(1):3503. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-58617-5.
Accurately predicting species' responses to anthropogenic climate change is hampered by limited knowledge of their spatiotemporal ecological and evolutionary dynamics. We combine landscape genomics, demographic reconstructions, and species distribution models to assess the eco-evolutionary responses to past climate fluctuations and to future climate of an Afro-Palaearctic migratory raptor, the lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni). We uncover two evolutionarily and ecologically distinct lineages (European and Asian), whose demographic history, evolutionary divergence, and historical distribution range were profoundly shaped by past climatic fluctuations. Using future climate projections, we find that the Asian lineage is at higher risk of range contraction, increased migration distance, climate maladaptation, and consequently greater extinction risk than the European lineage. Our results emphasise the importance of providing historical context as a baseline for understanding species' responses to contemporary climate change, and illustrate how incorporating intraspecific genetic variation improves the ecological realism of climate change vulnerability assessments.
对物种时空生态和进化动态的了解有限,这阻碍了准确预测物种对人为气候变化的反应。我们结合景观基因组学、种群统计学重建和物种分布模型,来评估一种非洲-古北界迁徙猛禽——小黄脚隼(Falco naumanni)对过去气候波动以及未来气候的生态进化反应。我们发现了两个在进化和生态上截然不同的谱系(欧洲谱系和亚洲谱系),其种群历史、进化分歧和历史分布范围都受到过去气候波动的深刻影响。利用未来气候预测,我们发现,与欧洲谱系相比,亚洲谱系面临更大的范围收缩风险、迁徙距离增加、气候适应不良,因此灭绝风险也更高。我们的研究结果强调了提供历史背景作为理解物种对当代气候变化反应的基线的重要性,并说明了纳入种内遗传变异如何提高气候变化脆弱性评估的生态现实性。