土拨鼠及其食用植物对日益干旱的反应

Cameron W. Barrows, Lynn C. Sweet, Melanie J. Davis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

沙漠地区正变得更加温暖和干旱,这可能会挑战即使是适应干旱的物种在其当前范围内生存的能力。在这里,我们分析了常见的chuckwalla,Sauromalus ater,一种仅限于北美西部温暖沙漠的素食蜥蜴,对预测的温度和干旱增加的敏感性。我们还评估了它们的主要食物植物对这些变化条件的反应。我们的研究区域包括东西向和海拔干旱梯度。在该梯度的东部,最干旱的一端,卡盘动物的最高种群密度仅限于海拔高度为600-699米的顶部。在东西梯度的中部,海拔高度为400-599米及以上的卡盘动物密度较高。在梯度最不干旱的西部,从海拔200米开始的海拔类别中出现了高密度的查克瓦拉。它们的食物植物反映了这种分布趋势。我们还构建了独立的栖息地模型,以预测蜥蜴及其食用植物目前和未来的适宜范围。在模拟的当前和预测的未来范围重叠的地方存在潜在的气候避难所。我们的经验海拔数据反映了我们模型预测的气候避难所;目前密度较高的种群大部分已经居住在公认的气候避难所。居住在这些避难所下方的Chuckwallas将发现条件越来越具有挑战性,如果未来的干旱水平超过我们模型中使用的值,所有种群都需要转移到更高的海拔地区。
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Responses of common chuckwallas and their food plants to increasing aridity

Desert regions are becoming both warmer and more arid, potentially challenging the ability of even arid-adapted species to exist within their current ranges. Here we analyzed the sensitivity of the common chuckwalla, Sauromalus ater, a vegetarian lizard restricted to western North America's warm deserts, to predicted increases in temperature and aridity. We also assessed the response by their primary food plants to these changing conditions. Our study area included both east-west and elevational aridity gradients. At the eastern, most arid end of this gradient the highest population densities of chuckwallas were restricted to the top elevation category, 600-699 m. In the middle of the east-west gradient, higher chuckwalla densities occurred at elevation categories of 400-599 m and above. At the western, least arid end of the gradient, high chuckwalla densities occurred from elevation categories beginning at 200 m. Their food plants mirrored that distribution trend. We also constructed independent habitat models to predict current and future suitable ranges for both the lizards and their food plants. Potential climate refugia exist where modeled current and predicted future ranges overlap. Our empirical elevation data for where chuckwallas and their food plants exist at higher densities mirrored the climate refugia predicted by our models; current higher density populations largely already reside in putative climate refugia. Chuckwallas residing below these refugia will find conditions increasingly challenging, and all populations will need to shift to higher elevations if future levels of aridity exceed the values used in our models.

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