墨西哥热带干燥森林中一种微型流行病、栖息地专家蜥蜴的生理生态学和对气候变化的脆弱性

Francisco Javier Muñoz-Nolasco , Diego Miguel Arenas-Moreno , Fabiola Judith Gandarilla-Aizpuro , Adán Bautista-del Moral , Rufino Santos-Bibiano , Donald B. Miles , Fausto Roberto Méndez-de la Cruz
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摘要

生理学在陆生外胚层生境特化中的作用是一个很少被提及的话题,尽管生境特化通常涉及多种生理特征的共同适应,这反过来可能会使其更容易受到气候变化的影响。在这里,我们记录了墨西哥热带干燥森林的一小块区域内,一种仅限于花岗岩巨石的蜥蜴——麦豆蜥的热生理和水生理方面,并估计了它对气候变化的脆弱性。我们旨在确定该物种为应对引人注目的季节性环境而进行的生理和行为调整,以阐明生态生理学是否有助于解释其栖息地的特殊性、微流行病,以及环境温度的升高将如何限制该物种的活动。温度调节的有效性和节水策略的指示随季节变化显著。正如预期的那样,花岗岩巨石和相关植被比周围(和无人居住)的栖息地更适合进行温度和水力调节。然而,我们的模型表明,到2041-2060年,气候变化将限制该物种的活动,增加其灭绝的威胁。这些结果强调了在气候变化的背景下,花岗岩微栖息地对麦豆藻的热和水关系的重要性,并表明该物种目前的栖息地和范围限制可能是其生理学的结果,因此需要采取紧急行动保护该物种免于灭绝。
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Physiological ecology and vulnerability to climate change of a microendemic, habitat-specialist lizard in a tropical dry forest of Mexico

The role of physiology on habitat specialization in terrestrial ectotherms constitutes a rarely addressed topic, despite the fact that habitat specialization often involves the coadaptation of multiple physiological traits, which in turn may confer a higher vulnerability to climate change. Here we documented aspects of the thermal and hydric physiology of Sceloporus macdougalli, a lizard restricted to granite boulders in a tiny area of a tropical dry forest of Mexico, and estimated its vulnerability to climate change. We aimed to determine the physiological and behavioral adjustments used by this species to cope with a striking seasonal environment, to elucidate whether ecophysiology could help explain its habitat specialization, microendemicity, and how increasing environmental temperatures will restrict activity of this species. The effectiveness of thermoregulation and indications of water conservation strategies changed markedly over seasons. As expected, granite boulders and associated vegetation were more suitable for thermo- and hydroregulation than surrounding (and unoccupied) habitat. However, our model indicated that by 2041-2060 climate change will restrict activity of this species, enhancing its threat of extinction. These results highlight the importance of granite microhabitats for the thermal and water relations of S. macdougalli, in the context of climate change, and suggest that the current habitat and range restriction of the species might be an outcome of its physiology, thus demanding urgent actions to preserve the species from extinction.

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