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The fate of endemic insects of the Andean region under the effect of global warming

Three independent but complementary lines of research have provided evidence for the recognition of refugia: paleontology, phylogeography and species distributional modelling (SDM). SDM assesses the ecological requirements of a species based on its known occurrences and enables its distribution to b...

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Autores principales: Montemayor, Sara I., Melo, María Cecilia, Scattolini, María Celeste, Pocco, Martina E., del Río, María Guadalupe, Dellapé, Gimena, Scheibler, Erica E., Roig, Sergio A., Cazorla, Carla G., Dellapé, Pablo M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5643147/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29036214
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186655
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author Montemayor, Sara I.
Melo, María Cecilia
Scattolini, María Celeste
Pocco, Martina E.
del Río, María Guadalupe
Dellapé, Gimena
Scheibler, Erica E.
Roig, Sergio A.
Cazorla, Carla G.
Dellapé, Pablo M.
author_facet Montemayor, Sara I.
Melo, María Cecilia
Scattolini, María Celeste
Pocco, Martina E.
del Río, María Guadalupe
Dellapé, Gimena
Scheibler, Erica E.
Roig, Sergio A.
Cazorla, Carla G.
Dellapé, Pablo M.
author_sort Montemayor, Sara I.
collection PubMed
description Three independent but complementary lines of research have provided evidence for the recognition of refugia: paleontology, phylogeography and species distributional modelling (SDM). SDM assesses the ecological requirements of a species based on its known occurrences and enables its distribution to be projected on past climatological reconstructions. One advantage over the other two approaches is that it provides an explicit link to environment and geography, thereby enabling the analysis of a large number of taxa in the search for more general refugia patterns. We propose a methodology for using SDM to recognize biogeographical patterns of endemic insects from Southern South America. We built species distributional models for 59 insect species using Maxent. The species analyzed in the study have narrow niche breadth and were classified into four assemblages according to the ecoregion they inhabit. Models were built for the Late Pleistocene, Mid-Holocene and Present. Through the procedure developed for this study we used the models to recognize: Late Pleistocene refugia; areas with high species richness during all three periods; climatically constant areas (in situ refugia); consistent patterns among in situ refugia, Pleistocene refugia and current distribution of endemic species. We recognized two adjacent Pleistocene refugia with distinct climates; four in situ refugia, some of which are undergoing a process of fragmentation and retraction or enlargement. Interestingly, we found a congruent pattern among in situ refugia, Pleistocene refugia and endemic species. Our results seem to be consistent with the idea that long-term climate stability is known to have a key role in promoting persistence of biodiversity in an area. Our Pleistocene and in situ refugia are consistent with refugia identified in studies focusing on different taxa and applying other methodologies, showing that the method developed can be used to identify such areas and prove their importance for conservation.
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spelling pubmed-56431472017-10-30 The fate of endemic insects of the Andean region under the effect of global warming Montemayor, Sara I. Melo, María Cecilia Scattolini, María Celeste Pocco, Martina E. del Río, María Guadalupe Dellapé, Gimena Scheibler, Erica E. Roig, Sergio A. Cazorla, Carla G. Dellapé, Pablo M. PLoS One Research Article Three independent but complementary lines of research have provided evidence for the recognition of refugia: paleontology, phylogeography and species distributional modelling (SDM). SDM assesses the ecological requirements of a species based on its known occurrences and enables its distribution to be projected on past climatological reconstructions. One advantage over the other two approaches is that it provides an explicit link to environment and geography, thereby enabling the analysis of a large number of taxa in the search for more general refugia patterns. We propose a methodology for using SDM to recognize biogeographical patterns of endemic insects from Southern South America. We built species distributional models for 59 insect species using Maxent. The species analyzed in the study have narrow niche breadth and were classified into four assemblages according to the ecoregion they inhabit. Models were built for the Late Pleistocene, Mid-Holocene and Present. Through the procedure developed for this study we used the models to recognize: Late Pleistocene refugia; areas with high species richness during all three periods; climatically constant areas (in situ refugia); consistent patterns among in situ refugia, Pleistocene refugia and current distribution of endemic species. We recognized two adjacent Pleistocene refugia with distinct climates; four in situ refugia, some of which are undergoing a process of fragmentation and retraction or enlargement. Interestingly, we found a congruent pattern among in situ refugia, Pleistocene refugia and endemic species. Our results seem to be consistent with the idea that long-term climate stability is known to have a key role in promoting persistence of biodiversity in an area. Our Pleistocene and in situ refugia are consistent with refugia identified in studies focusing on different taxa and applying other methodologies, showing that the method developed can be used to identify such areas and prove their importance for conservation. Public Library of Science 2017-10-16 /pmc/articles/PMC5643147/ /pubmed/29036214 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186655 Text en © 2017 Montemayor et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Montemayor, Sara I.
Melo, María Cecilia
Scattolini, María Celeste
Pocco, Martina E.
del Río, María Guadalupe
Dellapé, Gimena
Scheibler, Erica E.
Roig, Sergio A.
Cazorla, Carla G.
Dellapé, Pablo M.
The fate of endemic insects of the Andean region under the effect of global warming
title The fate of endemic insects of the Andean region under the effect of global warming
title_full The fate of endemic insects of the Andean region under the effect of global warming
title_fullStr The fate of endemic insects of the Andean region under the effect of global warming
title_full_unstemmed The fate of endemic insects of the Andean region under the effect of global warming
title_short The fate of endemic insects of the Andean region under the effect of global warming
title_sort fate of endemic insects of the andean region under the effect of global warming
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5643147/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29036214
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186655
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