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Effect of climate change in lizards of the genus Xenosaurus (Xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism

Accelerated climate change represents a major threat to the health of the planet's biodiversity. Particularly, lizards of the genus Xenosaurus might be negatively affected by this phenomenon because several of its species have restricted distributions, low vagility, and preference for low tempe...

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Autores principales: Berriozabal‐Islas, Christian, Rodrigues, João Fabrício Mota, Ramírez‐Bautista, Aurelio, Becerra‐López, Jorge L., Nieto‐Montes de Oca, Adrián
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6065345/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30073050
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4200
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author Berriozabal‐Islas, Christian
Rodrigues, João Fabrício Mota
Ramírez‐Bautista, Aurelio
Becerra‐López, Jorge L.
Nieto‐Montes de Oca, Adrián
author_facet Berriozabal‐Islas, Christian
Rodrigues, João Fabrício Mota
Ramírez‐Bautista, Aurelio
Becerra‐López, Jorge L.
Nieto‐Montes de Oca, Adrián
author_sort Berriozabal‐Islas, Christian
collection PubMed
description Accelerated climate change represents a major threat to the health of the planet's biodiversity. Particularly, lizards of the genus Xenosaurus might be negatively affected by this phenomenon because several of its species have restricted distributions, low vagility, and preference for low temperatures. No study, however, has examined the climatic niche of the species of this genus and how their distribution might be influenced by different climate change scenarios. In this project, we used a maximum entropy approach to model the climatic niche of 10 species of the genus Xenosaurus under present and future suitable habitat, considering a climatic niche conservatism context. Therefore, we performed a similarity analysis of the climatic niche between each species of the genus Xenosaurus. Our results suggest that a substantial decrease in suitable habitat for all species will occur by 2070. Among the most affected species, X. tzacualtipantecus will not have suitable conditions according to its climatic niche requirements and X. phalaroanthereon will lose 85.75% of its current suitable area. On the other hand, we found low values of conservatism of the climatic niche among species. Given the limited capacity of dispersion and the habitat specificity of these lizards, it seems unlikely that fast changes would occur in the distribution of these species facing climate change. The low conservatism in climatic niche we found in Xenosaurus suggests that these species might have the capacity to adapt to the new environmental conditions originated by climate change.
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spelling pubmed-60653452018-08-02 Effect of climate change in lizards of the genus Xenosaurus (Xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism Berriozabal‐Islas, Christian Rodrigues, João Fabrício Mota Ramírez‐Bautista, Aurelio Becerra‐López, Jorge L. Nieto‐Montes de Oca, Adrián Ecol Evol Original Research Accelerated climate change represents a major threat to the health of the planet's biodiversity. Particularly, lizards of the genus Xenosaurus might be negatively affected by this phenomenon because several of its species have restricted distributions, low vagility, and preference for low temperatures. No study, however, has examined the climatic niche of the species of this genus and how their distribution might be influenced by different climate change scenarios. In this project, we used a maximum entropy approach to model the climatic niche of 10 species of the genus Xenosaurus under present and future suitable habitat, considering a climatic niche conservatism context. Therefore, we performed a similarity analysis of the climatic niche between each species of the genus Xenosaurus. Our results suggest that a substantial decrease in suitable habitat for all species will occur by 2070. Among the most affected species, X. tzacualtipantecus will not have suitable conditions according to its climatic niche requirements and X. phalaroanthereon will lose 85.75% of its current suitable area. On the other hand, we found low values of conservatism of the climatic niche among species. Given the limited capacity of dispersion and the habitat specificity of these lizards, it seems unlikely that fast changes would occur in the distribution of these species facing climate change. The low conservatism in climatic niche we found in Xenosaurus suggests that these species might have the capacity to adapt to the new environmental conditions originated by climate change. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6065345/ /pubmed/30073050 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4200 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Berriozabal‐Islas, Christian
Rodrigues, João Fabrício Mota
Ramírez‐Bautista, Aurelio
Becerra‐López, Jorge L.
Nieto‐Montes de Oca, Adrián
Effect of climate change in lizards of the genus Xenosaurus (Xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism
title Effect of climate change in lizards of the genus Xenosaurus (Xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism
title_full Effect of climate change in lizards of the genus Xenosaurus (Xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism
title_fullStr Effect of climate change in lizards of the genus Xenosaurus (Xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism
title_full_unstemmed Effect of climate change in lizards of the genus Xenosaurus (Xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism
title_short Effect of climate change in lizards of the genus Xenosaurus (Xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism
title_sort effect of climate change in lizards of the genus xenosaurus (xenosauridae) based on projected changes in climatic suitability and climatic niche conservatism
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6065345/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30073050
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.4200
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