Cargando…

The role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the Himalaya

Pikas (Ochotona Link, 1795) are high‐altitude specialist species making them a useful bioindicator species to warming in high‐altitude ecosystem. The Himalayan Mountains are an important part of their range, supporting approximately 23%–25% of total pika species worldwide, yet we lack basic informat...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dahal, Nishma, Kumar, Sunil, Noon, Barry R., Nayak, Rajat, Lama, Rinzin Phunjok, Ramakrishnan, Uma
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7029102/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32076532
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6007
_version_ 1783499101947559936
author Dahal, Nishma
Kumar, Sunil
Noon, Barry R.
Nayak, Rajat
Lama, Rinzin Phunjok
Ramakrishnan, Uma
author_facet Dahal, Nishma
Kumar, Sunil
Noon, Barry R.
Nayak, Rajat
Lama, Rinzin Phunjok
Ramakrishnan, Uma
author_sort Dahal, Nishma
collection PubMed
description Pikas (Ochotona Link, 1795) are high‐altitude specialist species making them a useful bioindicator species to warming in high‐altitude ecosystem. The Himalayan Mountains are an important part of their range, supporting approximately 23%–25% of total pika species worldwide, yet we lack basic information on the distribution patterns. We combine field‐based surveys with genetics‐based identification and phylogeny to identify differences in species‐environment relationships. Further, we suggest putative evolutionary causes for the observed niche patterns. LOCATION: Himalayan high‐altitude region. METHODS: We sampled 11 altitudinal transects (ranging from ~2,000 to 5,000 m) in the Himalaya to establish occurrence records. We collected 223 species records using genetic analyses to confirm species' identity (based on some invasive and mostly noninvasive biological samples). Niche and geographic overlap were estimated using kernel density estimates. RESULTS: Most pikas in the Himalaya span wide elevation ranges and exhibit extensive spatial overlap with other species. However, even in areas of high species diversity, we found species to have a distinct environmental niche. Despite apparent overlapping distributions at broad spatial scales, in our field surveys, we encountered few cases of co‐occurrence of species in the sampled transects. Deeply diverged sister‐species pair had the least environmental niche overlap despite having the highest geographic range overlap. In contrast, sister‐species pair with shallow genetic divergence had a higher environmental niche overlap but was geographically isolated. We hypothesize that the extent of environmental niche divergence in pikas is a function of divergence time within the species complex. We assessed vulnerability of species to future climate change using environmental niche and geographic breadth sizes as a proxies. Our findings suggest that O. sikimaria may be the most vulnerable species. Ochotona roylii appears to have the most unique environmental niche space, with least niche overlap with other pika species from the study area.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7029102
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-70291022020-02-19 The role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the Himalaya Dahal, Nishma Kumar, Sunil Noon, Barry R. Nayak, Rajat Lama, Rinzin Phunjok Ramakrishnan, Uma Ecol Evol Original Research Pikas (Ochotona Link, 1795) are high‐altitude specialist species making them a useful bioindicator species to warming in high‐altitude ecosystem. The Himalayan Mountains are an important part of their range, supporting approximately 23%–25% of total pika species worldwide, yet we lack basic information on the distribution patterns. We combine field‐based surveys with genetics‐based identification and phylogeny to identify differences in species‐environment relationships. Further, we suggest putative evolutionary causes for the observed niche patterns. LOCATION: Himalayan high‐altitude region. METHODS: We sampled 11 altitudinal transects (ranging from ~2,000 to 5,000 m) in the Himalaya to establish occurrence records. We collected 223 species records using genetic analyses to confirm species' identity (based on some invasive and mostly noninvasive biological samples). Niche and geographic overlap were estimated using kernel density estimates. RESULTS: Most pikas in the Himalaya span wide elevation ranges and exhibit extensive spatial overlap with other species. However, even in areas of high species diversity, we found species to have a distinct environmental niche. Despite apparent overlapping distributions at broad spatial scales, in our field surveys, we encountered few cases of co‐occurrence of species in the sampled transects. Deeply diverged sister‐species pair had the least environmental niche overlap despite having the highest geographic range overlap. In contrast, sister‐species pair with shallow genetic divergence had a higher environmental niche overlap but was geographically isolated. We hypothesize that the extent of environmental niche divergence in pikas is a function of divergence time within the species complex. We assessed vulnerability of species to future climate change using environmental niche and geographic breadth sizes as a proxies. Our findings suggest that O. sikimaria may be the most vulnerable species. Ochotona roylii appears to have the most unique environmental niche space, with least niche overlap with other pika species from the study area. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-01-22 /pmc/articles/PMC7029102/ /pubmed/32076532 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6007 Text en © 2020 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
Dahal, Nishma
Kumar, Sunil
Noon, Barry R.
Nayak, Rajat
Lama, Rinzin Phunjok
Ramakrishnan, Uma
The role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the Himalaya
title The role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the Himalaya
title_full The role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the Himalaya
title_fullStr The role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the Himalaya
title_full_unstemmed The role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the Himalaya
title_short The role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the Himalaya
title_sort role of geography, environment, and genetic divergence on the distribution of pikas in the himalaya
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7029102/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32076532
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6007
work_keys_str_mv AT dahalnishma theroleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT kumarsunil theroleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT noonbarryr theroleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT nayakrajat theroleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT lamarinzinphunjok theroleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT ramakrishnanuma theroleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT dahalnishma roleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT kumarsunil roleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT noonbarryr roleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT nayakrajat roleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT lamarinzinphunjok roleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya
AT ramakrishnanuma roleofgeographyenvironmentandgeneticdivergenceonthedistributionofpikasinthehimalaya