201316Jul19:20

Evo­lu­tion too slow to keep up with cli­mate change

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 16 July 2013 | mod­i­fied 30 May 2014
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Many ver­te­brate species would have to evolve about 10,000 times faster than they have in the past to adapt to the rapid cli­mate change expected in the next 100 years, a study led by a Uni­ver­sity of Ari­zona (UA) ecol­o­gist has found.

Mexican treefrogSci­en­tists analysed how quickly species adapted to dif­fer­ent cli­mates in the past, using data from 540 liv­ing species from all major groups of ter­res­trial ver­te­brates, includ­ing amphib­ians, rep­tiles, birds and mam­mals. They then com­pared their rates of evo­lu­tion to rates of cli­mate change pro­jected for the end of this cen­tury. This is the first study to com­pare past rates of adap­tion to future rates of cli­mate change.

The results, pub­lished online on 26 June in the jour­nal Ecol­ogy Let­ters, show that ter­res­trial ver­te­brate species appear to evolve too slowly to be able to adapt to the dra­mat­i­cally warmer cli­mate expected by 2100. The researchers sug­gested that many species may face extinc­tion if they are unable to move or acclimatise.

We found that on aver­age, species usu­ally adapt to dif­fer­ent cli­matic con­di­tions at a rate of only by about 1 degree Cel­sius per mil­lion years
John J. Wiens, depart­ment of ecol­ogy and evo­lu­tion­ary biol­ogy,Col­lege of Sci­ence, Uni­ver­sity of Arizona »

“Every species has a cli­matic niche which is the set of tem­per­a­ture and pre­cipitation con­di­tions in the area where it lives and where it can sur­vive,” explained John J. Wiens. “For exam­ple, some species are found only in trop­i­cal areas, some only in cooler tem­per­ate areas, some live high in the moun­tains, and some live in the deserts.”

Wiens con­ducted the research together with Igna­cio Quin­tero, a post­grad­u­ate research assis­tant at Yale University.

“We found that on aver­age, species usu­ally adapt to dif­fer­ent cli­matic con­di­tions at a rate of only by about 1 degree Cel­sius per mil­lion years,” Wiens explained. “But if global tem­per­a­tures are going to rise by about 4 degrees over the next hun­dred years as pre­dicted by the Inter­gov­ern­men­tal Panel of Cli­mate Change, that is where you get a huge dif­fer­ence in rates. What that sug­gests over­all is that sim­ply evolv­ing to match these con­di­tions may not be an option for many species.”

For their analy­sis, Quin­tero and Wiens stud­ied phy­lo­ge­nies — essen­tially evo­lu­tion­ary fam­ily trees show­ing how species are related to each other — based on genetic data. These trees reveal how long ago species split from each other. The sam­pling cov­ered 17 fam­i­lies rep­re­sent­ing the major liv­ing groups of ter­res­trial ver­te­brates, includ­ing frogs, sala­man­ders, lizards, snakes, croc­o­dil­ians, birds and mammals.

They then com­bined these evo­lu­tion­ary trees with data on the cli­matic niche of each species to esti­mate how quickly cli­matic niches evolve among species, using cli­matic data such as annual mean tem­per­a­ture and annual pre­cip­i­ta­tion as well as high and low extremes.

“Basi­cally, we fig­ured out how much species changed in their cli­matic niche on a given branch, and if we know how old a species is, we can esti­mate how quickly the cli­matic niche changes over time,” Wiens explained. “For most sis­ter species, we found that they evolved to live in habi­tats with an aver­age tem­per­a­ture dif­fer­ence of only about 1 or 2 degrees Cel­sius over the course of one to a few mil­lion years.”

“We then com­pared the rates of change over time in the past to pro­jec­tions for what cli­matic con­di­tions are going to be like in 2100 and looked at how dif­fer­ent these rates are. If the rates were sim­i­lar, it would sug­gest there is a poten­tial for species to evolve quickly enough to be able to sur­vive, but in most cases, we found those rates to be dif­fer­ent by about 10,000-fold or more,” he said.

Accord­ing to our data, almost all groups have at least some species that are poten­tially endan­gered, par­tic­u­larly trop­i­cal species.
« John J. Wiens

Species can respond to cli­mate change by accli­ma­tis­ing with­out evo­lu­tion­ary change or by mov­ing over space to track their pre­ferred cli­mate. For exam­ple, some species might be able to move to higher lat­i­tudes or higher ele­va­tion to remain in suit­able con­di­tions as the cli­mate warms. In addi­tion, many species could lose many pop­u­la­tions due to cli­mate change but might still be able to per­sist as a species if some of their pop­u­la­tions sur­vive. Bar­ring any these options, extinc­tion is the most likely outcome.

He explained that mov­ing to more suit­able cli­matic con­di­tions may not always be an option for many species. “Some stud­ies sug­gest many species won’t be able to move fast enough,” he said. “Also, mov­ing may require unim­peded access to habi­tats that have not been heav­ily dis­turbed by humans. Or con­sider a species liv­ing on the top of a moun­tain. If it gets too warm or dry up there, they can’t go anywhere.”

In an ear­lier study, Wiens and co-​authors asked what might actu­ally cause species to go extinct. They showed that species extinc­tions and declines from cli­mate change are more often due to changes in inter­ac­tions with other species rather than inabil­ity to cope with chang­ing con­di­tions physiologically.

“What seemed to be a big dri­ver in many species declines was reduced food avail­abil­ity,” Wiens said. “For exam­ple, bighorn sheep: If it gets drier and drier, the grass gets sparse and they starve to death.”

(Source: The Uni­ver­sity of Ari­zona News, 08.07.2013)

Goal: 7000 tigers in the wild

Tiger range countries map

Tiger map” (CC BY 2.5) by Sander­son et al., 2006.

about zoos and their mis­sion regard­ing breed­ing endan­gered species, nature con­ser­va­tion, bio­di­ver­sity and edu­ca­tion, which of course relates to the evo­lu­tion of species.
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