| Literature DB >> 27136458 |
Michael F Westphal1, Joseph A E Stewart2, Erin N Tennant3, H Scott Butterfield4, Barry Sinervo2.
Abstract
Extreme weather events can provide unique opportunities for testing models that predict the effect of climate change. Droughts of increasing severity have been predicted under numerous models, thus contemporary droughts may allow us to test these models prior to the onset of the more extreme effects predicted with a changing climate. In the third year of an ongoing severe drought, surveys failed to detect neonate endangered blunt-nosed leopard lizards in a subset of previously surveyed populations where we expected to see them. By conducting surveys at a large number of sites across the range of the species over a short time span, we were able to establish a strong positive correlation between winter precipitation and the presence of neonate leopard lizards over geographic space. Our results are consistent with those of numerous longitudinal studies and are in accordance with predictive climate change models. We suggest that scientists can take immediate advantage of droughts while they are still in progress to test patterns of occurrence in other drought-sensitive species and thus provide for more robust models of climate change effects on biodiversity.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27136458 PMCID: PMC4852947 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0154838
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Sites where neonate G. sila were and were not observed plotted against winter precipitation.
The line is predicted probability of observation as derived from a logistic regression fit to the data.
Fig 2Comparison of past, present and predicted drought patterns and G. sila recruitment.
Map backgrounds are colored by mean annual precipitation for recent (1981–2010, left panel), 2014 water year (middle panel), and projected future (2070–2099, MIROC-ESM RCP8.5, right panel) periods. Results of 2014 surveys for G. sila neonates are shown in the middle panel.
Fig 3Time series of NDVI values at 14 sites included in this study (16-day temporal resolution).
NDVI was extracted from 250-m resolution MODIS grid cells using a 500-m neighborhood around the centroid of BNLL neonate surveys.