Predicting the impacts of climate change on genetic diversity in an endangered lizard species.

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Title
Predicting the impacts of climate change on genetic diversity in an endangered lizard species.
Journal
Climatic Change
Author(s)
Dubey S., Pike D.A., Shine R.
ISSN
1573-1480
ISSN-L
0165-0009
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2013
Volume
117
Number
1-2
Pages
319-327
Language
english
Abstract
Many endangered species persist as a series of isolated populations, with some populations more genetically diverse than others. If climate change disproportionately threatens the most diverse populations, the species' ability to adapt (and hence its long-term viability) may be affected more severely than would be apparent by its numerical reduction. In the present study, we combine genetic data with modelling of species distributions under climate change to document this situation in an endangered lizard (Eulamprus leuraensis) from montane southeastern Australia. The species is known from only about 40 isolated swamps. Genetic diversity of lizard populations is greater in some sites than others, presumably reflecting consistently high habitat suitability over evolutionary time. Species distribution modelling suggests that the most genetically diverse populations are the ones most at risk from climate change, so that global warming will erode the species' genetic variability faster than it curtails the species' geographic distribution.
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Create date
18/10/2011 13:26
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:34
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