4.6 Article

Eco-Geography of Dioscorea composita (Hemsl.) in M & eacute;xico and Central America under the Influence of Climate Change

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 15, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su151612320

Keywords

ecological niche model; Dioscorea composita; MaxEnt; changing climate

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This research focused on characterizing the eco-geography of Dioscorea composita and predicting its potential geographic distribution under climate change scenarios in Mexico-Central America. The findings showed that D. composita adapts to warm and humid agro-climates and the most contributing variables for its presence are moisture availability indices, photoperiod, thermal range, and specific bioclimatic variables. The results provide valuable information for the effective utilization and conservation of this plant.
Dioscorea composita is a plant with historical recognition for the production of secondary metabolites of pharmaceutical importance, including diosgenin, and with great nutritional and ethnobotanical value in its center of origin (Mexico and Central America). Furthermore, it is considered a promising therapeutic agent against cancer. Currently, Mexico is one of the two most important countries producing this yam; however, climate change is altering the environmental conditions of its natural habits, threatening its preservation and productivity. This is why this research was focused on characterizing the eco-geography of D. composita and predicting its potential geographic distribution under climate change scenarios in Mexico-Central America. A collection of 408 geo-referenced accessions was used to determine its climatic adaptation, ecological descriptors, and the current and future potential geographic distribution, which was modeled with the MaxEnt model through the Kuenm R-package. For future climate scenarios, an ensemble of the GCMs HadGEM-ES and CCSM4 was used. Results showed that D. composita adapts to warm and humid and very humid agro-climates and, the most contributing variables for its presence are annual and seasonal moisture availability indices, the seasonal photoperiod, annual thermal range, and Bio14 and Bio11. The current potential distribution (692,123 km(2)) of D. composita might decrease by the year 2050 RCP4.5 (365,680 km(2)) and might increase by 2050 under the scenario RCP8.5 (763,589 km(2)), showing this plant could be a good crop option for this climate change scenario. The findings obtained provide valuable information that will allow for the effective utilization of this plant, both in terms of developing new pharmaceutical products and implementing appropriate conservation strategies.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available