4.5 Article

Will predicted positive effects of climate change be enough to reverse declines of the regionally Endangered Natterjack toad in Ireland?

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 11, 期 10, 页码 5049-5064

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7362

关键词

amphibia; bioclim; Epidalea calamita; fecundity; GLMM; Maxent; range expansion; SDM; spawning; species distribution model

资金

  1. National Parks & Wildlife Service
  2. Department of Culture, Heritage, and the Gaeltacht

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The global amphibian crisis is driven by various stressors, with climate change likely influencing environmental suitability, ranges, reproduction, and phenology. This study focused on characterizing the bioclimatic-habitat niche space of the Natterjack toad in Europe and assessing the impact of climate on its environmental suitability and breeding behavior. Projections suggest that future climate change may increase fecundity in Ireland, with spawning potentially commencing earlier under high greenhouse gas emission scenarios.
The global amphibian crisis is driven by a range of stressors including disease, habitat loss, and environmental contamination. The role of climate change remains poorly studied and is likely to influence environmental suitability, ranges, reproduction, and phenology. This study aimed to characterize the bioclimatic-habitat niche space of the Natterjack toad (Epidalea calamita) throughout its European range and to assess the impact of climate on the toad's environmental suitability and breeding behavior in Ireland, where declines in recent decades have resulted in it being regionally Red-Listed as Endangered. To address these questions, we first identified which climate variables best predict the current bioclimatic niche, fecundity (number of eggs deposit), and phenology. We then used future climate projections for two time periods (2041-2060 and 2061-2080) and two greenhouse gas emission scenarios (RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5) to predict how the species range, fecundity, and phenology would change. The European range of the species was found to be limited by winter temperatures while its bioclimatic niche varied markedly throughout its range. Species distribution models suggested projected climate change will increase environmental suitability for the species throughout its range, including Ireland, but most notably in Scandinavia and the Baltic. Fecundity in Ireland was greatest during the cool temperatures of spring and after wet winters associated with ephemeral breeding pool availability. Warm, dry summers in the preceding year influenced fecundity the following spring indicative of carryover effects. Initiation of spawning was driven by spring temperatures, not rainfall. Projections suggested future climate change may increase fecundity in Ireland while spawning may commence earlier throughout the 21st century especially under a high greenhouse gas emission scenario (RCP 8.5). Despite recent range contraction and population declines due to habitat deterioration, the Natterjack toad, if subject to a suitable species conservation strategy, has the potential to be a climate change winner, notwithstanding unpredictable habitat and land-use change, sea-level rise inducing coastal erosion, changes in invertebrate prey abundance, and disease.

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