Landscape prerequisites for the survival of a modelled metapopulation and its neutral genetic diversity are affected by climate change
Authored by Jana Verboom, Rene Jochem, Marleen M P Cobben, Paul F M Opdam, Rolf F Hoekstra, Marinus J M Smulders
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-011-9676-1
Sponsors:
Netherlands Ministries
Dutch National Research Programme Climate changes Spatial Planning
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Model Documentation:
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
In response to climate change a species may move, adapt, or go extinct.
For the adaptability of a population its genetic diversity is essential, but climate change-induced range shifts can cause a loss of genetic
diversity. We investigated how landscape structure affects the level and
distribution of genetic diversity in metapopulations subject to climate
change-induced range shifts. For this we used the spatially explicit, individual-based model METAPHOR which simulates metapopulation
demography and genetics under different temperature increase scenarios.
The results indicated that increasing total habitat area may enhance the
maintenance of the genetic diversity in metapopulations while they are
shifting their range under climate change. However, the results also
showed that a high level of total habitat area did not prevent the
populations in the newly colonised habitat area of being depleted of
much of the original genetic diversity. We therefore conclude that
enhancing landscape connectivity may lead to a delayed loss of genetic
diversity in metapopulations under climate change, but that additional
measures would be necessary to ensure its long-term conservation.
Importantly, our simulations also show that a landscape which could be
regarded as well-structured under stable climatic conditions, may be
inferior for the conservation of genetic diversity during a range shift.
This is important information for landscape management when developing
strategies for the in situ conservation of genetic variation in natural
populations under climate change.
Tags
Adaptation
Migration
differentiation
connectivity
Biodiversity
population
Implementation
Responses
Divergence
Frog rana-arvalis