Niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.

The ability of species to respond to novel future climates is determined in part by their physiological capacity to tolerate climate change and the degree to which they have reached and continue to maintain distributional equilibrium with the environment. While broad-scale correlative climatic measu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: William B Monahan, Morgan W Tingley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3408403?pdf=render
id doaj-cce9c92962de43c4bb82d546a18e8b96
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cce9c92962de43c4bb82d546a18e8b962020-11-25T02:57:22ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0177e4209710.1371/journal.pone.0042097Niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.William B MonahanMorgan W TingleyThe ability of species to respond to novel future climates is determined in part by their physiological capacity to tolerate climate change and the degree to which they have reached and continue to maintain distributional equilibrium with the environment. While broad-scale correlative climatic measurements of a species' niche are often described as estimating the fundamental niche, it is unclear how well these occupied portions actually approximate the fundamental niche per se, versus the fundamental niche that exists in environmental space, and what fitness values bounding the niche are necessary to maintain distributional equilibrium. Here, we investigate these questions by comparing physiological and correlative estimates of the thermal niche in the introduced North American house sparrow (Passer domesticus). Our results indicate that occupied portions of the fundamental niche derived from temperature correlations closely approximate the centroid of the existing fundamental niche calculated on a fitness threshold of 50% population mortality. Using these niche measures, a 75-year time series analysis (1930-2004) further shows that: (i) existing fundamental and occupied niche centroids did not undergo directional change, (ii) interannual changes in the two niche centroids were correlated, (iii) temperatures in North America moved through niche space in a net centripetal fashion, and consequently, (iv) most areas throughout the range of the house sparrow tracked the existing fundamental niche centroid with respect to at least one temperature gradient. Following introduction to a new continent, the house sparrow rapidly tracked its thermal niche and established continent-wide distributional equilibrium with respect to major temperature gradients. These dynamics were mediated in large part by the species' broad thermal physiological tolerances, high dispersal potential, competitive advantage in human-dominated landscapes, and climatically induced changes to the realized environmental space. Such insights may be used to conceptualize mechanistic climatic niche models in birds and other taxa.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3408403?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author William B Monahan
Morgan W Tingley
spellingShingle William B Monahan
Morgan W Tingley
Niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.
PLoS ONE
author_facet William B Monahan
Morgan W Tingley
author_sort William B Monahan
title Niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.
title_short Niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.
title_full Niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.
title_fullStr Niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.
title_full_unstemmed Niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.
title_sort niche tracking and rapid establishment of distributional equilibrium in the house sparrow show potential responsiveness of species to climate change.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description The ability of species to respond to novel future climates is determined in part by their physiological capacity to tolerate climate change and the degree to which they have reached and continue to maintain distributional equilibrium with the environment. While broad-scale correlative climatic measurements of a species' niche are often described as estimating the fundamental niche, it is unclear how well these occupied portions actually approximate the fundamental niche per se, versus the fundamental niche that exists in environmental space, and what fitness values bounding the niche are necessary to maintain distributional equilibrium. Here, we investigate these questions by comparing physiological and correlative estimates of the thermal niche in the introduced North American house sparrow (Passer domesticus). Our results indicate that occupied portions of the fundamental niche derived from temperature correlations closely approximate the centroid of the existing fundamental niche calculated on a fitness threshold of 50% population mortality. Using these niche measures, a 75-year time series analysis (1930-2004) further shows that: (i) existing fundamental and occupied niche centroids did not undergo directional change, (ii) interannual changes in the two niche centroids were correlated, (iii) temperatures in North America moved through niche space in a net centripetal fashion, and consequently, (iv) most areas throughout the range of the house sparrow tracked the existing fundamental niche centroid with respect to at least one temperature gradient. Following introduction to a new continent, the house sparrow rapidly tracked its thermal niche and established continent-wide distributional equilibrium with respect to major temperature gradients. These dynamics were mediated in large part by the species' broad thermal physiological tolerances, high dispersal potential, competitive advantage in human-dominated landscapes, and climatically induced changes to the realized environmental space. Such insights may be used to conceptualize mechanistic climatic niche models in birds and other taxa.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3408403?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT williambmonahan nichetrackingandrapidestablishmentofdistributionalequilibriuminthehousesparrowshowpotentialresponsivenessofspeciestoclimatechange
AT morganwtingley nichetrackingandrapidestablishmentofdistributionalequilibriuminthehousesparrowshowpotentialresponsivenessofspeciestoclimatechange
_version_ 1724711635484934144