Water loss and temperature interact to compound amphibian vulnerability to climate change


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Authors: Lertzman-Lepofsky, GF; Kissel, AM; Sinervo, B; Palen, WJ
Year: 2020
Journal: Glob. Change Biol. 26: 4868-4879   Article Link (DOI)  PubMed
Title: Water loss and temperature interact to compound amphibian vulnerability to climate change
Abstract: Ectotherm thermal physiology is frequently used to predict species responses to changing climates, but for amphibians, water loss may be of equal or greater importance. Using physical models, we estimated the frequency of exceeding the thermal optimum (T-opt) or critical evaporative water loss (EWLcrit) limits, with and without shade- or water-seeking behaviours. Under current climatic conditions (2002-2012), we predict that harmful thermal (>T-opt) and hydric (>EWLcrit) conditions limit the activity of amphibians during similar to 70% of snow-free days in sunny habitats. By the 2080s, we estimate that sunny and dry habitats will exceed one or both of these physiological limits during 95% of snow-free days. Counterintuitively, we find that while wet environments eliminate the risk of critical EWL, they do not reduce the risk of exceeding T-opt (+2% higher). Similarly, while shaded dry environments lower the risk of exceeding T-opt, critical EWL limits are still exceeded during 63% of snow-free days. Thus, no single environment that we evaluated can simultaneously reduce both physiological risks. When we forecast both temperature and EWL into the 2080s, both physiological thresholds are exceeded in all habitats during 48% of snow-free days, suggesting that there may be limited opportunity for behaviour to ameliorate climate change. We conclude that temperature and water loss act synergistically, compounding the ecophysiological risk posed by climate change, as the combined effects are more severe than those predicted individually. Our results suggest that predictions of physiological risk posed by climate change that do not account for water loss in amphibians may be severely underestimated and that there may be limited scope for facultative behaviours to mediate rapidly changing environments.
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