Abstract

Climate change is a major threat to global biodiversity that will produce a range of new selection pressures. Understanding species responses to climate change requires an interdisciplinary perspective, combining ecological, molecular and environmental approaches. We propose an applied integrated framework to identify populations under threat from climate change based on their extent of exposure, inherent sensitivity due to adaptive and neutral genetic variation and range shift potential. We consider intraspecific vulnerability and population‐level responses, an important but often neglected conservation research priority. We demonstrate how this framework can be applied to vertebrates with limited dispersal abilities using empirical data for the bat Plecotus austriacus. We use ecological niche modelling and environmental dissimilarity analysis to locate areas at high risk of exposure to future changes. Combining outlier tests with genotype–environment association analysis, we identify potential climate‐adaptive SNPs in our genomic data set and differences in the frequency of adaptive and neutral variation between populations. We assess landscape connectivity and show that changing environmental suitability may limit the future movement of individuals, thus affecting both the ability of populations to shift their distribution to climatically suitable areas and the probability of evolutionary rescue through the spread of adaptive genetic variation among populations. Therefore, a better understanding of movement ecology and landscape connectivity is needed for predicting population persistence under climate change. Our study highlights the importance of incorporating genomic data to determine sensitivity, adaptive potential and range shift potential, instead of relying solely on exposure to guide species vulnerability assessments and conservation planning.

Highlights

  • Climate change is a major threat to global biodiversity (IPCC, 2013)

  • We aim to identify P. austriacus populations vulnerable to future climate change based on their extent of exposure to changing climatic conditions, sensitivity due to adaptive and neutral genetic variation and range shift potential

  • We identified eight SNPs potentially associated with climate-adaptive genetic variation that were supported by all methods (Bayescan, latent factor mixed model (LFMM) and logistic regressions; Table S3)

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is a major threat to global biodiversity (IPCC, 2013). Increased periods of drought, thermal stress and extreme climatic events are likely to produce a range of new selection pressures (Hoffmann & Sgro, 2011). The ability of populations to respond to these changes depends on the rate and magnitude of climate change and individual adaptive capacity based on physiological sensitivity to. Understanding how biodiversity responds to climate change requires an interdisciplinary perspective, combining ecological, molecular and environmental approaches, and an integrated assessment of exposure to changing climatic conditions, adaptive potential and movement ability. While exposure is commonly used to assess species vulnerability to climate change, the other aspects of vulnerability, sensitivity and adaptive potential have been largely neglected, precluding accurate estimations of species-specific vulnerability (Butt et al, 2016)

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