Abstract

While climate change is recognized as a major future threat to biodiversity, most species are currently threatened by extensive human‐induced habitat loss, fragmentation and degradation. Tropical high‐altitude alpine and montane forest ecosystems and their biodiversity are particularly sensitive to temperature increases under climate change, but they are also subject to accelerated pressures from land conversion and degradation due to a growing human population. We studied the combined effects of anthropogenic land‐use change, past and future climate changes and mountain range isolation on the endemic Ethiopian Highlands long‐eared bat, Plecotus balensis, an understudied bat that is restricted to the remnant natural high‐altitude Afroalpine and Afromontane habitats. We integrated ecological niche modelling, landscape genetics and model‐based inference to assess the genetic, geographic and demographic impacts of past and recent environmental changes. We show that mountain range isolation and historic climates shaped population structure and patterns of genetic variation, but recent anthropogenic land‐use change and habitat degradation are associated with a severe population decline and loss of genetic diversity. Models predict that the suitable niche of this bat has been progressively shrinking since the last glaciation period. This study highlights threats to Afroalpine and Afromontane biodiversity, squeezed to higher altitudes under climate change while losing genetic diversity and suffering population declines due to anthropogenic land‐use change. We conclude that the conservation of tropical montane biodiversity requires a holistic approach, using genetic, ecological and geographic information to understand the effects of environmental changes across temporal scales and simultaneously addressing the impacts of multiple threats.

Highlights

  • Clusters of alpine high mountain ecosystems that are isolated by different environmental conditions in the intervening lowlands can behave as authentic archipelagos

  • Our study highlights threats to tropical montane biodiversity due to the combined effects of multiple stressors, being squeezed into higher altitudes due to climate change while losing genetic diversity and suffering population declines due to anthropogenic land-use change

  • Using a combination of ecological niche models, landscape genetics and ABC model-based inference of demographic history, we show how historic climate change and geographic barriers interact with recent anthropogenic habitat loss and degradation to shape the population size, structure, diversity and connectivity of tropical montane biodiversity

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Clusters of alpine high mountain ecosystems that are isolated by different environmental conditions in the intervening lowlands can behave as authentic archipelagos. High-altitude species living close to mountain tops may lose their entire range as their suitable climatic regime and its associated ecosystem disappears with increasing temperatures (Pimm, 2009; Williams et al, 2007) This problem is especially acute in understudied and highly threatened areas like the Ethiopian Highlands, where accelerated land conversion and degradation is placing further pressures on biodiversity (Yalden et al, 1996). Due to their limited long-distance dispersal abilities and habitat specializations, Plecotus bats are sensitive to habitat loss (Razgour et al, 2014) and the effects of climate change (Razgour et al, 2013) We use this recently described high-altitude bat to determine how sky islands and historic, current and future environmental changes shape the distribution, genetic diversity and conservation status of tropical montane biodiversity. Our study highlights threats to tropical montane biodiversity due to the combined effects of multiple stressors, being squeezed into higher altitudes due to climate change while losing genetic diversity and suffering population declines due to anthropogenic land-use change

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
| CONCLUSIONS

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