Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Global temperatures are projected to increase by several degrees (+1.8 to +4.0C) over the
next century and models are needed to predict how species will respond The study of responses
to environmental change is especially important in species with limited dispersal abilities, such
as amphibians, as range shifts may be limited. Findings from a 30-year study monitoring the
amphibian community at Rainbow Bay (RB), an ephemeral wetland in eastern South Carolina,
found increasing temperature to be positively correlated with shifts in the timing of breeding
migrations (phenology) in some species, negatively correlated in other species, and uncorrelated
with phenology in other species As a potential compounding effect, increased droughts at RB
from 1978-2004 have resulted in decreased hydroperiods and have been shown to be
significantly correlated with population declines in amphibian species adapted to long
hydroperiods The resolution of phenological responses and population declines related to
climate-associated factors is important, but the equally important question of how these changes
have impacted demography and the loss or maintenance of genetic variation remains unclear .
Collectively, these climate-associated factors have impacted the population dynamics of
the amphibian community at RB. For example, the salamander Ambystoma opacum has
advanced its breeding time by 15.3 days, and the population has steadily expanded in numbers
since colonizing RB in 1980. In contrast, A. talpoideum has not shifted its breeding time and its
population has steadily declined since 1980. The response to climate change of these two species
over time can address many questions related to the ecological genomics of climate change
adaptation.
Here, we propose research objectives aimed at understanding how phenological and
demographic responses to climate change impacts the population genetics and evolution of
amphibian species. Rainbow Bay provides a unique opportunity for this work because amphibian
species have been continuously sampled over the last 30 years, providing a valuable time series
across a period of years in which climatological and ecological conditions have changed
significantly. Using restriction-site-associated DNA (RAD) sequencing, we will (1) generate
genomic surveys of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) from a salamander species (A.
opacum) that has demonstrated a population expansion at RB and a salamander species (A.
talpoideum) that has declined in numbers. For each species, genomic data will be collected from
three different time points, representing early, intermediate, and late stages across the last 30
years of climatological and ecological change at RB. We will use these data to then (2) assess
intraspecific trends in population genetic parameters over time and compare interspecific trends.
Finally, we will (3) use the time series of SNP variation within each species to identify loci that
may be potentially influenced by selection as a result of climate change. These results will not
only be informative at a local scale, but will be useful in beginning to model the genetic
responses of amphibian populations at a regional-scale.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 3/7/13 → 9/6/14 |
Funding
- KY Academy of Science Foundation: $992.00
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