Animals (Nov 2022)

Global Warming and Long-Distance Spread of Invasive <i>Discoglossus pictus</i> (Amphibia, Alytidae): Conservation Implications for Protected Amphibians in the Iberian Peninsula

  • Dani Villero,
  • Albert Montori,
  • Gustavo A. Llorente,
  • Núria Roura-Pascual,
  • Philippe Geniez,
  • Lluís Brotons

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani12233236
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 23
p. 3236

Abstract

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Discoglossus pictus is a North African amphibian that was introduced in southern France early the 20th century and has spread south and north along the Mediterranean coastal plains up to 170 km. In order to disentangle the conservation implications of the spread of D. pictus for sensitive native species, we examined the impact of long-term climate warming on the basis of niche overlap analysis, taking into account abiotic factors. The study area covered the distribution ranges of all genus Discoglossus species in northwestern Africa (659,784 km2), Sicily (27,711 km2), the Iberian Peninsula, and southern France (699,546 km2). Niche overlap was measured from species environmental spaces extracted via PCA, including climate and relief environmental variables. Current and future climatic suitability for each species was assessed in an ensemble-forecasting framework of species distribution models, built using contemporary species data and climate predictors and projected to 2070′s climatic conditions. Our results show a strong climatic niche overlap between D. pictus and native and endemic species in the Iberian Peninsula. In this context, all species will experience an increase in climatic suitability over the next decades, with the only exception being Pelodytes punctatus, which could be negatively affected by synergies between global warming and cohabitation with D. pictus.

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