Species can respond to global
warming in two ways: adapt and survive, or die. Biologists foresee climate
change driving many species to extinction over the next century, especially
those that are unable to adjust rapidly enough. Plants and animals evolved to
survive in specific ecological niches, and while some may adapt to new
environments — and many have already — for many others, it will take time. But
the changes driven by human-generated greenhouse gases may be coming on too
fast.
That's exactly what appears to be
happening with the worldwide lizard population. A few years ago, a team of
herpetologists first noticed a suspicious pattern of extinctions among
populations of European lizards. At the time, it wasn't clear why they were
dying — it could have been global warming, but it also could have been disease
or loss of habitat. So researchers set out to get the hard evidence, ultimately
launching a global study that eventually drew in more than two dozen scientists
from around the world. (See TIME's photo-essay
"10 Species Near Extinction.")
The results, appearing in the May 14
issue of Science, are dramatic: populations of lizards have been lost on
five continents over the past few decades, and based on these extinction
patterns — and the current rate of global warming — scientists predict that by
2080 nearly 40% of all lizard populations and 20% of lizard species could
vanish. Given that lizards are a key source of food for many birds, snakes and
other animals, and are important predators of insects, the disappearance of
these animals could have major repercussions up and down the food chain.
The results are not just dramatic
but also convincing, thanks to some meticulous science conducted by lead author
Barry Sinervo of the University of California at Santa Cruz. "I was
originally looking at lizard evolution, but in chasing down that story, I found
this story," he says. "The extinctions in France seemed to be
happening mostly at the southern edges of the lizards' ranges and at lower
elevations — in both cases, the warmest parts of their habitats."
Sinervo wondered whether the French
phenomenon of extinction would be seen in other parts of the world. Between
2006 and 2008, he and a team of scientists surveyed 48 species of the Sceloporus
lizard at 200 sites in Mexico — populations for which they already had data
going back to 1975, when the sites were first surveyed. Comparing data from the
two time periods, Sinervo discovered that about 12% of local populations had
died out by 2009. The only environmental factor that had changed during that
time was temperature. (See TIME's video
"Komodo: Living with the Deadly Dragons.")
The theory was that the heat wasn't
killing the lizards directly, but rather preventing them from reproducing. Sceloporus
lizards, like most others, are diurnal — active during the day — and
cold-blooded, so they can't regulate their body temperature. On hot days, they
tend not to move around much, preferring to laze in cool burrows so as not to
overheat. As global warming causes weather to get hotter and stay hotter
longer, lizards — especially species that live in the warmest areas — spend
more time seeking refuge out of the sun. "They have so little time during
the day to forage and so little time to reproduce that conditions become
untenable [for survival]," says Aaron Bauer of Villanova University, a
co-author of the study.
To test that theory, Sinervo and his
team spent a year creating a predictive model of extinction, based on what they
knew about lizards' heat sensitivity, where different species lived and the
measured increases in local temperatures over the past 30 years. The model
pinpointed exact sites where extinctions should be happening. The scientists
then scoured the scientific literature and contacted herpetologists around the
world to see how the animal populations had fared. (See the top 10 animal
stories of 2009.)
Sure enough, populations of lizards
were vanishing in just the places the model had identified. "It's sort of
striking," says Bauer. "Not only does the model predict where lizards
should be disappearing; it also predicts where they should not be in
danger." In the southern hemisphere, for instance, where a greater
ocean-to-land ratio has kept temperature increases relatively moderate so far,
lizards have largely escaped extinction, according to Bauer.
The fact that the model's
predictions match the real world so closely is impressive. It's also somewhat
depressing, considering the grim fate the model predicts for the animals by
2080, based on the current rate of greenhouse-gas emissions. But at least
scientists now have a handle on the scope of the problem. Beyond that, the
lizard-extinction model could perhaps be applied to other species. "We're
working on amphibians now," says Sinervo. "They're a little more
complex, because they're sensitive to both heat and drought." Mammals are
more complex still, but even they might be amenable to this sort of extinction
modeling. "I think we now have a really good idea of how to do this,"
Sinervo says.
Read more: http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1989115,00.html#ixzz0uqasIjc1
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