Living on the edge—Genomic and ecological delineation of cryptic lineages in the high‐elevation specialist Erebia nivalis

Author:

Augustijnen Hannah1ORCID,Patsiou Theofania12,Schmitt Thomas34,Lucek Kay15ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Sciences University of Basel Basel Switzerland

2. Institute of Plant Sciences, Ecological Genomics University of Bern Bern Switzerland

3. Department Systematics and Biogeography Senckenberg German Entomological Institute Müncheberg Germany

4. Entomology and Biogeography, Institute of Biochemistry and Biology, Faculty of Science University of Potsdam Potsdam Germany

5. Biodiversity Genomics Laboratory, Institute of Biology University of Neuchâtel Neuchâtel Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract Cold‐adapted species at high elevations may be especially impacted by global warming since they may be limited in their capacity to adapt to changing conditions or may be prevented from shifting their distributions upwards if no suitable habitats are available. The latter may be true for Erebia nivalis, a high‐elevation specialist that mainly occurs in the Austrian Alps and on few mountaintops in Switzerland, where its taxonomic and conservation status remains unclear. We aimed to clarify the relationships among geographically isolated populations of E. nivalis using whole‐genome resequencing data to reconstruct population connectivity and phylogenetic relationships. We inferred current and historical effective population sizes and combined these with tests for ecological differentiation based on available occurrence data to re‐evaluate the conservation status of E. nivalis. Our results confirm that Swiss and Austrian E. nivalis should be considered different evolutionarily significant units for conservation purposes, as they are marked by moderate genomic differentiation, distinct demographic histories and a difference in the abiotic conditions of their habitats. In both Austria and Switzerland, we found rapid uphill range shifts over the last decades, little population connectivity, low current effective population sizes and low genetic diversity. The above, combined with the low dispersal capacity of this 2‐year lifecycle species and its need to overwinter under snow, which is rapidly retreating from several regions of the Alps, leads us to suggest that the status of E. nivalis should be updated to ‘Vulnerable’ or ‘Endangered’ in the European, Swiss and Austrian Red Lists.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

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