Ecological Niche Differentiation and Response to Climate Change of the African Endemic Family Myrothamnaceae

Author:

Wan Qisong1,Du Shenglan234,Chen Yu1,Li Feng235,Salah Radwa235,Njenga Maxwell Njoroge235,Li Jitao1,Wang Shengwei236ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Hubei Key Laboratory of Biologic Resources Protection and Utilization, Hubei Minzu University, Enshi 445000, China

2. Key Laboratory of Plant Germplasm Enhancement and Specialty Agriculture, Wuhan Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430074, China

3. Center of Conservation Biology, Core Botanical Gardens, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430074, China

4. School of Ecology and Environment, Tibet University, Lhasa 850000, China

5. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China

6. Sino-Africa Joint Research Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430074, China

Abstract

Studying the ecological niches of species and their responses to climate change can provide better conservation strategies for these species. Myrothamnaceae is endemic to Africa, comprising only two species that belong to Myrothamnus (M. flabellifolius and M. moschatus). These closely related species exhibit allopatric distributions, positioning them as ideal materials for studying the species ecological adaptation. This study explores the ecological niche differentiation between M. flabellifolius and M. moschatus and their response capabilities to future climate change. The results indicate that M. flabellifolius and M. moschatus have undergone niche differentiation. The main drivers of niche differences are the minimum temperature of the coldest month (Bio6) for M. flabellifolius, precipitation of the driest month (Bio14), and precipitation of the coldest quarter (Bio19) for M. moschatus. M. flabellifolius demonstrated a stronger adaptation to environments characterized by lower precipitation, relatively lower temperatures, and greater annual temperature variations compared to M. moschatus. Under future climate scenarios (SSP5-8.5, 2081–2100 years), the results show that approximately 85% of the total suitable habitat for M. flabellifolius will be lost, with an 85% reduction in high-suitability areas and almost complete loss of the original mid-low suitability areas. Concurrently, about 29% of the total suitable habitat for M. moschatus will be lost, with a 34% reduction in high suitability areas and roughly 60% of the original mid-low suitability areas becoming unsuitable. This suggests that M. flabellifolius will face greater threats under future climate change. This study contributes novel insight into niche differentiation in Myrothamnaceae and provides useful information for the conservation of this distinctive African lineage.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Sino-Africa Joint Research Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province

Open Fund of Hubei Key Laboratory of Biological Resources Protection and Utilization

Publisher

MDPI AG

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