The American pika (Ochotona princeps), a relative of
rabbits, occupies rocky environments in the mountains of western Northern
America. It has been widely thought that pikas could not survive extremes of
temperature and thus were at risk of running out of space at the tops of mountains
as temperatures rise due to climate change. But is there more to the story?
Previously, when researchers
visited pika habitat sites warmer or drier than usual in the Great Basin, where
they had historically lived, they found that many of these sites no longer were
occupied. It was thought that pikas had
been forced to higher ground to escape the warming temperatures or had died,
and it was concluded that pikas were in threat of extinction in the Great Basin
due to climate change. However, these studies were focused on historic sites
and did not examine the distribution of pikas at other marginal locations or in
environments where they would more typically be expected to occur.
A new study, "Distribution,
climatic relationships, and status of American pikas in the Great Basin,
USA", published in Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research, examined
the largest set of records for occupied and extirpated (vacant) pika sites
across a four-state region encompassing the entire Great Basin, and documented
pikas inhabiting climates and territories never before reported.
The study found that pikas occur
in conditions wetter and colder, as well as warmer and drier, than described
from the prior limited sites. Pikas were found at elevations spanning 7,800
feet in elevation, from 5,350 feet to above 13,000 feet, and traversing 40
mountain ranges across California, Oregon, Nevada and Utah.
"This evidence provides an
important new perspective on the status of pikas in the Great Basin," said
Connie Millar, a senior research ecologist with the U.S. Forest Service's
Pacific Southwest Research Station and lead author of the study. "Pikas
are persisting broadly across the region, and these findings give us reason to
believe that the species is able to tolerate a wider set of habitat and climate
conditions than previously understood."
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