(A) Microkayla cf. quimsacrucis, (B) Microkayla illimani, and (C) Microkayla illampu. in Burrowes, Navas, Jiménez-Robles, et al., 2020. |
Abstract
Short-legged, small, robust frogs of the family Craugastoridae present a remarkable beta-diversity in the high Andes, their distributions being characterized by a very high degree of micro-endemism to specific valleys. We used dataloggers to study the temperature and humidity conditions of microhabitats of several species of the genus Microkayla at three elevation belts: below, within, and above the altitudinal range of their distribution in Bolivia. We also conducted thermal physiology experiments on a limited number of individuals of one of these species. Our aim was to infer on factors that may limit the distribution of anurans in a biological hotspot that is threatened by climate warming. We found an unexpected thermal heterogeneity within the slopes at three different Andean valleys that explained the specific distribution of species of Microkayla at each site. Species distribution was associated to elevation belts with the highest ambient relative humidity, and there was high variability in thermal preference when individuals were experimentally exposed to a thermal gradient. Critical thermal maxima compared to the temperatures that frogs confront in nature, as well as thermal performance trials, revealed that the studied species has a broad physiological tolerance to temperature. These results point to moisture, and not temperature, as the limiting climatic factor determining the occurrence of these species in high Andean slopes, but further experimental work on water balance is needed. The predicted desertification of the Andes in future climate change scenarios poses a potentially serious threat to this highly diverse group of amphibians.
(A) Microkayla cf. quimsacrucis, (B) Microkayla illimani, and (C) Microkayla illampu. Photos: I. De la Riva. |
Patricia A. Burrowes, Carlos A. Navas, Octavio Jiménez-Robles, Peter Delgado and Ignacio De la Riva. 2020. Climatic Heterogeneity in the Bolivian Andes: Are Frogs Trapped? South American J. of Herpetology. 18(1); 1-12. DOI: 10.2994/SAJH-D-18-00047.1