Mammals on ‘Sky Islands’ May Be Threatened By Climate Change, Human Development
Researchers gauge mammal diversity on Mt. Kenya by comparing camera trap footage with photos from Theodore Roosevelt's 1909 expedition.
For Immediate Release
A new study sheds light on how climate change and human development threaten mammal species living in isolated biodiversity hotspots known as “sky islands.”
Researchers placed camera traps throughout Mt. Kenya National Park in East Africa, following the same route up the mountain used by Theodore Roosevelt during his expedition there in 1909. By comparing their new photos to those taken during the Roosevelt expedition, the researchers were able to observe how mammal communities had changed over six different habitat types located within a relatively small geographic area. This mosaic of habitats hosted a wide range of species, but many of those species were only found in one or two different habitats.
“These highly specialized species are threatened by a phenomenon known as the ‘elevator to extinction,’” said Matt Snider, corresponding author of the study and a Ph.D. student at North Carolina State University.
“Certain species are adapted for specific temperature or habitat conditions, but the risk of climate change is that those habitats are increasingly moving up the mountain,” Snider said. “The animals that normally live at those higher points are then pushed even further up the mountain. As you get closer to the top, these animals run out of places to go.”
This problem is compounded by the isolated nature of mountainous places like Mt. Kenya, which earns them the nickname sky islands. Sky island is a term ecologists use for species-rich, high-elevation areas that were largely colonized by animals following the last glacial period. As those climate conditions receded, they left behind animal populations that specialized in these habitat conditions and could not survive away from their mountains, leaving them stranded amid the vast savannahs and agricultural land of East Africa.
At higher elevations, large mammal diversity had decreased significantly since the Roosevelt expedition. Above 4,000 meters, common elands were the only large herbivores that the researchers recorded. This left them as the only remaining members of a high mountain community that as recently as 50 years ago included African elephant, plains zebra, hartebeest and African buffalo.
While elephants and buffalo were still present at lower elevations, the camera traps did not capture plains zebra or hartebeest at all. Black rhino, African lion, African wild dogs and mountain bongo, all historical residents of Mt. Kenya, were also completely absent despite researchers setting up cameras in ideal habitat for all four species.
While the study raises serious concerns about the health of sky island ecosystems, the researchers also made some exciting discoveries. Camera traps observed the rare Jackson’s mongoose three times, a surviving population not scientifically documented on the mountain in over a century. The researchers also observed honey badger and aardvark, two species never before seen on Mt. Kenya.
The study demonstrates the need for a holistic approach to protecting sky island habitats, Snider said.
“Each of these different habitats is unique, and we can’t just focus on protecting one type of space. We need to be able to protect the whole gradient of different habitats, because each of them has a mammal community that cannot be replicated elsewhere,” he said. “When it comes to things like climate change, we need to develop a broad, systematic understanding of how to deal with that. If we don’t, we could potentially lose these very unique mammal communities on the mountain.”
The open-access paper, “Shifting mammal communities and declining species richness along an elevational gradient on Mt Kenya,” is published in Ecology and Evolution
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Note to Editors: The study abstract follows.
“Shifting mammal communities and declining species richness along an elevational gradient on Mt Kenya”
Authors: Matthew Snider; North Carolina State University, Kristofer Helgen; Australian Museum Research Institute, Hillary Young; University of California Santa Barbara, Bernard Agwanda; National Museums of Kenya, Stephanie Schuttler; North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, Roland Kays; North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences; North Carolina State University, Georgia Titcomb; Colorado State University, Douglas Branch; Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, Rene Dommain; Nanyang Technological University, Earth Observatory of Singapore
Published: April 9, 2024
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.11151
Abstract: Conservation areas encompassing elevation gradients are biodiversity hotspots because they contain a wide range of habitat types in a relatively small space. Studies of biodiversity patterns along elevation gradients, mostly on small mammal or bird species, have documented a peak in diversity at mid elevations. Here, we report on a field study of medium and large mammals to examine the impact of elevation, habitat type, and gross primary productivity on community structure. Species richness was observed using a camera trap transect with 219 sites situated across different habitat types from 2329 to 4657 m above the sea level on the western slope of Mt Kenya, the second highest mountain in Africa. We found that the lowest elevation natural habitats had the highest species richness and relative abundance and that both metrics decreased steadily as elevation increased, paralleling changes in gross primary productivity, and supporting the energy richness hypothesis. We found no evidence for the mid-domain effect on species diversity. The lowest elevation degraded Agro-Forestry lands adjacent to the National Park had high activity of domestic animals and reduced diversity and abundance of native species. The biggest difference in community structure was between protected and unprotected areas, followed by more subtle stepwise differences between habitats at different elevations. Large carnivore species remained relatively consistent but dominant herbivore species shifted along the elevation gradient. There was some habitat specialization and turnover in species, such that the elevation gradient predicts a high diversity of species, demonstrating the high conservation return for protecting mountain ecosystems for biodiversity conservation.
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