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Using the past to contextualize anthropogenic impacts on the present and future distribution of an endemic Caribbean mammal
Authors:LM Gibson  AM Mychajliw  Y Leon  E Rupp  EA Hadly
Institution:1. Department of Biology, 371 Serra Mall, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, 94305 U.S.A.;2. Grupo Jaragua, Calle El Vergel 33, Santo Domingo, 10107 Dominican Republic

Instituto Tecnológico de Santo Domingo, Avenida de Los Próceres #49, Santo Domingo, 10602 Dominican Republic;3. Grupo Jaragua, Calle El Vergel 33, Santo Domingo, 10107 Dominican Republic

Abstract:Island species are difficult to conserve because they face the synergy of climate change, invasive species, deforestation, and increasing human population densities in areas where land mass is shrinking. The Caribbean island of Hispaniola presents particular challenges because of geopolitical complexities that span 2 countries and hinder coordinated management of species across the island. We employed species distribution modeling to evaluate the impacts of climatic change and anthropogenic activities on the distribution of an endemic mammal of conservation concern, the Hispaniolan solenodon (Solenodon paradoxus). We aggregated occurrence points for this poorly known species for the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and the present (1975–2016) based on museum collections, online biodiversity databases, and new field surveys. We quantified degree of overlap between periods and scenarios with Schoener's D. Through a conservation paleobiology lens, we found that over time humans played an increasing role in shaping the distribution of S. paradoxus, thus, providing a foundation for developing conservation strategies on appropriate spatiotemporal scales. Human population density was the single most important predictor of S. paradoxus occurrence. Densities >166 people/km2 corresponded to a near-zero probability of occurrence. Models that accounted for climate but not anthropogenic variables falsely identified suitable habitat in Haiti, where on-the-ground surveys confirm habitat is unavailable. Climate-only models also significantly overestimated the potential for habitat connectivity between isolated populations. Our work highlights that alternative fates for S. paradoxus in the Anthropocene exist across the political border between the Dominican Republic and Haiti due to the fundamentally different economic and political realities of each country. Relationships in the fossil record confirm that Hispaniola's sociopolitical boundary is not biologically significant but instead represents one imposed on the island's fauna in the past 500 years by colonial activity. Our approach reveals how a paleontological perspective can contribute to concrete management insights.
Keywords:biogeography  climate change  distribution  island  MaxEnt  museums  protected areas  threatened species  áreas protegidas  biogeografía  cambio climático  distribución  especie amenazada  isla  MaxEnt  museos
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