Projecting the compound effects of climate change and white-nose syndrome on North American bat species
Date
2022Author
McClure, Meredith L
Hranac, Carter R
Haase, Catherine G
McGinnis, Seth
Dickson, Brett G
Hayman, David T.S
McGuire, Liam P (TTU)
Lausen, Cori L
Plowright, Raina K
Fuller, N (TTU)
Olson, Sarah H
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Climate change and disease are threats to biodiversity that may compound and interact with one another in
ways that are difficult to predict. White-nose syndrome (WNS), caused by a cold-loving fungus (Pseudogymnoascus
destructans), has had devastating impacts on North American hibernating bats, and impact severity has been linked
to hibernaculum microclimate conditions. As WNS spreads across the continent and climate conditions change,
anticipating these stressors’ combined impacts may improve conservation outcomes for bats. We build on the
recent development of winter species distribution models for five North American bat species, which used a hybrid
correlative-mechanistic approach to integrate spatially explicit winter survivorship estimates from a bioenergetic
model of hibernation physiology. We apply this bioenergetic model given the presence of P. destructans, including
parameters capturing its climate-dependent growth as well as its climate-dependent effects on host physiology,
under both current climate conditions and scenarios of future climate change. We then update species distribution
models with the resulting survivorship estimates to predict changes in winter hibernacula suitability under future
conditions. Exposure to P. destructans is generally projected to decrease bats’ winter occurrence probability, but
in many areas, changes in climate are projected to lessen the detrimental impacts of WNS. This rescue effect is
not predicted for all species or geographies and may arrive too late to benefit many hibernacula. However, our
findings offer hope that proactive conservation strategies to minimize other sources of mortality could allow bat
populations exposed to P. destructans to persist long enough for conditions to improve.