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1 June 2009 American Pikas Inhabit Low-Elevation Sites Outside the Species' Previously Described Bioclimatic Envelope
William G. Simpson
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Abstract

It has been suggested that Nearctic pikas (Ochotona spp.) are good biogeographic indicators of regions containing rocky, mesic, and cool habitat characterized by long winters and short summers. I examined whether populations of pikas inhabiting distinct low-elevation locales (121–255 m) are faithfully restricted to long-winter and short-summer conditions by monitoring the climate associated with American pikas (Ochotona princeps) in the southern part of the Columbia River Gorge, Oregon. Ambient air temperatures and weather conditions in the vicinity of 4 pika-occupied rockslides were monitored with remote temperature loggers and weather stations from June 2000 to June 2001. Temperatures were compared to long-term averages recorded within the area. I detected pikas inhabiting locales where some temperatures lie outside of the limiting climatic values previously calculated for regions containing pikas. Mild winter temperatures at these pika locations show that long-winter temperatures and snow accumulation associated with typical habitat may not be requirements for pikas in some low-elevation habitat. When using climatic conditions experienced by extant pikas to estimate local paleoenvironments surrounding fossil sites and to anticipate effects of climate change on future pika distributions, I determined that pika sites in the Columbia River Gorge indicate that the association of pikas with long-winter habitat should be considered uncertain. These results highlight the need for further investigation into how local temperatures affect the distribution, behavior, and persistence of low-elevation pikas.

© 2009
William G. Simpson "American Pikas Inhabit Low-Elevation Sites Outside the Species' Previously Described Bioclimatic Envelope," Western North American Naturalist 69(2), 243-250, (1 June 2009). https://doi.org/10.3398/064.069.0213
Received: 9 May 2008; Accepted: 1 January 2009; Published: 1 June 2009
KEYWORDS
climate change
Columbia River Gorge
low-elevation distribution
Ochotona princeps
paleoecological reconstruction
thermal limits
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