O. Hinojosa de la Garza’s research while affiliated with Institute of Ecology INECOL and other places

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Publications (1)


Fig. 1. Known occurrence of Crotaphytus antiquus (circles) and Sceloporus cyanostictus (triangles) in the Chihuahuan Desert. The localities were gathered directly of lizards observed in the geographic distribution of each species and from published records. 
Fig. 2. Potential distributions models of (a) Crotaphytus antiquus and (b) Sceloporus cyanostictus for liberal climate change scenario (SRES A2) for 2020, and 2050. Color correspond to light-gray ¼ distributional areas lost by habitat conversion, dark-gray ¼ current potential distribution, and black ¼ predicted distribution remaining in future. Gray lines area indicates highways and roads, black lines are the political boundaries of Durango and Coahuila, and black stars are main cities. The maps correspond to a zooming of the study area. 
Fig. 3. Results of jackknife evaluations of relative importance of predictor variables for (a) Crotaphytus antiquus and (b) Sceloporus cyanostictus Maxent models. The main bioclimatic variables for both species were: bio12 ¼ Annual Precipitation, bio13 ¼ Precipitation of Wettest Month, bio16 ¼ Precipitation of Wettest Quarter, bio17 ¼ Precipitation of Driest Quarter, bio18 ¼ Precipitation of Warmest Quarter, bio19 ¼ Precipitation of Coldest Quarter, and bio14 ¼ Precipitation of Driest Month. The Minimum Temperature of Coldest Month (bio6) was only relevant to C. antiquus. 
distribution, habitat loss caused by anthropogenic habitat conversion, and predicted future distributional area of Sceloporus cyanostictus and Crotaphytus antiquus using one climatic scenario drawn from the Canadian Climate Centre, CGCM2 SRES A2 for two periods of time, 2020 and 2050. All values are in km 2 .
Effects of land-cover transformation and climate change on the distribution of two endemic lizards, Crotaphytus antiquus and Sceloporus cyanostictus, of northern Mexico
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August 2012

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29 Citations

Journal of Arid Environments

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O. Hinojosa de la Garza

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Two species of lizards, Sceloporus cyanostictus and Crotaphytus antiquus, are restricted to small areas of rocky hills in the center of the Chihuahuan Desert, where land-cover transformation has increased dramatically in recent years and future climatic changes are expected to be severe. The current geographic distribution of each species was estimated by ecological niche modeling using the Maximum Entropy model (MaxEnt). A recent land-use map was used to determine areas where habitat has been transformed by human activities, and niche models were projected under one simulated climatic scenario and for two periods of time (2020 and 2050) to estimate their future potential distributions. Results indicate a high degree of anthropogenic habitat transformation within the distribution of C. antiquus, and a significant reduction of its current distribution is expected by 2050. For S. cyanostictus land-cover transformation is less severe, however a severe reduction of its current distribution is expected in the future because of climate changes. Despite the uncertainty involved, the general trends seem highly feasible and immediate conservation actions are recommended.

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Citations (1)


... Extensive livestock farming has drastically changed the landscape of northern Mexico through the consumption of large areas of bushes and grasslands [57]. Anthropogenic land use change and climate change will lead to restrictions in the distribution of Uma exsul and Crotaphytus antiquus by 2050 [58,59], and other species, such as Urosaurus ornatus, may not be able to successfully respond to climate change [60]. Climate change is predicted to cause a drastic reduction in the distribution of Uma paraphygas and Sceloporus gadsdeni [58,59]. ...

Reference:

The Herpetofauna of the Chihuahuan Desert Biogeographic Province of Mexico: Diversity, Similarity to Other Provinces, and Conservation Status
Effects of land-cover transformation and climate change on the distribution of two endemic lizards, Crotaphytus antiquus and Sceloporus cyanostictus, of northern Mexico

Journal of Arid Environments