Download Petition to List the American Pika (Ochotona princeps)

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Transcript
Petition to List the American Pika
(Ochotona princeps) as Threatened in
California
National Park Service
A. Tshcherbina
S. Osborn
Scott Osborn and Daniel Applebee
Dept. of Fish and Game - Wildlife Branch
Petition History
2007 Aug Center for Biological Diversity petition
Dec DFG evaluation report
2008 Apr Commission rejects petition
2009 May Petitioner suit regarding decision standard upheld
Jun
2010 Oct
Commission rejects petition
Petitioner suit regarding new information upheld
2011 Feb Commission refers the amended petition to DFG
May Additional new information referred to DFG
Sep DFG evaluation report
A. Smith
Appearance
P. Mirejovsky
Taxonomy
Two pika species in N. America
• Collared pika (Ochotona collaris) - AK, nw Canada
• American pika (Ochotona princeps) - BC, western US
Taxonomic revision (Hafner and Smith 2010)
One subspecies in CA:
Ochotona princeps schisticeps
AnimalSpot.net
A. Tshcherbina
Range in California:
• Sierra Nevada
• Southern Cascades
• Modoc Plateau
• Great Basin Ranges
Habitat Associations
Photos: S. Osborn
Habitat Associations
Photos: S. Eng/USDA-Forest Service
Habitat Associations
Photos: C. Millar, S. Eng, C. Millar
Diet
AnimalSpot.net
Thermoregulation
AnimalSpot.net
Distribution
Resurveys of historical pika sites
• Yosemite
• Bodie townsite
• Lassen
• Mt Shasta
• Lava Beds NM
• Central Sierra
• Eastern Sierra
• White-Inyo mtns
Climate Change
• Heat stress during summer
• Behavior to avoid heat
stress
• Cold stress during winter
• Reduced dispersal
(A.J. Ray et al. 2010)
Climate Change
• Heat stress during summer
• Behavior to avoid heat
stress
• Cold stress during winter
• Reduced dispersal
• Ecosystem changes
• Reduced area of suitable
habitat
• Combined and interactive
effects
Photos: L. Comrack, R. Padilla, Cal-Acad Sci.
Climate Change
• Heat stress during summer
• Behavior to avoid heat
stress
• Cold stress during winter
• Reduced dispersal
• Ecosystem changes
• Reduced area of suitable
habitat
• Combined and interactive
effects
(Beever et al.
(Galbreath
et 2011)
al. 2009)
Other Threats
• Grazing
• Mining
• Small, isolated populations
• Disease
• Predation
• Competition
Conclusions
1. Pikas appear to be welldistributed in CA
2. Pikas are absent from
some sites where they
historically occurred
3. Pikas have been impacted
by climate change in the
Great Basin
4. Models predict a
reduction in pika habitat
in CA over the next
century
5. The magnitude of other
threats is unknown
A. Tshcherbina