British Columbia

How scientists are using poop to track climate-change effects on pikas and their mountain home

American pikas are more than just adorable little mountain dwellers — they're also a potential canary in the coal mine when it comes to the impact of climate change on their ecosystem. B.C. researchers are now developing new ways to better monitor their populations.

B.C. researchers developing a way to monitor American pika populations by analyzing mountain dwellers' DNA

An American pika stands in its rocky mountainous environment. It resembles a small rabbit, but has shorter hair and looks closer to a guinea pig.
The American pika is considered a 'climate sentinel' — a species that is particularly sensitive to change, meaning it can serve as an early indicator of potential trouble for its ecosystem. (Submitted by Tony Einfeldt )

Pikas may be adorable, but their poop doesn't really have the same appeal — unless you're a biologist working to monitor the impact of climate change on one of Canada's most threatened ecosystems. 

That's the case for researchers at the University of British Columbia Okanagan, who are developing a genetic monitoring tool that could revolutionize the way ecologists study American pika populations, and even give insights into how climate change is affecting their alpine home.

By analyzing pika DNA, including from their poop, researcher Kate Arpin and the university's Russello Lab say they could soon track individual pikas, monitor the interconnectedness of different pika populations, and record those populations' evolution in near-real time. 

As the climate continues to warm, scientists say sensitive species like the pika can act as an early warning system for much more widespread impacts. Recent improvements in the accessibility and affordability of DNA sequencing technologies have opened the door to a much deeper understanding of the species. 

A pika stands regally atop a rock pile.
Pikas' rocky habitat — found across various mountain ranges in Canada and the U.S. but exclusively above the treeline — is expected to slowly be lost as the climate warms and forests expand to higher elevations. (Tony Einfeldt)

'Climate sentinels'

The American pika can be found at high elevations throughout parts of the Canadian Rockies and B.C.'s Coast Mountains, in rocky, barren habitats with little soil and vegetation. Hikers in western Canada may be familiar with their characteristic call ("eep!").

Pikas are widely considered one of the animals most vulnerable to climate change. As temperatures rise, forests climb to higher elevations, reducing the amount of habitat available for pikas, said Tony Einfeldt, an ecologist with Parks Canada. 

Warmer temperatures can also make it harder for pikas to find enough food and decrease the winter snowpack, which they rely on for insulation during the winter. 

Biologists expect pikas will be forced to move to higher elevations, which could further isolate populations from each other — a common driver of decline among many species.

"One way of catching that process early would be to look at the changes in connectivity that would result in these increasingly island-like mountainous regions through genetic tools," said Einfeldt, who says park ecologists are currently monitoring pikas by recording the piles of dried vegetation that the mammals gather as a winter food source. 

Unfortunately, some populations may also find there is no mountain left to climb, causing those pikas to lose their habitat completely. 

Kate Arpin stands on a pile of rocks in the mountains.
Current pika monitoring efforts entail going to their habitats and counting the number of hay piles, which the pikas gather as a winter food source. UBCO researcher Kate Arpin, shown here, has taken part in these monitoring efforts in the Canadian Rockies. (Tony Einfeldt)

Pikas' sensitivity to climate change makes them an excellent indicator species, or "climate sentinel," according to the experts CBC spoke to.

"They provide us this pulse, this barometer of what's happening in our most sensitive ecosystems," said Erik Beever, a research ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey and Montana State University. 

Limited evidence shows certain U.S. pika populations may have some ability to adapt, but in other areas pikas are seeing widespread decline. The status of Canadian populations is less well known largely due to a lack of genetic data, said Arpin.

She says she hopes the genetic monitoring tool she and her collaborators have built may soon change that. 

The promise of pika poop

The tool is already extremely accurate when it comes to analyzing a pika's genetic material from tissue samples, even those dating as far back as 1930.

The more degraded DNA found in their scat is trickier to analyze accurately, with error rates close to 30 per cent. Arpin says they were able to reduce the error rate by modifying their lab protocols, and that further improvement is possible.

Until those refinements are made the applications of the tool are limited, says Beever, who was not involved in the research. 

"The great limitation [is] how little pika tissue has been collected across the species' range, [and] the fact that it's time-intensive and costly to obtain such tissue," he said.

Still, Beever is optimistic.

"I would argue that the rapidity of development and evolution of these molecular tools is pretty mind-blowing, and specifically on the front of non-invasive techniques [like scat sampling]."

WATCH | Monitoring the American pika: 

The small fluffy mammals captivating UBC Okanagan researchers

1 year ago
Duration 2:42
One of B.C.'s most adored animals, the American pika, is believed to be particularly threatened by climate change. As CBC's Darius Mahdavi explains, researchers at UBC Okanagan have been developing a new tool to monitor the species.

Arpin says while this sort of genetic monitoring is very new, there have been breakthroughs for other species. 

"Recent work ... has developed the same type of genetic monitoring tool for polar bear and for deer [scat] samples," she said. "There's definitely promise in using these sorts of genetic monitoring tools in the future."

If sampling is done over many years, researchers could even potentially watch the species evolve through their poop. To do so, they would analyze regions of DNA believed to be evolutionarily neutral as well as those that might give some individuals an advantage as the climate changes. 

If researchers are able to achieve high accuracy with fecal samples, it would mean a change of approach for the Parks Canada ecologists monitoring pikas — as Einfeldt already knows from Arpin's request for samples.

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"I think usually we're trying to avoid touching the poop," he said. 

"But we donned our rubber gloves and got our forceps out and went digging through their latrines that they form in these rocky environments. Looking for the freshest, best poop we could find."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Darius Mahdavi

Science communicator

Darius Mahdavi is the science specialist for CBC News Network and CBC British Columbia, based in Vancouver. He's worked as a researcher and earned a degree in conservation biology and immunology from the University of Toronto. From quirky research to essential climate news to fun facts, he covers all things science. You can hear his daily science segments on the B.C. afternoon radio shows, or watch him nightly on Canada Tonight and CBC Vancouver News. If you have a science or climate question, reach out at darius.mahdavi@cbc.ca.