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Current and Future Niche of North and Central American Sand Flies (Diptera: Psychodidae) in Climate Change Scenarios

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TLDR
Model the environmental requirements of the principal North and Central American phlebotomine species and analyze three niche characteristics over future climate change scenarios to provide an increased opportunity for the geographic expansion of NCA sand flys' ENM and human exposure to vectors of Leishmaniases.
Abstract
Ecological niche models are useful tools to infer potential spatial and temporal distributions in vector species and to measure epidemiological risk for infectious diseases such as the Leishmaniases. The ecological niche of 28 North and Central American sand fly species, including those with epidemiological relevance, can be used to analyze the vector's ecology and its association with transmission risk, and plan integrated regional vector surveillance and control programs. In this study, we model the environmental requirements of the principal North and Central American phlebotomine species and analyze three niche characteristics over future climate change scenarios: i) potential change in niche breadth, ii) direction and magnitude of niche centroid shifts, iii) shifts in elevation range. Niche identity between confirmed or incriminated Leishmania vector sand flies in Mexico, and human cases were analyzed. Niche models were constructed using sand fly occurrence datapoints from Canada, USA, Mexico, Guatemala and Belize. Nine non-correlated bioclimatic and four topographic data layers were used as niche components using GARP in OpenModeller. Both B2 and A2 climate change scenarios were used with two general circulation models for each scenario (CSIRO and HadCM3), for 2020, 2050 and 2080. There was an increase in niche breadth to 2080 in both scenarios for all species with the exception of Lutzomyia vexator. The principal direction of niche centroid displacement was to the northwest (64%), while the elevation range decreased greatest for tropical, and least for broad-range species. Lutzomyia cruciata is the only epidemiologically important species with high niche identity with that of Leishmania spp. in Mexico. Continued landscape modification in future climate change will provide an increased opportunity for the geographic expansion of NCA sand flys' ENM and human exposure to vectors of Leishmaniases.

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Climatic Risk and Distribution Atlas of European Bumblebees

TL;DR: In this paper, maps depicting potential risks of climate change for bumble bees are shown together with informative summary statistics, ecological background information and a picture of each European species, thanks to the EU FP7 project STEP, the authors gathered over one million bumblebee records from all over Europe.
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Atlas of Mexican Triatominae (Reduviidae: Hemiptera) and vector transmission of Chagas disease

TL;DR: A state-of-knowledge atlas of Mexican triatomines is produced and their geographic associations with T. cruzi, human demographics and landscape modification are analyzed, showing high tolerance to human-modified habitats and broadened historical ranges.
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Ecological Niche Modelling Predicts Southward Expansion of Lutzomyia (Nyssomyia) flaviscutellata (Diptera: Psychodidae: Phlebotominae), Vector of Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis in South America, under Climate Change.

TL;DR: The vector’s climatic niche is defined and future projections under climate change scenarios indicate expansion of the climatically suitable area for the vector in both scenarios, towards higher latitudes and elevations.
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Effects of climate change on the distribution of indigenous species in oceanic islands (Azores)

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used ensemble forecasting to evaluate the current and future distribution of well-studied endemic and native bryophytes (19 species), endemic vascular plants (59 species) and endemic arthropods (128 species), for two of the largest Azorean Islands, Terceira and Sao Miguel, using a Regional Climate Model (CIELO), and assuming the extreme scenario RCP8.5.
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas (excluding Antarctica) at a spatial resolution of 30 arc s (often referred to as 1-km spatial resolution).
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Environmental niche equivalency versus conservatism: quantitative approaches to niche evolution.

TL;DR: New methods for quantifying niche overlap that rely on a traditional ecological measure and a metric from mathematical statistics are developed and suggest various randomization tests that may prove useful in other areas of ecology and evolutionary biology.
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