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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Species' traits as predictors of range shifts under contemporary climate change: A review and meta-analysis.

Sarah MacLean, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2017 - 
- Vol. 23, Iss: 10, pp 4094-4105
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TLDR
The first comprehensive review of species' traits as predictors of range shifts is conducted, collecting results from 51 studies across multiple taxa encompassing over 11,000 species' responses for 54 assemblages of taxonomically related species occurring together in space.
Abstract
A growing body of literature seeks to explain variation in range shifts using species’ ecological and life-history traits, with expectations that shifts should be greater in species with greater dispersal ability, reproductive potential, and ecological generalization. Despite strong theoretical support for species’ traits as predictors of range shifts, empirical evidence from contemporary range shift studies remains limited in extent and consensus. We conducted the first comprehensive review of species’ traits as predictors of range shifts, collecting results from 51 studies across multiple taxa encompassing over 11,000 species’ responses for 54 assemblages of taxonomically related species occurring together in space. We used studies of assemblages that directly compared geographic distributions sampled in the 20th century prior to climate change with resurveys of distributions after contemporary climate change and then tested whether species traits accounted for heterogeneity in range shifts. We performed a formal meta-analysis on study-level effects of body size, fecundity, diet breadth, habitat breadth, and historic range limit as predictors of range shifts for a subset of 21 studies of 26 assemblages with sufficient data. Range shifts were consistent with predictions based on habitat breadth and historic range limit. However, body size, fecundity, and diet breadth showed no significant effect on range shifts across studies, and multiple studies reported significant relationships that contradicted predictions. Current understanding of species’ traits as predictors of range shifts is limited, and standardized study is needed for traits to be valid indicators of vulnerability in assessments of climate change impacts.

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Citations
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Accelerated invasion through the evolution of dispersal behaviour

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated whether dispersal, reproduction or competitive ability is at the source of the accelerated spread of the dwarf spider Mermessus trilobatus in Europe, and found that the accelerated invasion is due to the accumulation of dispersive but not more reproductive or competitive genotypes in newly colonized areas.
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Tackling climate change impacts on biodiversity towards integrative conservation in Atlantic landscapes

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors analyzed the impact of climate change in the spatial distribution of selected species, between historical period (1950-2018) and future period (2041-2070), in four case studies at a watershed level over the Atlantic region, highlighting the importance of integrating landscape trends to anticipate key biodiversity pattern responses.
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Stable body size of Alpine ungulates.

TL;DR: Neither global warming nor local hunting influenced the fitness of the wild ungulates studied at a detectable level, however, it cannot rule out possible counteracting effects of enhanced nutritional resources associated with longer and warmer growing seasons, as well as the animals' ability to migrate along extensive elevational gradients in the highly diversified alpine landscape of this study.
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Beyond latitude: Temperature, productivity and thermal niche conservatism drive global body size variation in Odonata

TL;DR: In this article , a phylogenetic analysis of dragonflies and damselflies is presented, showing a strong positive relationship between body length and latitude but finding strong and contrasting effects for temperature between dragonflies, and consistent positive effects for productivity.
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Siberian Ibex Capra sibirica Respond to Climate Change by Shifting to Higher Latitudes in Eastern Pamir

TL;DR: In this paper , an ensemble species distribution model was built using 109 occurrence points from a four-year field survey, and fifteen environmental variables were used to simulate suitable habitat distribution under different climate change scenarios.
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