SILVIS Lab, Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, 53706, USA.
Centre for Tropical Biodiversity and Climate Change Research, School of Marine and Tropical Biology, James Cook University, Townsville, Qld, 4811, Australia.
Glob Chang Biol. 2016 Mar;22(3):1130-44. doi: 10.1111/gcb.13154. Epub 2015 Dec 22.
Climate change may drastically alter patterns of species distributions and richness, but predicting future species patterns in occurrence is challenging. Significant shifts in distributions have already been observed, and understanding these recent changes can improve our understanding of potential future changes. We assessed how past climate change affected potential breeding distributions for landbird species in the conterminous United States. We quantified the bioclimatic velocity of potential breeding distributions, that is, the pace and direction of change for each species' suitable climate space over the past 60 years. We found that potential breeding distributions for landbirds have shifted substantially with an average velocity of 1.27 km yr(-1) , about double the pace of prior distribution shift estimates across terrestrial systems globally (0.61 km yr(-1) ). The direction of shifts was not uniform. The majority of species' distributions shifted west, northwest, and north. Multidirectional shifts suggest that changes in climate conditions beyond mean temperature were influencing distributional changes. Indeed, precipitation variables that were proxies for extreme conditions were important variables across all models. There were winners and losers in terms of the area of distributions; many species experienced contractions along west and east distribution edges, and expansions along northern distribution edges. Changes were also reflected in the potential species richness, with some regions potentially gaining species (Midwest, East) and other areas potentially losing species (Southwest). However, the degree to which changes in potential breeding distributions are manifested in actual species richness depends on landcover. Areas that have become increasingly suitable for breeding birds due to changing climate are often those attractive to humans for agriculture and development. This suggests that many areas might have supported more breeding bird species had the landscape not been altered. Our study illustrates that climate change is not only a future threat, but something birds are already experiencing.
气候变化可能会极大地改变物种分布和丰富度的模式,但预测未来物种的出现模式具有挑战性。已经观察到分布的显著变化,了解这些最近的变化可以提高我们对潜在未来变化的理解。我们评估了过去的气候变化如何影响美国大陆范围内的陆地鸟类潜在繁殖分布。我们量化了潜在繁殖分布的生物气候速度,即每种物种在过去 60 年中适宜气候空间的变化速度和方向。我们发现,陆地鸟类的潜在繁殖分布已经发生了重大变化,平均速度为 1.27 公里/年,是全球陆地系统中先前分布变化估计速度(0.61 公里/年)的两倍左右。变化的方向并不均匀。大多数物种的分布向西、西北和北移动。多方向的变化表明,气候条件的变化不仅仅是平均温度,还影响着分布的变化。事实上,作为极端条件代表的降水变量在所有模型中都是重要的变量。在分布区域方面,有些物种是赢家,有些则是输家;许多物种在西部和东部分布边缘收缩,而在北部分布边缘扩张。变化也反映在潜在物种丰富度上,一些地区的潜在物种可能会增加(中西部、东部),而其他地区的潜在物种可能会减少(西南部)。然而,潜在繁殖分布的变化在实际物种丰富度中的体现程度取决于土地覆盖。由于气候变化而变得更适合繁殖鸟类的地区往往对人类来说具有农业和发展的吸引力。这表明,如果景观没有改变,许多地区可能会支持更多的繁殖鸟类物种。我们的研究表明,气候变化不仅是未来的威胁,也是鸟类已经在经历的问题。