Jensen Alex J, Goldstein Benjamin R, Cove Michael V, Pacifici Krishna, Kierepka Elizabeth, Rooney Brigit, McShea William, Kays Roland
North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Forestry and Environmental Resources, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
Glob Chang Biol. 2025 May;31(5):e70222. doi: 10.1111/gcb.70222.
Accurately estimating species distributions is critical for tracking how biodiversity is shaped by global change. While some species are expanding their ranges, the importance of factors like climate change, habitat change, and human avoidance for explaining this expansion is not well understood. Here, we used observations of 94 North American mammals on iNaturalist to (1) identify errors of omission in the existing range maps; (2) differentiate between extra-range populations that are likely products of natural expansions vs. introductions; and (3) test hypotheses about where natural range expansions occur. We found a substantial percentage of observations were outside both IUCN (16%) and Area of Habitat (36%) maps, suggesting that integrating contemporary citizen science data would improve existing range maps. We estimated that most observations outside IUCN ranges were natural expansions and 95% of species had at least one naturally expanding population. We also identified introductions for 36% of species, which were particularly extensive for several species. We show that natural range expansions are generally associated with a lighter human footprint and less habitat change and are not associated with warming temperatures. This suggests that habitat modifications by humans constrain the ability of species to expand their range to track a changing climate. We also found substantial variation in the directionality of effects from all factors across species, meaning that our species-specific findings will be useful for conservation planning. Our study demonstrates that citizen science data can be useful for conservation by tracking how organisms are responding, or failing to respond, to global change.
准确估计物种分布对于追踪生物多样性如何受全球变化影响至关重要。虽然一些物种正在扩大其分布范围,但气候变化、栖息地变化和人类回避等因素对解释这种扩张的重要性尚未得到充分理解。在这里,我们利用在iNaturalist上对94种北美哺乳动物的观察来:(1)识别现有分布地图中的遗漏错误;(2)区分可能是自然扩张产物的分布范围外种群与引入种群;(3)检验关于自然分布范围扩张发生地点的假设。我们发现相当大比例的观察结果位于世界自然保护联盟(IUCN)地图(16%)和栖息地面积地图(36%)之外,这表明整合当代公民科学数据将改善现有分布地图。我们估计IUCN分布范围之外的大多数观察结果是自然扩张,95%的物种至少有一个自然扩张的种群。我们还识别出36%的物种存在引入情况,其中有几个物种的引入情况尤为广泛。我们表明,自然分布范围扩张通常与较轻的人类足迹和较少的栖息地变化相关,与气温升高无关。这表明人类对栖息地的改变限制了物种为追踪气候变化而扩大其分布范围的能力。我们还发现所有因素对不同物种的影响方向存在很大差异,这意味着我们针对特定物种的研究结果将有助于保护规划。我们的研究表明,公民科学数据通过追踪生物体如何应对或未能应对全球变化,可对保护工作有所帮助。