» Articles » PMID: 34708503

Climate-driven, but Dynamic and Complex? A Reconciliation of Competing Hypotheses for Species' Distributions

Overview
Journal Ecol Lett
Date 2021 Oct 28
PMID 34708503
Citations 6
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Estimates of the percentage of species "committed to extinction" by climate change range from 15% to 37%. The question is whether factors other than climate need to be included in models predicting species' range change. We created demographic range models that include climate vs. climate-plus-competition, evaluating their influence on the geographic distribution of Pinus edulis, a pine endemic to the semiarid southwestern U.S. Analyses of data on 23,426 trees in 1941 forest inventory plots support the inclusion of competition in range models. However, climate and competition together only partially explain this species' distribution. Instead, the evidence suggests that climate affects other range-limiting processes, including landscape-scale, spatial processes such as disturbances and antagonistic biotic interactions. Complex effects of climate on species distributions-through indirect effects, interactions, and feedbacks-are likely to cause sudden changes in abundance and distribution that are not predictable from a climate-only perspective.

Citing Articles

Sapling recruitment as an indicator of carbon resiliency in forests of the northern USA.

Harris L, Woodall C, DAmato A Ecol Evol. 2024; 14(8):e70077.

PMID: 39114162 PMC: 11304899. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.70077.


Tree rings reveal the transient risk of extinction hidden inside climate envelope forecasts.

Evans M, Dey S, Heilman K, Tipton J, DeRose R, Klesse S Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024; 121(24):e2315700121.

PMID: 38830099 PMC: 11181036. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2315700121.


Research on the Changes in Distribution and Habitat Suitability of the Chinese Red Panda Population.

Ruan T, Wei W, Zhang Z, Zhou H Animals (Basel). 2024; 14(3).

PMID: 38338067 PMC: 10854785. DOI: 10.3390/ani14030424.


Which demographic processes control competitive equilibria? Bayesian calibration of a size-structured forest population model.

Heiland L, Kunstler G, Seben V, Hulsmann L Ecol Evol. 2023; 13(7):e10232.

PMID: 37408631 PMC: 10318622. DOI: 10.1002/ece3.10232.


Demography-environment relationships improve mechanistic understanding of range dynamics under climate change.

Malchow A, Hartig F, Reeg J, Kery M, Zurell D Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2023; 378(1881):20220194.

PMID: 37246385 PMC: 10225853. DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0194.