Modelling species' range shifts in a changing climate: The impacts of biotic interactions, dispersal distance and the rate of climate change
Authored by Calvin Dytham, Justin MJ Travis, Rob W Brooker, Ewen J Clark
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2006.09.033
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Abstract
There is an urgent need for accurate prediction of climate change
impacts on species ranges. Current reliance on bioclimatic envelope
approaches ignores important biological processes such as interactions
and dispersal. Although much debated, it is unclear how such processes
might influence range shifting. Using individual-based modelling we show
that interspecific interactions and dispersal ability interact with the
rate of climate change to determine range-shifting dynamics in a
simulated community with two growth forms-mutualists and competitors.
Interactions determine spatial arrangements of species prior to the
onset of rapid climate change. These lead to space-occupancy effects
that limit the rate of expansion of the fast-growing competitors but
which can be overcome by increased long-distance dispersal. As the rate
of climate change increases, lower levels of long-distance dispersal can
drive the mutualists to extinction, demonstrating the potential for
subtle process balances, non-linear dynamics and abrupt changes from
species coexistence to species loss during climate change. (c) 2006
Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Simulation
Evolution
ecosystems
patterns
Grasslands
Responses
Environmental
gradient
Bioclimate envelope models
Alpine plant-communities
Shrublands