Spatially heterogeneous impact of climate change on small mammals of montane California
Date
2014-12-10
Authors
Rowe, K. C.
Rowe, K. M. C.
Tingley, M. W.
Koo, M. S.
Patton, J. L.
Conroy, C. J.
Perrine, J. D.
Beissinger, S. R.
Moritz, Craig
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Royal Society Publishing
Abstract
Resurveys of historical collecting localities have revealed range shifts, primarily
leading edge expansions, which have been attributed to global warming. However,
there have been few spatially replicated community-scale resurveys testing
whether species’ responses are spatially consistent. Here we repeated early
twentieth century surveys of small mammals along elevational gradients in
northern, central and southern regions of montane California. Of the 34 species
we analysed, 25 shifted their ranges upslope or downslope in at least one region.
However, two-thirds of ranges in the three regions remained stable at one or
both elevational limits and none of the 22 species found in all three regions
shifted both their upper and lower limits in the same direction in all regions.
When shifts occurred, high-elevation species typically contracted their lower
limits upslope, whereas low-elevation species had heterogeneous responses.
For high-elevation species, site-specific change in temperature better predicted
the direction of shifts than change in precipitation, whereas the direction of
shifts by low-elevation species was unpredictable by temperature or precipitation.
While our results support previous findings of primarily upslope
shifts in montane species, they also highlight the degree to which the responses
of individual species vary across geographically replicated landscapes.
Description
Keywords
global change, geographical range, elevation gradient, occupancy, museum specimens, vertebrates
Citation
Collections
Source
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Type
Journal article