• Title of article

    Future distribution modelling: A stitch in time is not enough

  • Author/Authors

    Stankowski، نويسنده , , Philippe A. and Parker، نويسنده , , William H.، نويسنده ,

  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    567
  • To page
    572
  • Abstract
    The last two decades have seen an increasing number of studies assessing the impact of climate change upon biodiversity. A central assumption underpinning research into the potential future habitat of terrestrial biota is that species are presently in equilibrium with their environments and that quantitative climate models adequately represent the distribution of species. Recently, many alarming predictions have emerged concerning the extinction and redistribution of species. Here, we show that even large-scale models of the climatic niche dimensions of species are temporally variable. Distributional models were developed for Salix (willow) species occurring in the province of Ontario, Canada, using three historical climate data sets. Although historical data very accurately represented the distributions of willows, the inherent variability within the models of species based on different periods greatly influenced the direction and magnitude of projected distributional change. We expose a fundamental uncertainty with respect to predicting the responses of species to climate change.
  • Keywords
    extirpation , Salix (willow) , Species/climate equilibrium , logistic regression , Species distribution modelling , redistribution , uncertainty , climate change , extinction risk
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Record number

    2085807