Climate change fluctuations can increase population abundance and range size
- PMID: 38844411
- DOI: 10.1111/ele.14453
Climate change fluctuations can increase population abundance and range size
Abstract
Climate change threatens many species by a poleward/upward movement of their thermal niche. While we know that faster movement has stronger impacts, little is known on how fluctuations of niche movement affect population outcomes. Environmental fluctuations often affect populations negatively, but theory and experiments have revealed some positive effects. We study how fluctuations around the average speed of the niche impact a species' persistence, abundance and realized niche width under climate change. We find that the outcome depends on how fluctuations manifest and what the relative time scale of population growth and climate fluctuations are. When populations are close to extinction with the average speed, fluctuations around this average accelerate population decline. However, populations not yet close to extinction can increase in abundance and/or realized niche width from such fluctuations. Long-lived species increase more when their niche size remains constant, short-lived species increase more when their niche size varies.
Keywords: climate change; moving‐habitat model; population persistence; temporal variability; thermal niche shift.
© 2024 The Author(s). Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
References
REFERENCES
-
- Aitken, S.N., Yeaman, S., Holliday, J.A., Wang, T. & Curtis‐McLane, S. (2008) Adaptation, migration or extirpation: climate change outcomes for tree populations. Evolutionary Applications, 1(1), 95–111.
-
- Amarasekare, P. & Savage, V. (2012) A framework for elucidating the temperature dependence of fitness. The American Naturalist, 179(2), 178–191.
-
- Bedford, F.E., Whittaker, R.J. & Kerr, J.T. (2012) Systemic range shift lags among a pollinator species assemblage following rapid climate change. Botany, 90(7), 587–597.
-
- Benning, J.W., Hufbauer, R.A. & Weiss‐Lehman, C. (2022) Increasing temporal variance leads to stable species range limits. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences, 289, 20220202.
-
- Berestycki, H., Diekmann, O., Nagelkerke, C.J. & Zegeling, P.A. (2009) Can a species keep pace with a shifting climate? Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, 71, 399–429.
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical