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The Future of Species Under Climate Change: Resilience or Decline?

As climates change across already stressed ecosystems, there is no doubt that species will be affected, but to what extent and which will be most vulnerable remain uncertain. The fossil record suggests that most species persisted through past climate change, whereas forecasts of future impacts predi...

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Published in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2013-08, Vol.341 (6145), p.504-508
Main Authors: Moritz, Craig, Agudo, Rosa
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Language:English
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description As climates change across already stressed ecosystems, there is no doubt that species will be affected, but to what extent and which will be most vulnerable remain uncertain. The fossil record suggests that most species persisted through past climate change, whereas forecasts of future impacts predict large-scale range reduction and extinction. Many species have altered range limits and phenotypes through 20th-century climate change, but responses are highly variable. The proximate causes of species decline relative to resilience remain largely obscure; however, recent examples of climate-associated species decline can help guide current management in parallel with ongoing research.
doi_str_mv 10.1126/science.1237190
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source American Association for the Advancement of Science; JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Analytical forecasting
Animals
Biological Evolution
Biological taxonomies
Birds
Climate Change
Climate change adaptation
Climate models
Ecosystem
Environmental impact
Extinct species
Extinction
Extinction, Biological
Forecasting
Global warming
Impact analysis
Mammals
Paleoclimatology
REVIEWS
Species
Species extinction
Temperature
title The Future of Species Under Climate Change: Resilience or Decline?
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