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Do climate envelope models transfer? A manipulative test using dung beetle introductions
Authors:Richard P Duncan  Phillip Cassey  Tim M Blackburn
Institution:1.Bioprotection Research Centre, Lincoln University, PO Box 84, Lincoln 7647, New Zealand;2.Landcare Research, PO Box 40, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand;3.Centre for Ornithology, School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK;4.Institute of Zoology, ZSL, Regents Park, London NW1 4RY, UK
Abstract:Climate envelope models (CEMs) are widely used to forecast future shifts in species ranges under climate change, but these models are rarely validated against independent data, and their fundamental assumption that climate limits species distributions is rarely tested. Here, we use the data on the introduction of five South African dung beetle species to Australia to test whether CEMs developed in the native range can predict distribution in the introduced range, where the confounding effects of dispersal limitation, resource limitation and the impact of natural enemies have been removed, leaving climate as the dominant constraint. For two of the five species, models developed in the native range predict distribution in the introduced range about as well as models developed in the introduced range where we know climate limits distribution. For the remaining three species, models developed in the native range perform poorly, implying that non-climatic factors limit the native distribution of these species and need to be accounted for in species distribution models. Quantifying relevant non-climatic factors and their likely interactions with climatic variables for forecasting range shifts under climate change remains a challenging task.
Keywords:species distribution models  bioclimatic envelope  dispersal limitation  range limits
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