首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Expanding northward: influence of climate change,forest connectivity,and population processes on a threatened species' range shift
Authors:S J MELLES  M‐J FORTIN  K LINDSAY  D BADZINSKI
Institution:1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S 3G5;2. Canadian Wildlife Service, 351 St Joseph Blvd. Gatineau (Hull), QC, Canada K1A 0H3;3. Bird Studies Canada, PO Box 160, Port Rowan, ON, Canada N0E 1M0
Abstract:Species' ranges are dynamic, shifting in response to a large number of interrelated ecological and anthropogenic processes. Climate change is thought to be one of the most influential drivers of range shifts, but the effects of other confounded ecological processes are often ignored even though these processes may modify expected range responses to climate change. To determine the relative effects of climate, forest availability, connectivity, and biotic processes such as immigration and establishment, we examine range changes occurring in a species of bird, the Hooded Warbler (Wilsonia citrina). We focus predominantly on the periphery of the species' northern range in Canada but we also examine data from the entire species' range. Nesting records in southern Ontario were obtained from two breeding bird Atlases of Ontario separated by a period of 20 years (1981–1985 and 2001–2005), and the rate of range expansion was estimated by comparing the number of occupied areas in each Atlas. Twelve hypotheses of the relationship between the rate of range expansion and factors known to influence range change were examined using model‐selection techniques and a mixed modeling approach (zero‐inflated Poisson's regression). Cooler temperatures were positively related to a lack of range expansion indicating that climate constrained the species' distribution. Establishment probability (based on the number of occupied, neighboring Atlas squares) and immigration from populations to the south (estimated using independent data from the North American Breeding Bird Survey) were also important predictors of range expansion. These biotic process variables can mask the effects of forest availability and connectivity on range expansion. Expansion due to climate change may be slower in fragmented systems, but the rate of expansion will be influenced largely by biotic processes such as proximity to neighboring populations.
Keywords:Canada  climate change  establishment and immigration  forest connectivity  forest cover  Ontario  range change  spatial regression  species at risk  zero‐inflated Poisson regression
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号