
Bioclimatic velocity: the pace of species exposure to climate change
Author(s) -
SerraDiaz Josep M.,
Franklin Janet,
Ninyerola Miquel,
Davis Frank W.,
Syphard Alexandra D.,
Regan Helen M.,
Ikegami Makihiko
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
diversity and distributions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.918
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1472-4642
pISSN - 1366-9516
DOI - 10.1111/ddi.12131
Subject(s) - climate change , ecology , geography , species distribution , physical geography , environmental science , climatology , biology , habitat , geology
Aim To investigate the velocity of species‐specific exposure to climate change for mid‐ and late 21st century and develop metrics that quantify exposure to climate change over space and time. Location California Floristic Province, south‐western USA . Methods Occurrences from presence/absence inventories of eight Californian endemic tree species ( P inus balfouriana [Grev.&Balf.], P inus coulteri [D.Don] , P inus muricata [D.Don.], P inus sabiniana [D.Don], Q uercus douglasii [Hook.&Arn.], Q uercus engelmannii [Greene], Q uercus lobata [Nee] and Q uercus wislizeni [A.DC.]) were used to develop eight species distribution models ( SDM s) for each species with the BIOMOD platform, and this ensemble was used to construct current suitability maps and future projections based on two global circulation models in two time periods [mid‐century: 2041–2070 and late century ( LC ): 2071–2100]. From the resulting current and future suitability maps, we calculated a bioclimatic velocity as the ratio of temporal gradient to spatial gradient. We developed and compared eight metrics of temporal exposure to climate change for mid‐ and LC for each species. Results The velocity of species exposure to climate change varies across species and time periods, even for similarly distributed species. We find weak support among the species analysed for higher velocities in exposure to climate change towards the end of the 21st century, coinciding with harsher conditions. The variation in the pace of exposure was greater among species than for climate projections considered. Main conclusions The pace of climate change exposure varies depending on period of analysis, species and the spatial extent of conservation decisions (potential ranges versus current distributions). Translating physical climatic space into a biotic climatic space helps informing conservation decisions in a given time frame. However, the influence of spatial and temporal resolution on modelled species distributions needs further consideration in order to better characterize the dynamics of exposure and species‐specific velocities.