Title of article
Global warming, elevational ranges and the vulnerability of tropical biota
Author/Authors
Laurance، نويسنده , , William F. and Carolina Useche، نويسنده , , D. and Shoo، نويسنده , , Luke P. and Herzog، نويسنده , , Sebastian K. and Kessler، نويسنده , , Michael D. Escobar، نويسنده , , Federico and Brehm، نويسنده , , Gunnar and Axmacher، نويسنده , , Jan C. and Chen، نويسنده , , I-Ching and Gلmez، نويسنده , , Lucrecia Arellano and Hietz، نويسنده , , Peter and Fiedler، نويسنده , , Konrad a، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
10
From page
548
To page
557
Abstract
Tropical species with narrow elevational ranges may be thermally specialized and vulnerable to global warming. Local studies of distributions along elevational gradients reveal small-scale patterns but do not allow generalizations among geographic regions or taxa. We critically assessed data from 249 studies of species elevational distributions in the American, African, and Asia-Pacific tropics. Of these, 150 had sufficient data quality, sampling intensity, elevational range, and freedom from serious habitat disturbance to permit robust across-study comparisons. We found four main patterns: (1) species classified as elevational specialists (upper- or lower-zone specialists) are relatively more frequent in the American than Asia-Pacific tropics, with African tropics being intermediate; (2) elevational specialists are rare on islands, especially oceanic and smaller continental islands, largely due to a paucity of upper-zone specialists; (3) a relatively high proportion of plants and ectothermic vertebrates (amphibians and reptiles) are upper-zone specialists; and (4) relatively few endothermic vertebrates (birds and mammals) are upper-zone specialists. Understanding these broad-scale trends will help identify taxa and geographic regions vulnerable to global warming and highlight future research priorities.
Keywords
Africa , biodiversity , climate change , Endemism , Elevational range , Asia-Pacific , GLOBAL WARMING , extinction , neotropics , Montane areas , Tropical ecosystems , Thermal tolerance
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Biological Conservation
Record number
1909449
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