RRC ID 64138
Author Duchenne F, Martin G, Porcher E.
Title European plants lagging behind climate change pay a climatic debt in the North, but are favoured in the South.
Journal Ecol Lett
Abstract For many species, climate change leads to range shifts that are detectable, but often insufficient to track historical climatic conditions. These lags of species range shifts behind climatic conditions are often coined "climatic debts", but the demographic costs entailed by the word "debt" have not been demonstrated. Here, we used opportunistic distribution data for c. 4000 European plant species to estimate the temporal shifts in climatic conditions experienced by these species and their occupancy trends, over the last 65 years. The resulting negative relationship observed between these two variables provides the first piece of evidence that European plants are already paying a climatic debt in Alpine, Atlantic and Boreal regions. In contrast, plants appear to benefit from a surprising "climatic bonus" in the Mediterranean. We also find that among multiple pressures faced by plants, climate change is now on par with other known drivers of occupancy trends, including eutrophication and urbanisation.
Volume 24(6)
Pages 1178-1186
Published 2021-3-22
DOI 10.1111/ele.13730
PMID 33750013
MeSH Climate Change* Ecosystem* Plants Urbanization
IF 8.665
Resource
GBIF Plant specimens in the Museum of Nature and Human Activities, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan Ibaraki Nature Museum, Vascular Plants collection Plant specimens of Kushiro City Museum