Authors
Kenneth J Feeley, Miles R Silman, Mark B Bush, William Farfan, Karina Garcia Cabrera, Yadvinder Malhi, Patrick Meir, Norma Salinas Revilla, Mireya Natividad Raurau Quisiyupanqui, Sassan Saatchi
Publication date
2011/4
Journal
Journal of Biogeography
Volume
38
Issue
4
Pages
783-791
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Aim  Climate change causes shifts in species distributions, or ‘migrations’. Despite the centrality of species distributions to biodiversity conservation, the demonstrated large migration of tropical plant species in response to climate change in the past, and the expected sensitivity of species distributions to modern climate change, no study has tested for modern species migrations in tropical plants. Here we conduct a first test of the hypothesis that increasing temperatures are causing tropical trees to migrate to cooler areas.
Location  Tropical Andes biodiversity hotspot, south‐eastern Peru, South America.
Methods  We use data from repeated (2003/04–2007/08) censuses of 14 1‐ha forest inventory plots spanning an elevational gradient from 950 to 3400 m in Manu National Park in south‐eastern Peru, to characterize changes in the elevational distributions of 38 Andean tree genera. We also analyse changes in …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
KJ Feeley, MR Silman, MB Bush, W Farfan… - Journal of Biogeography, 2011