Authors
Alexa Fredston, Malin Pinsky, Rebecca L Selden, Cody Szuwalski, James T Thorson, Steven D Gaines, Benjamin S Halpern
Publication date
2021/7
Journal
Global Change Biology
Volume
27
Issue
13
Pages
3145-3156
Description
Understanding the dynamics of species range edges in the modern era is key to addressing fundamental biogeographic questions about abiotic and biotic drivers of species distributions. Range edges are where colonization and extirpation processes unfold, and so these dynamics are also important to understand for effective natural resource management and conservation. However, few studies to date have analyzed time series of range edge positions in the context of climate change, in part because range edges are difficult to detect. We first quantified positions for 165 range edges of marine fishes and invertebrates from three U.S. continental shelf regions using up to five decades of survey data and a spatiotemporal model to account for sampling and measurement variability. We then analyzed whether those range edges maintained their edge thermal niche—the temperatures found at the range edge position …
Total citations
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