Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Biodiversity" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 The Bug-Network (BugNet): A Global Experimental Network Testing the Effects of Invertebrate Herbivores and Fungal Pathogens on Plant Communities and Ecosystem Function in Open Ecosystems Kempel A; Adamidis GC; Anadón JD; Atkinson J; Auge H; Avtzis D; Bachelot B; Bashirzadeh M; Bota JL; Classen A; Constantinou I; Crawley M; de Bellis T; Dostal P; Ebeling A; Eisenhauer N; Eldridge DJ; Encina G; Estrada C; Everingham S; Fanin N; Feng Y; Gaspar M; Gooriah L; Graff P; Montalván EG; Montalván PG; Hartke TR; Huang L; Jochum M; Kaljund K; Karmiris I; Koorem K; Korell L; Laine AL; le Provost G; Lessard JP; Liu M; Liu X; Liu Y; Llancabure J; Loïez S; Loydi A; Marrero H; Gockel S; Montoya A; Münzbergo 41080499
ENCS
2 No species left behind: borrowing strength to map data-deficient species Sharma S; Winner K; Pollock LJ; Thorson JT; Mäkinen J; Merow C; Pedersen EJ; Chefira KF; Portmann JM; Iannarilli F; Beery S; de Lutio R; Jetz W; 40571432
BIOLOGY
3 Variation in flower morphology associated with higher bee diversity in urban green spaces Sinno S; MacInnis G; Lessard JP; Ziter CD; 39609370
BIOLOGY
4 Global assessment of effective population sizes: Consistent taxonomic differences in meeting the 50/500 rule Clarke SH; Lawrence ER; Matte JM; Gallagher BK; Salisbury SJ; Michaelides SN; Koumrouyan R; Ruzzante DE; Grant JWA; Fraser DJ; 38613250
BIOLOGY
5 Reciprocal inhibition and competitive hierarchy cause negative biodiversity-ecosystem function relationships D' Andrea R; Khattar G; Koffel T; Frans VF; Bittleston LS; Cuellar-Gempeler C; 38193391
BIOLOGY
6 Variation in a Darwin Wasp (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae) Community along an Elevation Gradient in a Tropical Biodiversity Hotspot: Implications for Ecology and Conservation Flinte V; Pádua DG; Durand EM; Hodgin C; Khattar G; da Silveira LFL; Fernandes DRR; Sääksjärvi IE; Monteiro RF; Macedo MV; Mayhew PJ; 37999060
BIOLOGY
7 Macrogenetics reveals multifaceted influences of environmental variation on vertebrate population genetic diversity across the Americas Lawrence ER; Pedersen EJ; Fraser DJ; 37365672
BIOLOGY
8 Identifying climate change refugia for South American biodiversity Sales LP; Pires MM; 36919472
BIOLOGY
9 Decline in wild bee species richness associated with honey bee (Apis mellifera L.) abundance in an urban ecosystem MacInnis G; Normandin E; Ziter CD; 36755869
BIOLOGY
10 The effect of past defaunation on ranges, niches, and future biodiversity forecasts Sales LP; Galetti M; Carnaval A; Monsarrat S; Svenning JC; Pires MM; 35246902
BIOLOGY
11 Diversity from genes to ecosystems: A unifying framework to study variation across biological metrics and scales. Gaggiotti OE, Chao A, Peres-Neto P, Chiu CH, Edwards C, Fortin MJ, Jost L, Richards CM, Selkoe KA 30026805
BIOLOGY
12 Biodiversity Observations Miner: A web application to unlock primary biodiversity data from published literature. Muñoz G, Kissling WD, van Loon EE 30692868
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Identifying climate change refugia for South American biodiversity
Authors:Sales LPPires MM
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36919472/
DOI:10.1111/cobi.14087
Publication:Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology
Keywords:Amazon faunaAnthropocene museumadaptación al cambio climáticobiodiversity forecastingbiogeografíabiogeographyclimate change adaptationcompensaciones ecológicasconservation prioritizationecological trade-offsfauna amazónicaforest relictsinternational policiesmodelos de distribución de especiesmuseo del Antropocenopolíticas internacionalespredicciones de biodiversidadpriorización de la conservaciónspecies distribution modelingvestigios forestales
PMID:36919472 Category: Date Added:2023-03-15
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Animal Biology, Institute of Biology, University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Campinas, São Paulo, Brazil.
2 Department of Biology, Faculty of Arts and Science, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Description:

Refugia-based conservation strategies offer long-term effectiveness and minimize uncertainty on strategies for climate change adaptation. Here, we use distribution modelling to identify climate change refugia for 617 terrestrial mammals and quantify the role of protected areas in safeguarding these zones across South America. Moist tropical forests located in high-elevation areas with complex topography concentrated the highest local diversity of species refugia, although regionally important refugia centers were also found elsewhere. Andean Amazon forests were revealed as "Anthropocene museums", hosting climate change refugia for more than half the continental species' pool and up to 87 species locally (17×17 km2 grid cell). The highland zones of the Southern Atlantic Forest also included megadiverse refugia, safeguarding up to 76 species per cell. Almost half of the species that may find refugia in the Atlantic Forest will do so in a single region - the Serra do Mar and Serra do Espinhaço. Most of the refugia highlighted here, however, are not covered by protected areas, which may shelter less than 6% of the total area of climate change refugia, leaving 129 to 237 species with no refugia inside the territorial limits of protected areas of any kind. Those results reveal a dismal scenario on the level of refugia protection in some of the most biodiverse regions of the world. Nonetheless, because refugia areas tend to be located in high-elevation, topographically complex and remote areas, with lower economic pressure, formally protecting them may require a comparatively modest investment. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.





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