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Ecological barriers mediate spatiotemporal shifts of bird communities at a continental scale

Authors :
Marjakangas, Emma-Liina
Bosco, Laura
Versluijs, Martijn
Xu, Yanjie
Santangeli, Andrea
Holopainen, Sari
Mäkeläinen, Sanna
Herrando, Sergi
Keller, Verena
Voříšek, Petr
Brotons, Lluís
Johnston, Alison
Princé, Karine
Willis, Stephen G
Aghababyan, Karen
Ajder, Vitalie
Balmer, Dawn E
Bino, Taulant
Boyla, Kerem Ali
Chodkiewicz, Tomasz
Del Moral, Juan Carlos
Mazal, Vlatka Dumbović
Ferrarini, Alessandro
Godinho, Carlos
Gustin, Marco
Kalyakin, Mikhail
Knaus, Peter
Kuzmenko, Tatiana
Lindström, Åke
Maxhuni, Qenan
Molina, Blas
Nagy, Károly
Radišić, Dimitrije
Rajkov, Saša
Rajković, Draženko Z
Raudoniki, Liutauras
Sjeničić, Jovica
Stoychev, Stoycho
Szép, Tibor
Teufelbauer, Norbert
Ursul, Silvia
van Turnhout, Chris A M
Velevski, Metodija
Vikstrøm, Thomas
Wilk, Tomasz
Voltzit, Olga
Øien, Ingar Jostein
Sudfeldt, Christoph
Gerlach, Bettina
Lehikoinen, Aleksi
University of St Andrews. Arctic Research Centre
University of St Andrews. Statistics
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Funding: This study was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant P2BEP3_195232) and by the Academy of Finland (project 323527 and project 329251). Species' range shifts and local extinctions caused by climate change lead to community composition changes. At large spatial scales, ecological barriers, such as biome boundaries, coastlines, and elevation, can influence a community's ability to shift in response to climate change. Yet, ecological barriers are rarely considered in climate change studies, potentially hindering predictions of biodiversity shifts. We used data from two consecutive European breeding bird atlases to calculate the geographic distance and direction between communities in the 1980s and their compositional best match in the 2010s and modeled their response to barriers. The ecological barriers affected both the distance and direction of bird community composition shifts, with coastlines and elevation having the strongest influence. Our results underscore the relevance of combining ecological barriers and community shift projections for identifying the forces hindering community adjustments under global change. Notably, due to (macro)ecological barriers, communities are not able to track their climatic niches, which may lead to drastic changes, and potential losses, in community compositions in the future. Publisher PDF

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od.......901..6902c51355bb14713c189f703c764e7c