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Article

Refining predictions of population decline at species' rear edges

Details

Citation

Vilà-Cabrera A, Premoli AC & Jump AS (2019) Refining predictions of population decline at species' rear edges. Global Change Biology, 25 (5), pp. 1549-1560. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14597

Abstract
According to broad‐scale application of biogeographical theory, widespread retractions of species’ rear edges should be seen in response to ongoing climate change. This prediction rests on the assumption that rear edge populations are ‘marginal’ since they occur at the limit of the species’ ecological tolerance and are expected to decline in performance as climate warming pushes them to extirpation. However, conflicts between observations and predictions are increasingly accumulating and little progress has been made in explaining this disparity. We argue that a revision of the concept of marginality is necessary, together with explicit testing of population decline, which is increasingly possible as data availability improves. Such action should be based on taking the population perspective across a species’ rear edge, encompassing the ecological, geographical and genetic dimensions of marginality. Refining our understanding of rear edge populations is essential to advance our ability to monitor, predict and plan for the impacts of environmental change on species range dynamics.

Keywords
biogeography; biotic interactions; climate change; land‐use; marginal; population ecology; population genetics; relict population

Journal
Global Change Biology: Volume 25, Issue 5

StatusPublished
Funders
Publication date31/05/2019
Publication date online21/02/2019
Date accepted by journal26/01/2019
URL
PublisherWiley
ISSN1354-1013
eISSN1365-2486

People (1)

Professor Alistair Jump

Professor Alistair Jump

Dean of Natural Sciences, NS Management and Support

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