4.8 Article

Range edges in heterogeneous landscapes: Integrating geographic scale and climate complexity into range dynamics

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 1055-1067

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14897

Keywords

climatic niche; microclimate; range limit theory; range shifts; topography

Funding

  1. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [1016272]
  2. National Science Foundation [DBI-1523866, DEB-1457827, DEB-1553053, DEB-1637686]

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The impacts of climate change have re-energized interest in understanding the role of climate in setting species geographic range edges. Despite the strong focus on species' distributions in ecology and evolution, defining a species range edge is theoretically and empirically difficult. The challenge of determining a range edge and its relationship to climate is in part driven by the nested nature of geography and the multidimensionality of climate, which together generate complex patterns of both climate and biotic distributions across landscapes. Because range-limiting processes occur in both geographic and climate space, the relationship between these two spaces plays a critical role in setting range limits. With both conceptual and empirical support, we argue that three factors-climate heterogeneity, collinearity among climate variables, and spatial scale-interact to shape the spatial structure of range edges along climate gradients, and we discuss several ways that these factors influence the stability of species range edges with a changing climate. We demonstrate that geographic and climate edges are often not concordant across species ranges. Furthermore, high climate heterogeneity and low climate collinearity across landscapes increase the spectrum of possible relationships between geographic and climatic space, suggesting that geographic range edges and climatic niche limits correspond less frequently than we may expect. More empirical explorations of how the complexity of real landscapes shapes the ecological and evolutionary processes that determine species range edges will advance the development of range limit theory and its applications to biodiversity conservation in the context of changing climate.

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