4.7 Article

Early indicators of change: divergent climate envelopes between tree life stages imply range shifts in the western United States

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 168-180

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/geb.12109

Keywords

Biogeography; climate envelope models; life stages; range shift; tree regeneration; western United States

Funding

  1. University of Wyoming
  2. US Geological Survey, Southwest Biological Science Center [G11AC20366]
  3. NSF [1202800]
  4. Div Of Biological Infrastructure
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences [1202800] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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AimTo determine if differences in climate envelopes for six coniferous tree species and two life stages (trees and seedlings) suggest a potential for species range contractions, expansions or shifts in response to climate change and if these patterns differ between subalpine (i.e. cool-climate) and montane (i.e. warm-climate) species. LocationThe dry domain of the western United States. MethodsUsing data from the Forest Inventory and Analysis National Program, we quantified the relationship between probability of occurrence and climate for adults and seedlings of each species with a Bayesian logistic regression. Assuming that distributional differences between life stages highlight shifting regeneration patterns relative to adult trees, we assessed differences between seedlings and adult trees based on predicted probabilities of occurrence and climate envelope boundaries. ResultsDifferences between occurrence probabilities for seedlings and adults were greatest for montane, as opposed to subalpine, species and along range margins, especially in the southern and western portions of the study area. Climate envelope boundaries of seedlings differed from adult trees most frequently in montane species and often suggested range contractions or range shifts, as opposed to range expansion. Main conclusionsOur results indicated that climate-induced contractions and shifts in seedling distribution in response to recent change are already under way and are particularly severe in montane tree species. While adult trees may persist for hundreds of years without significant regeneration, tree species ranges will eventually contract where tree regeneration fails.

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