Published March 3, 2021 | Version v1
Software Open

Date From: The myriad of complex demographic responses of terrestrial mammals to climate change and gaps of knowledge: A global analysis

  • 1. Centre for Research on Ecology and Forestry Applications
  • 2. University of Sheffield
  • 3. University of Ulm
  • 4. University of Southern Denmark
  • 5. German Center for Integrative Biodiversity Research
  • 6. Lincoln Zoo*
  • 7. University of Canberra
  • 8. Trinity College Dublin
  • 9. University of Zurich
  • 10. Case Western Reserve University
  • 11. Nordregio
  • 12. University of Oxford

Description

Approximately 25% of mammals are currently threatened with extinction, a risk that is amplified under climate change. Species persistence under climate change is determined by the combined effects of climatic factors on multiple demographic rates (survival, development, reproduction), and hence, population dynamics. Thus, to quantify which species and regions on Earth are most vulnerable to climate-driven extinction, a global understanding of how different demographic rates respond to climate is urgently needed.  Here, we perform a systematic review of literature on demographic responses to climate, focusing on terrestrial mammals, for which extensive demographic data are available.  To assess the full spectrum of responses, we synthesize information from studies that quantitatively link climate to multiple demographic rates. We find only 106 such studies, corresponding to 87 mammal species. These 87 species constitute < 1% of all terrestrial mammals. Our synthesis reveals a strong mismatch between the locations of demographic studies and the regions and taxa currently recognized as most vulnerable to climate change. Surprisingly, for most mammals and regions sensitive to climate change, holistic demographic responses to climate remain unknown. At the same time, we reveal that filling this knowledge gap is critical as the effects of climate change will operate via complex demographic mechanisms: a vast majority of mammal populations display projected increases in some demographic rates but declines in others, often depending on the specific environmental context, complicating simple projections of population fates.  Assessments of population viability under climate change are in critical need to gather data that account for multiple demographic responses, and coordinated actions to assess demography holistically should be prioritized for mammals and other taxa.

Notes

ReadMe File uploaded

Files

Files (9.7 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:e6616ea546d972d12d9d8ea45bc1f2ae
9.7 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is source of
10.5061/dryad.hmgqnk9g7 (DOI)