نتایج جستجو برای: habitat change

تعداد نتایج: 639317  

2011
Becky K. Kerns Bridgett J. Naylor Michelle Buonopane Catherine G. Parks Brendan Rogers

Tamarisk species are shrubs or small trees considered by some to be among the most aggressively invasive and potentially detrimental exotic plants in the United States. Although extensively studied in the southern and interior west, northwestern (Oregon, Washington, and Idaho) distribution and habitat information for tamarisk is either limited or lacking. We obtained distribution data for the n...

Journal: :Environmental management 2007
Stephanie A Snyder James R Miller Adam M Skibbe Robert G Haight

Habitat protection for grassland birds is an important component of open space land acquisition in suburban Chicago. We use optimization decision models to develop recommendations for land protection and analyze tradeoffs between alternative goals. One goal is to acquire (and restore if necessary) as much grassland habitat as possible for a given budget. Because a viable habitat for grassland b...

2016
Anne Savage Len Thomas Katie L Feilen Darren Kidney Luis H Soto Mackenzie Pearson Felix S Medina German Emeris Rosamira R Guillen

Numerous animals have declining populations due to habitat loss, illegal wildlife trade, and climate change. The cotton-top tamarin (Saguinus oedipus) is a Critically Endangered primate species, endemic to northwest Colombia, threatened by deforestation and illegal trade. In order to assess the current state of this species, we analyzed changes in the population of cotton-top tamarins and its h...

2014
Saskia A. Otto Rabea Diekmann Juha Flinkman Georgs Kornilovs Christian Möllmann

Understanding and predicting species distribution in space and time and consequently community structure and dynamics is an important issue in ecology, and particularly in climate change research. A crucial factor determining the composition and dynamics of animal populations is habitat heterogeneity, i.e., the number of structural elements in a given locality. In the marine pelagic environment...

Journal: :American journal of primatology 2014
Víctor Arroyo-Rodríguez Lenore Fahrig

With accelerated deforestation and fragmentation through the tropics, assessing the impact that landscape spatial changes may have on biodiversity is paramount, as this information is required to design and implement effective management and conservation plans. Primates are expected to be particularly dependent on the landscape context; yet, our understanding on this topic is limited as the maj...

Human-induced climate change, with such rapid and continuing global-scale warming, is historically unprecedented and signifies that human pressures on Earth’s life-supporting natural systems now exceed the planet’s bio-geo-capacity. The risks from climate change to health and survival in populations are diverse, as are the social and political ramifications. Although attributing observed health...

2016
Kate M. Wilkin David D. Ackerly Scott L. Stephens Sylvie Gauthier

Early climate change ideas warned of widespread species extinctions. As scientists have probed more deeply into species responses, a more nuanced perspective emerged indicating that some species may persist in microrefugia (refugia), including in mountainous terrain. Refugia are habitats that buffer climate changes and allow species to persist in—and to potentially expand under—changing environ...

2012
Jenny A. Hodgson Chris D. Thomas Calvin Dytham Justin M. J. Travis Stephen J. Cornell

Species may be driven extinct by climate change, unless their populations are able to shift fast enough to track regions of suitable climate. Shifting will be faster as the proportion of suitable habitat in the landscape increases. However, it is not known how the spatial arrangement of habitat will affect the speed of range advance, especially when habitat is scarce, as is the case for many sp...

2014
Dana H. Ikeda Kevin C. Grady Stephen M. Shuster Thomas G. Whitham

We examined the impact climate change (CC) will have on the availability of climatically suitable habitat for three native and one exotic riparian species. Due to its increasing prevalence in arid regions throughout the western US, we predicted that an exotic species, Tamarix, would have the greatest increase in suitable habitat relative to native counterparts under CC. We used an ecological ni...

2015
Kendra L. Garner Michelle Y. Chang Matthew T. Fulda Jonathan A. Berlin Rachel E. Freed Melissa M. Soo-Hoo Dave L. Revell Makihiko Ikegami Lorraine E. Flint Alan L. Flint Bruce E. Kendall

Local increases in sea level caused by global climate change pose a significant threat to the persistence of many coastal plant species through exacerbating inundation, flooding, and erosion. In addition to sea level rise (SLR), climate changes in the form of air temperature and precipitation regimes will also alter habitats of coastal plant species. Although numerous studies have analyzed the ...

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