Persistent Quaternary climate refugia are hospices for biodiversity in the Anthropocene
Stuart C. Brown (),
Tom M. L. Wigley,
Bette L. Otto-Bliesner,
Carsten Rahbek and
Damien A. Fordham ()
Additional contact information
Stuart C. Brown: University of Adelaide
Tom M. L. Wigley: University of Adelaide
Bette L. Otto-Bliesner: National Center for Atmospheric Research
Carsten Rahbek: University of Copenhagen
Damien A. Fordham: University of Adelaide
Nature Climate Change, 2020, vol. 10, issue 3, 244-248
Abstract:
Abstract Climate stability leads to high levels of speciation and reduced extinction rates, shaping species richness patterns1–3. Hotspots of species diversity often overlap with regions that experienced stable temperatures and, perhaps, variable rates of precipitation during the late Quaternary4,5. These hotspots potentially harbour many species with low vagility and small geographical ranges6, making them more vulnerable to future ecoclimatic change4,7,8. By comparing global and regional patterns of climate stability during short periods of unusually large and widespread climate changes since the Last Glacial Maximum with twenty-first-century patterns, we show that human-driven climate change will disproportionally affect biodiversity in late Quaternary climate refugia, ultimately affecting the species, communities and ecosystems that are most vulnerable to climate change. Moreover, future changes in absolute temperature will probably erode the mechanisms that are theorized to sustain biodiversity hotspots across time. These impending shifts from stable to unstable temperatures—projected for the majority of the world’s biodiversity regions—threaten to reduce the size and extent of important climatic safe havens for diversity. Where climate refugia are forecast to persist until the end of this century, temperatures in these refuges are likely to exceed the acclimation capacity of many species, making them short-term hospices for biodiversity at best7–9.
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1038/s41558-019-0682-7
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