Publication | Closed Access
Impact of a Century of Climate Change on Small-Mammal Communities in Yosemite National Park, USA
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Citations
20
References
2008
Year
EngineeringLand-use ChangeHuman-wildlife RelationshipHabitat ManagementSocial SciencesWildlife EcologyBiogeographyMammalogyConservation BiologyClimate ChangeYosemite National ParkGeographyGlobal WarmingClimate Change EffectElevation GradientsSmall-mammal CommunitiesHigh ElevationWildlife ManagementRange ShiftSpatial Ecology
We provide a century-scale view of small-mammal responses to global warming, without confounding effects of land-use change, by repeating Grinnell's early-20th century survey across a 3000-meter-elevation gradient that spans Yosemite National Park, California, USA. Using occupancy modeling to control for variation in detectability, we show substantial ( approximately 500 meters on average) upward changes in elevational limits for half of 28 species monitored, consistent with the observed approximately 3 degrees C increase in minimum temperatures. Formerly low-elevation species expanded their ranges and high-elevation species contracted theirs, leading to changed community composition at mid- and high elevations. Elevational replacement among congeners changed because species' responses were idiosyncratic. Though some high-elevation species are threatened, protection of elevation gradients allows other species to respond via migration.
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