Publication | Closed Access
Climate warming, dispersal inhibition and extinction risk
137
Citations
42
References
2007
Year
BiologyRange ShiftEngineeringTheoretical EcologyMetapopulation DynamicsJuvenile DispersalEvolutionary BiologyNatural SciencesDispersal InhibitionClimate Change EffectEcosystem AdaptationPopulation EcologyCommon LizardLatent Extinction RiskConservation BiologyClimate Change
Abstract Global warming impels species to track their shifting habitats or adapt to new conditions. Both processes are critically influenced by individual dispersal. In many animals, dispersal behaviour is plastic, but how organisms with plastic dispersal respond to climate change is basically unknown. Here, we report the analysis of interannual dispersal change from 16 years of monitoring a wild population of the common lizard, and a 12‐year manipulation of lizards' diet intended to disentangle the direct effect of temperature rise on dispersal from its effects on resource availability. We show that juvenile dispersal has declined dramatically over the last 16 years, paralleling the rise of spring temperatures during embryogenesis. A mesoscale model of metapopulation dynamics predicts that in general dispersal inhibition will elevate the extinction risk of metapopulations exposed to contrasting effects of climate warming.
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