2008
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2008.0878
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Birds are tracking climate warming, but not fast enough

Abstract: Range shifts of many species are now documented as a response to global warming. But whether these observed changes are occurring fast enough remains uncertain and hardly quantifiable. Here, we developed a simple framework to measure change in community composition in response to climate warming. This framework is based on a community temperature index (CTI ) that directly reflects, for a given species assemblage, the balance between low-and high-temperature dwelling species. Using data from the French breedin… Show more

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Cited by 445 publications
(675 citation statements)
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“…Yet, only a quarter of these species increased their area of geographical distribution, supposedly because positive responses to climate warming were outweighed by negative effects of habitat fragmentation, especially for less mobile specialists (Travis 2003). Other empirical studies (Anderson et al 2009;Devictor et al 2008;Schwartz et al 2001) confirm for other species groups that a response to climate change may be hampered by habitat fragmentation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Yet, only a quarter of these species increased their area of geographical distribution, supposedly because positive responses to climate warming were outweighed by negative effects of habitat fragmentation, especially for less mobile specialists (Travis 2003). Other empirical studies (Anderson et al 2009;Devictor et al 2008;Schwartz et al 2001) confirm for other species groups that a response to climate change may be hampered by habitat fragmentation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Variable and flexible strategies must be developed to incorporate different dynamics across many scales (Ejrnaes et al 2002;Pärtel et al 2005). Although the EU Habitats Directive recognises priority habitats and species to be conserved (Annex I and II), it does not consider that ecosystems can change through succession, inherent ecosystem dynamics (Evans 2006;Hobbs et al 2006), land use and climate change (Devictor et al 2008). Indeed, site-based conservation strategies, whether local or European such as the Emerald Network (that includes Natura 2000), may be inadequate under a changing climate, whereby a shifting climate space could result in species extinctions within, and migrations from, the designated PAs to areas not managed for conservation.…”
Section: Rationale For the Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Adaptation can occur predominantly in one particular dimension, but generally involves all of them. When populations cannot adapt in one of these dimensions or cannot adapt fast enough (Devictor et al, 2008;Visser, 2008), a species may be driven to extinction, even though today's projections are probably overestimated (Botkin et al, 2007) due to assumptions and limitations of current forecasting methods (refer to Thuiller, 2004, andThuiller et al, 2008, for the spatial dimension). .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%