| Literature DB >> 25576281 |
Kristoffer Hylander1, Johan Ehrlén, Miska Luoto, Eric Meineri.
Abstract
Microrefugia are sites that support populations of species when their ranges contract during unfavorable climate episodes. Here, we review and discuss two aspects relevant for microrefugia. First, distributions of different species are influenced by different climatic variables. Second, climatic variables differ in the degree of local decoupling from the regional climate. Based on this, we suggest that only species limited by climatic conditions decoupled from the regional climate can benefit from microrefugia. We argue that this restriction has received little attention in spite of its importance for microrefugia as a mechanism for species resilience (the survival of unfavorable episodes and subsequent range expansion). Presence of microrefugia will depend on both the responses of individual species to local climatic variation and how climate-forcing factors shape the correlation between local and regional climate across space and time.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25576281 PMCID: PMC4289006 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-014-0599-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Species distribution before and after range contraction; a a species with a continuous distribution all the way until a barrier (in the north in this case). b, c After a climatic deterioration (from north in this case) the species retract southward. However, the species linger on in a number of microrefugia (smaller green areas north of the main distribution area). b Many microrefugia even far away, c few microrefugia close to main distribution. When only looking at the current distribution (e.g., b and c panel) without knowledge of the past it is likely (but not necessary so) that the small isolated patches are remnants from a past wider distribution. However, it is still likely that the conditions in those places have similarities to conditions in the core distribution area
Fig. 2Variation in growing degree-days and minimum temperature across a latitudinal gradient in Sweden represented by two regions: in south (Mälardalen) and in north (central Norrland). Data are from one year from the SMHI stations. a The two regions in Sweden, b a trendline superimposed on the full data and boxes showing differences in the overlap between the two variables