Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change

The implications of climate change for terrestrial and aquatic taxa are for their dispersal pole-wards and/ or to higher altitudes as they track their climate niches. Here, bioclimatic models are developed to predict how projected climate change scenarios for a northern temperate region (Great Brita...

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Main Authors: Ruiz Navarro, A., Gillingham, P.K., Britton, J.R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24561/
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24561/1/Ruiz%20navarro%20et%20al%20climate%20change%20predictions%20GB%20fishes_Accepted%20version.pdf
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spelling ftunivbournem:oai:eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk:24561 2023-06-11T04:10:21+02:00 Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change Ruiz Navarro, A. Gillingham, P.K. Britton, J.R. 2016-09-05 application/pdf http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24561/ https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24561/1/Ruiz%20navarro%20et%20al%20climate%20change%20predictions%20GB%20fishes_Accepted%20version.pdf en eng https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24561/1/Ruiz%20navarro%20et%20al%20climate%20change%20predictions%20GB%20fishes_Accepted%20version.pdf Ruiz Navarro, A., Gillingham, P.K. and Britton, J.R., 2016. Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change. Biological Conservation, 203 (Nov), 33-42. cc_by_nc_nd_4 Article PeerReviewed 2016 ftunivbournem 2023-05-28T05:41:44Z The implications of climate change for terrestrial and aquatic taxa are for their dispersal pole-wards and/ or to higher altitudes as they track their climate niches. Here, bioclimatic models are developed to predict how projected climate change scenarios for a northern temperate region (Great Britain) shift the climate spaces (i.e. areas of suitable thermal habitat) for 12 freshwater fishes of the Salmonidae, Percidae, Esocidae and Cyprinidae families. Climate envelope models developed in Biomod2 used the current species’ distributions and their relationships with current climatic variables, and projected these onto the BCC-CSM1-1 and HadGEM2-AO climate change scenarios (low and high emissions, 2050 and 2070) in full and no dispersal scenarios. Substantial contractions in climate spaces were predicted for native salmonid fishes, with decreases of up to 78 % for Atlantic salmon Salmo salar, with these largely unchanged between the dispersal scenarios. Conversely, for the majority of cyprinid fishes, expansions were predicted, including into northern regions where they are current not present biogeographically. Only under the no dispersal scenarios did their predicted distributions remain the same as their current distributions. For all non-salmonid species, the most important climate variables in the model predictions related to temperature; for salmonids, they were a combination of temperature and shifts in annual mean precipitation. As these predictions suggest that there is potential for considerable alterations to the climate spaces of freshwater fishes in Great Britain during this century then regulatory and mitigation conservation actions should be undertaken to minimise these. Article in Journal/Newspaper Atlantic salmon Salmo salar Bournemouth University Research Online (BURO)
institution Open Polar
collection Bournemouth University Research Online (BURO)
op_collection_id ftunivbournem
language English
description The implications of climate change for terrestrial and aquatic taxa are for their dispersal pole-wards and/ or to higher altitudes as they track their climate niches. Here, bioclimatic models are developed to predict how projected climate change scenarios for a northern temperate region (Great Britain) shift the climate spaces (i.e. areas of suitable thermal habitat) for 12 freshwater fishes of the Salmonidae, Percidae, Esocidae and Cyprinidae families. Climate envelope models developed in Biomod2 used the current species’ distributions and their relationships with current climatic variables, and projected these onto the BCC-CSM1-1 and HadGEM2-AO climate change scenarios (low and high emissions, 2050 and 2070) in full and no dispersal scenarios. Substantial contractions in climate spaces were predicted for native salmonid fishes, with decreases of up to 78 % for Atlantic salmon Salmo salar, with these largely unchanged between the dispersal scenarios. Conversely, for the majority of cyprinid fishes, expansions were predicted, including into northern regions where they are current not present biogeographically. Only under the no dispersal scenarios did their predicted distributions remain the same as their current distributions. For all non-salmonid species, the most important climate variables in the model predictions related to temperature; for salmonids, they were a combination of temperature and shifts in annual mean precipitation. As these predictions suggest that there is potential for considerable alterations to the climate spaces of freshwater fishes in Great Britain during this century then regulatory and mitigation conservation actions should be undertaken to minimise these.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ruiz Navarro, A.
Gillingham, P.K.
Britton, J.R.
spellingShingle Ruiz Navarro, A.
Gillingham, P.K.
Britton, J.R.
Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change
author_facet Ruiz Navarro, A.
Gillingham, P.K.
Britton, J.R.
author_sort Ruiz Navarro, A.
title Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change
title_short Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change
title_full Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change
title_fullStr Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change
title_full_unstemmed Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change
title_sort predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in great britain due to climate change
publishDate 2016
url http://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24561/
https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24561/1/Ruiz%20navarro%20et%20al%20climate%20change%20predictions%20GB%20fishes_Accepted%20version.pdf
genre Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
Salmo salar
op_relation https://eprints.bournemouth.ac.uk/24561/1/Ruiz%20navarro%20et%20al%20climate%20change%20predictions%20GB%20fishes_Accepted%20version.pdf
Ruiz Navarro, A., Gillingham, P.K. and Britton, J.R., 2016. Predicting shifts in the climate space of freshwater fishes in Great Britain due to climate change. Biological Conservation, 203 (Nov), 33-42.
op_rights cc_by_nc_nd_4
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