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Category Text Publication
Reference Category Journals
DOI 10.1890/07-1748.1
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Title (Primary) Climate change can cause spatial mismatch of trophically interacting species
Author Schweiger, O.; Settele, J.; Kudrna, O.; Klotz, S.; Kühn, I. ORCID logo
Source Titel Ecology
Year 2008
Department BZF
Volume 89
Issue 12
Page From 3472
Page To 3479
Language englisch
Data and Software links https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3300704
Keywords biotic interactions; Boloria titania; butterflies; climate envelope modeling; ecological-niche modeling; European species-distribution data; global change; host plants; Polygonum bistorta; range shift; species interactions; trophic interactions
Abstract Climate change is one of the most influential drivers of biodiversity. Species-specific differences in the reaction to climate change can become particularly important when interacting species are considered. Current studies have evidenced temporal mismatching of interacting species at single points in space, and recently two investigations showed that species interactions are relevant for their future ranges. However, so far we are not aware that the ranges of interacting species may become substantially spatially mismatched. We developed separate ecological-niche models for a monophagous butterfly (Boloria titania) and its larval host plant (Polygonum bistorta) based on monthly interpolated climate data, land-cover classes, and soil data at a 10'-grid resolution. We show that all of three chosen global-change scenarios, which cover a broad range of potential developments in demography, socio-economics, and technology during the 21st century from moderate to intermediate to maximum change, will result in a pronounced spatial mismatch between future niche spaces of these species. The butterfly may expand considerably its future range (by 124-258%) if the host plant has unlimited dispersal, but it could lose 52-75% of its current range if the host plant is not able to fill its projected ecological niche space, and 79-88% if the butterfly also is assumed to be highly dispersal limited. These findings strongly suggest that climate change has the potential to disrupt trophic interactions because co-occurring species do not necessarily react in a similar manner to global change, having important consequences at ecological and evolutionary time scales.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=1444
Schweiger, O., Settele, J., Kudrna, O., Klotz, S., Kühn, I. (2008):
Climate change can cause spatial mismatch of trophically interacting species
Ecology 89 (12), 3472 - 3479 10.1890/07-1748.1