Postglacial migration supplements climate in determining plant species ranges in Europe

The influence of dispersal limitation on species ranges remains controversial. Considering the dramatic impacts of the last glaciation in Europe, species might not have tracked climate changes through time and, as a consequence, their present-day ranges might be in disequilibrium with current climat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 2011-12, Vol.278 (1725), p.3644-3653
Hauptverfasser: Normand, Signe, Ricklefs, Robert E, Skov, Flemming, Bladt, Jesper, Tackenberg, Oliver, Svenning, Jens-Christian
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container_issue 1725
container_start_page 3644
container_title Proceedings of the Royal Society. B, Biological sciences
container_volume 278
creator Normand, Signe
Ricklefs, Robert E
Skov, Flemming
Bladt, Jesper
Tackenberg, Oliver
Svenning, Jens-Christian
description The influence of dispersal limitation on species ranges remains controversial. Considering the dramatic impacts of the last glaciation in Europe, species might not have tracked climate changes through time and, as a consequence, their present-day ranges might be in disequilibrium with current climate. For 1016 European plant species, we assessed the relative importance of current climate and limited postglacial migration in determining species ranges using regression modelling and explanatory variables representing climate, and a novel species-specific hind-casting-based measure of accessibility to postglacial colonization. Climate was important for all species, while postglacial colonization also constrained the ranges of more than 50 per cent of the species. On average, climate explained five times more variation in species ranges than accessibility, but accessibility was the strongest determinant for one-sixth of the species. Accessibility was particularly important for species with limited long-distance dispersal ability, with southern glacial ranges, seed plants compared with ferns, and small-range species in southern Europe. In addition, accessibility explained one-third of the variation in species' disequilibrium with climate as measured by the realized/potential range size ratio computed with niche modelling. In conclusion, we show that although climate is the dominant broad-scale determinant of European plant species ranges, constrained dispersal plays an important supplementary role.
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Accessibility was particularly important for species with limited long-distance dispersal ability, with southern glacial ranges, seed plants compared with ferns, and small-range species in southern Europe. In addition, accessibility explained one-third of the variation in species' disequilibrium with climate as measured by the realized/potential range size ratio computed with niche modelling. 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subjects Animal migration behavior
climate
Climate Change
Climate models
Climatic zones
Disequilibrium
Ecological Niche Modelling
Ecosystem
Europe
ferns and fern allies
Geography
glaciation
Hind-Casting
Ice Age Refugia
Ice Cover
Indexing in process
interspecific variation
Market disequilibrium
Materials
Modeling
Models, Theoretical
Paleoclimatology
Plant Species Distributions
Plants
Population Dynamics
Postglacial Recolonization
Regression Analysis
Species
Species Specificity
Spermatophyta
Spermatophytina
title Postglacial migration supplements climate in determining plant species ranges in Europe
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