학술논문

Climate change causes upslope shifts and mountaintop extirpations in a tropical bird community.
Document Type
Article
Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 11/20/2018, Vol. 115 Issue 47, p11982-11987. 6p.
Subject
*GLOBAL warming
*CLIMATE change
*BIOLOGICAL extinction
*MOUNTAIN biodiversity
*BIRDS
Language
ISSN
0027-8424
Abstract
Montane species worldwide are shifting upslope in response to recent temperature increases. These upslope shifts are predicted to lead to mountaintop extinctions of species that live only near mountain summits, but empirical examples of populations that have disappeared are sparse. We show that recent warming constitutes an "escalator to extinction" for birds on a remote Peruvian mountain--high-elevation species have declined in both range size and abundance, and several previously common mountaintop residents have disappeared from the local community. Our findings support projections that warming will likely drive widespread extirpations and extinctions of high-elevation taxa in the tropical Andes. Such climate change-driven mountaintop extirpations may be more likely in the tropics, where temperature seems to exert a stronger control on species' range limits than in the temperate zone. In contrast, we show that lowland bird species at our study site are expanding in range size as they shift their upper limits upslope and may thus benefit from climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]