Reimagining species on the move across space and time

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Abstract

Climate change is already leaving a broad footprint of impacts on biodiversity, from an individual caterpillar emerging earlier in spring to dominant plant communities migrating poleward. Despite the various modes of how species are on the move, we primarily document shifting species along only one gradient (e.g., latitude or phenology) and along one dimension (space or time). Here we present a unifying framework for integrating the study of species on the move over space and time and from micro to macro scales. Future conservation planning and natural resource management will depend on our ability to use this framework to improve understanding, attribution, and prediction of species on the move. DOI https://doi.org/10.32942/X2G902 Subjects Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

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Dates Published: 2024-10-29 07:12 Last Updated: 2025-03-18 09:43 Older Versions License CC BY Attribution 4.0 International Additional Metadata Language: English

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