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Impacts of climate change on species, populations and communities : palaeobiogeographical insights and frontiers

MacDonald, G. M. (author)
Department of Geography and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UCLA, Los Angeles
Bennett, K. D. (author)
School of Geography, Archaeology and Palaeoecology, Queen's University of Belfast
Jackson, S. T. (author)
Department of Botany and Program in Ecology, University of Wyoming, Laramie
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Parducci, Laura (author)
Uppsala universitet,Paleobiologi,Evolutionär funktionsgenomik
Smith, F.A. (author)
Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM
Smol, J. P. (author)
Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario
Willis, K. J. (author)
School of Geography, Centre for the Environment, University of Oxford, Oxford
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 (creator_code:org_t)
2008-04-01
2008
English.
In: Progress in physical geography. - : SAGE Publications. - 0309-1333 .- 1477-0296. ; 32:2, s. 139-172
  • Research review (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Understanding climate change and its potential impact on species, populations and communities is one of the most pressing questions of twenty-first-century conservation planning. Palaeobiogeographers working on Cenozoic fossil records and other lines of evidence are producing important insights into the dynamic nature of climate and the equally dynamic response of species, populations and communities. Climatic variations ranging in length from multimillennia to decades run throughout the palaeo-records of the Quaternary and earlier Cenozoic and have been shown to have had impacts ranging from changes in the genetic structure and morphology of individual species, population sizes and distributions, community composition to large-scale bio-diversity gradients. The biogeographical impacts of climate change may be due directly to the effects of alterations in temperature and moisture on species, or they may arise due to changes in factors such as disturbance regimes. Much of the recent progress in the application of palaeobiogegraphy to issues of climate change and its impacts can be attributed to developments along a number of still advancing methodological frontiers. These include increasingly finely resolved chronological resolution, more refined atmosphere-biosphere modelling, new biological and chemical techniques in reconstructing past species distributions and past climates, the development of large and readily accessible geo-referenced databases of biogeographical and climatic information, and new approaches in fossil morphological analysis and new molecular DNA techniques.

Subject headings

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Biologi -- Ekologi (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Biological Sciences -- Ecology (hsv//eng)

Keyword

Cenozoic
climate change
dendrochronology
DNA
palaeobiogeography
palaeolimnology
palynology
vertebrate palaeontology

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