Periodic Reporting for period 1 - RELOAD (Realised ecological niche and species distributions under global environmental change)
Período documentado: 2023-09-01 hasta 2025-08-31
Then, we tested whether species are systematically changing their realised niches through time under ongoing global change, hypothesizing that even bird species cannot fully track their preferred environmental conditions due to the fast rates of environmental change. To this end, we assessed how environmental and distributional shifts have led to changes in the realised breeding niches of 121 species of North American birds over the last four decades and how the magnitude of niche change was associated with species traits. We found that the niche of 57% of the bird species diverged through time as they experienced widespread environmental change, including changes in both niche breadth and position. We concluded that bird species were in general increasingly exposed to higher environmental variation throughout their distributional ranges that led to changes in their realised niches over a relatively short time span (four decades), even though the niches of some species remained stable. The differences in the magnitude of niche change were to some extent related to species traits, which provided clues about how different species respond to widespread environmental change.
Finally, with the aim of investigating how the niches and geographical distributions of species have changed over a longer temporal scale, since before the onset of major anthropogenic impacts on biodiversity, we have participated in a major international effort to mobilise historical biodiversity data. In the context of an international workshop, we identified connections between historical ecology, biodiversity research and conservation by reviewing the main types of historical sources that contain biodiversity-relevant information and discussing how they can be extracted and integrated to draw inference about species, ecosystems and socio-ecological systems. We also proposed a strategy to improve the availability and use of historical data for biodiversity research and conservation. We are now using historical data since the sixteenth century to study how the distributions and niches of many species have been changing since times preceding the Industrial Revolution, and to set more appropriate biodiversity baselines for its conservation.