Autor: |
Gilbert, Sophie L.1 (AUTHOR) sophiegilbert@uidaho.edu, Broadley, Kate2 (AUTHOR), Doran‐Myers, Darcy2 (AUTHOR), Droghini, Amanda2 (AUTHOR), Haines, Jessica A.2 (AUTHOR), Hämäläinen, Anni3 (AUTHOR), Lamb, Clayton T.2 (AUTHOR), Neilson, Eric W.2 (AUTHOR), Boutin, Stan2 (AUTHOR) |
Předmět: |
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Zdroj: |
Conservation Biology. Feb2020, Vol. 34 Issue 1, p289-292. 4p. 1 Diagram. |
Abstrakt: |
Species protection via geographically fixed conservation actions is a primary tool for maintenance of biodiversity worldwide (Pimm et al. [22]). Principles of conservation prioritization could be used to reallocate resources from climate-change unviable to climate-change viable populations within each at-risk species' shifting climate envelopes, which we term trailing-edge triage. Determining which populations to deprioritize requires species-specific, range-wide analysis of climate vulnerability to identify climate-change unviable and viable populations so that resources can be reallocated. Climate change, species range shifts and dispersal corridors: an evaluation of spatial conservation models. [Extracted from the article] |
Databáze: |
GreenFILE |
Externí odkaz: |
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