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      Odonata as candidate macroecological barometers for global climate change

      Freshwater Science
      University of Chicago Press

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          Ecological and Evolutionary Responses to Recent Climate Change

          Ecological changes in the phenology and distribution of plants and animals are occurring in all well-studied marine, freshwater, and terrestrial groups. These observed changes are heavily biased in the directions predicted from global warming and have been linked to local or regional climate change through correlations between climate and biological variation, field and laboratory experiments, and physiological research. Range-restricted species, particularly polar and mountaintop species, show severe range contractions and have been the first groups in which entire species have gone extinct due to recent climate change. Tropical coral reefs and amphibians have been most negatively affected. Predator-prey and plant-insect interactions have been disrupted when interacting species have responded differently to warming. Evolutionary adaptations to warmer conditions have occurred in the interiors of species' ranges, and resource use and dispersal have evolved rapidly at expanding range margins. Observed genetic shifts modulate local effects of climate change, but there is little evidence that they will mitigate negative effects at the species level.
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            The distributions of a wide range of taxonomic groups are expanding polewards

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              Shrinking body size as an ecological response to climate change

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Freshwater Science
                Freshwater Science
                University of Chicago Press
                2161-9549
                2161-9565
                September 2015
                September 2015
                : 34
                : 3
                : 1040-1049
                Article
                10.1086/682210
                16d620c1-283c-4e57-bdb6-d1847d9b86d3
                © 2015
                History

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