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      Habitat preference of Drosophila suzukii across heterogeneous landscapes

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          Multimodel Inference: Understanding AIC and BIC in Model Selection

          K. Burnham (2004)
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            Effects of Habitat Fragmentation on Biodiversity

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              Impacts of climate warming on terrestrial ectotherms across latitude.

              The impact of anthropogenic climate change on terrestrial organisms is often predicted to increase with latitude, in parallel with the rate of warming. Yet the biological impact of rising temperatures also depends on the physiological sensitivity of organisms to temperature change. We integrate empirical fitness curves describing the thermal tolerance of terrestrial insects from around the world with the projected geographic distribution of climate change for the next century to estimate the direct impact of warming on insect fitness across latitude. The results show that warming in the tropics, although relatively small in magnitude, is likely to have the most deleterious consequences because tropical insects are relatively sensitive to temperature change and are currently living very close to their optimal temperature. In contrast, species at higher latitudes have broader thermal tolerance and are living in climates that are currently cooler than their physiological optima, so that warming may even enhance their fitness. Available thermal tolerance data for several vertebrate taxa exhibit similar patterns, suggesting that these results are general for terrestrial ectotherms. Our analyses imply that, in the absence of ameliorating factors such as migration and adaptation, the greatest extinction risks from global warming may be in the tropics, where biological diversity is also greatest.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Journal of Pest Science
                J Pest Sci
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1612-4758
                1612-4766
                March 2019
                October 8 2018
                March 2019
                : 92
                : 2
                : 485-494
                Article
                10.1007/s10340-018-1052-3
                3d03d973-0062-4c05-90fa-0a9161bed082
                © 2019

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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