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      Changes in urban plant phenology in the Pacific Northwest from 1959 to 2016: anthropogenic warming and natural oscillation

      , ,
      International Journal of Biometeorology
      Springer Nature

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          Empirical evidence for North Pacific regime shifts in 1977 and 1989

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            Influences of species, latitudes and methodologies on estimates of phenological response to global warming

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              Global warming and the disruption of plant-pollinator interactions.

              Anthropogenic climate change is widely expected to drive species extinct by hampering individual survival and reproduction, by reducing the amount and accessibility of suitable habitat, or by eliminating other organisms that are essential to the species in question. Less well appreciated is the likelihood that climate change will directly disrupt or eliminate mutually beneficial (mutualistic) ecological interactions between species even before extinctions occur. We explored the potential disruption of a ubiquitous mutualistic interaction of terrestrial habitats, that between plants and their animal pollinators, via climate change. We used a highly resolved empirical network of interactions between 1420 pollinator and 429 plant species to simulate consequences of the phenological shifts that can be expected with a doubling of atmospheric CO(2). Depending on model assumptions, phenological shifts reduced the floral resources available to 17-50% of all pollinator species, causing as much as half of the ancestral activity period of the animals to fall at times when no food plants were available. Reduced overlap between plants and pollinators also decreased diet breadth of the pollinators. The predicted result of these disruptions is the extinction of pollinators, plants and their crucial interactions.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Biometeorology
                Int J Biometeorol
                Springer Nature
                0020-7128
                1432-1254
                September 2018
                June 18 2018
                September 2018
                : 62
                : 9
                : 1675-1684
                Article
                10.1007/s00484-018-1567-6
                ae8de0ef-e549-4d51-820d-f09ba8b4bb37
                © 2018

                http://www.springer.com/tdm

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