Distribution shifts of demersal fishes are important adaptive responses to warming oceans for species' persistence. Shifts are facilitated by factors such as adult movement and dispersal of pelagic larvae to normally cooler regions, where increasing ocean temperatures are now enhancing larval and juvenile survival. However, successful recruitment (i.e. larval settlement) at these new regions can be constrained by resource availability, specialisation (food, habitat) and ecological interactions (competition, predation). Evaluating the capacity or likelihood of a species to successfully shift or expand its range, provides information relevant to biodiversity conservation and fisheries management, and is particularly important for species with...
Shifts in species ranges are a global phenomenon, well known to occur in response to a changing clim...
© Inter-Research 2016. Poleward redistribution of species, facilitated by global warming, will be co...
First published: 12 June 2020Climate change is redistributing marine and terrestrial species globall...
© 2017, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany. Range shifts as a result of warming oceans call for evaluation...
Aim: Temperate marine systems globally are warming at accelerating rates, facilitating the poleward ...
Choerodon rubescens is a subtropical wrasse endemic to Western Australia which has recently recruite...
Aim Temperate marine systems globally are warming at accelerating rates...
1. Coral-reef fishes are shifting their distributions poleward in response to human-mediated ocean w...
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Range shifts of tropical marine species to temperate latitudes are pred...
Range shifts of tropical marine species to temperate latitudes are predicted to increase as a conseq...
The southeast coast of Australia is a global hotspot for increasing ocean temperatures due to climat...
Ocean warming associated with global climate change is already inducing geographic range shifts of m...
First published: 04 October 2021 OnlinePublCoral-reef fishes are shifting their distributions polewa...
© 2017, Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany. A major outcom...
1. Temperature directly affects the metabolic rate and resource requirements of ectothermic animals,...
Shifts in species ranges are a global phenomenon, well known to occur in response to a changing clim...
© Inter-Research 2016. Poleward redistribution of species, facilitated by global warming, will be co...
First published: 12 June 2020Climate change is redistributing marine and terrestrial species globall...
© 2017, Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany. Range shifts as a result of warming oceans call for evaluation...
Aim: Temperate marine systems globally are warming at accelerating rates, facilitating the poleward ...
Choerodon rubescens is a subtropical wrasse endemic to Western Australia which has recently recruite...
Aim Temperate marine systems globally are warming at accelerating rates...
1. Coral-reef fishes are shifting their distributions poleward in response to human-mediated ocean w...
© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Range shifts of tropical marine species to temperate latitudes are pred...
Range shifts of tropical marine species to temperate latitudes are predicted to increase as a conseq...
The southeast coast of Australia is a global hotspot for increasing ocean temperatures due to climat...
Ocean warming associated with global climate change is already inducing geographic range shifts of m...
First published: 04 October 2021 OnlinePublCoral-reef fishes are shifting their distributions polewa...
© 2017, Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany. A major outcom...
1. Temperature directly affects the metabolic rate and resource requirements of ectothermic animals,...
Shifts in species ranges are a global phenomenon, well known to occur in response to a changing clim...
© Inter-Research 2016. Poleward redistribution of species, facilitated by global warming, will be co...
First published: 12 June 2020Climate change is redistributing marine and terrestrial species globall...