Habitat degradation and climate change are thought to be altering the distributions and abundances of animals and plants throughout the world, but their combined impacts have not been assessed for any species assemblage(1-4). Here we evaluated changes in the distribution sizes and abundances of 46 species of butterflies that approach their northern climatic range margins in Britain-where changes in climate and habitat are opposing forces. These insects might be expected to have responded positively to climate warming over the past 30 years, yet three-quarters of them declined: negative responses to habitat loss have outweighed positive responses to climate warming. Half of the species that were mobile and habitat generalists incre...
Species-energy theory indicates that recent climate warming should have driven increases in species ...
As the climate changes, we expect species geographic ranges to shift to higher latitudes and elevati...
Different vegetation types can generate variation in microclimates at local scales, potentially buff...
Climate warming threatens the survival of species at their warm, trailing‐edge range boundaries but ...
We analyse distribution records for 51 British butterfly species to investigate altitudinal and lati...
The combination of climate change and anthropogenic land use changes are having a substantial effect...
Polewards expansions of species' distributions have been attributed to climate warming, but evidence...
Evidence of anthropogenic global climate change is accumulating, but its potential consequences for ...
The ecological impacts of global warming are clear, with changes in species’ ranges, interactions be...
We analyse distribution records for 51 British butterfly species to investigate altitudinal and lati...
Populations at the high latitude edge of species’ geographical ranges are thought to show larger int...
Changes in the abundance and distribution of individual species have been widely documented in Brita...
Habitat degradation and climate change are thought to be altering the distributions and abundances o...
There is little consensus as to why there is so much variation in the rates at which different speci...
Changes in the abundance and distribution of individual species have been widely documented in Brita...
Species-energy theory indicates that recent climate warming should have driven increases in species ...
As the climate changes, we expect species geographic ranges to shift to higher latitudes and elevati...
Different vegetation types can generate variation in microclimates at local scales, potentially buff...
Climate warming threatens the survival of species at their warm, trailing‐edge range boundaries but ...
We analyse distribution records for 51 British butterfly species to investigate altitudinal and lati...
The combination of climate change and anthropogenic land use changes are having a substantial effect...
Polewards expansions of species' distributions have been attributed to climate warming, but evidence...
Evidence of anthropogenic global climate change is accumulating, but its potential consequences for ...
The ecological impacts of global warming are clear, with changes in species’ ranges, interactions be...
We analyse distribution records for 51 British butterfly species to investigate altitudinal and lati...
Populations at the high latitude edge of species’ geographical ranges are thought to show larger int...
Changes in the abundance and distribution of individual species have been widely documented in Brita...
Habitat degradation and climate change are thought to be altering the distributions and abundances o...
There is little consensus as to why there is so much variation in the rates at which different speci...
Changes in the abundance and distribution of individual species have been widely documented in Brita...
Species-energy theory indicates that recent climate warming should have driven increases in species ...
As the climate changes, we expect species geographic ranges to shift to higher latitudes and elevati...
Different vegetation types can generate variation in microclimates at local scales, potentially buff...