Polewards expansions of species' distributions have been attributed to climate warming, but evidence for climate-driven local extinctions at warm (low latitude/elevation) boundaries is equivocal. We surveyed the four species of butterflies that reach their southern limits in Britain. We visited 421 sites where the species had been recorded previously to determine whether recent extinctions were primarily due to climate or habitat changes. Coenonympha tullia had become extinct at 52% of study sites and all losses were associated with habitat degradation. Aricia artaxerxes was extinct from 50% of sites, with approximately one-third to half of extinctions associated with climate-related factors and the remainder with habitat loss. For Erebia a...
The ecological impacts of global warming are clear, with changes in species’ ranges, interactions be...
1. The ranges of many species have expanded in cool regions but contracted at warm margins in respon...
There is ample evidence that the ongoing climate change has large impacts on the distribution of spe...
Polewards expansions of species' distributions have been attributed to climate warming, but evidence...
We analyse distribution records for 51 British butterfly species to investigate altitudinal and lati...
Climate warming threatens the survival of species at their warm, trailing‐edge range boundaries but ...
Habitat degradation and climate change are thought to be altering the distributions and abundances ...
As the climate changes, we expect species geographic ranges to shift to higher latitudes and elevati...
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...
The combination of climate change and anthropogenic land use changes are having a substantial effect...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
1. Prediction of species distributions in an altered climate requires knowledge on how global- and l...
Until recently, published evidence for the responses of species to climate change had revealed more ...
The ecological impacts of global warming are clear, with changes in species’ ranges, interactions be...
1. The ranges of many species have expanded in cool regions but contracted at warm margins in respon...
There is ample evidence that the ongoing climate change has large impacts on the distribution of spe...
Polewards expansions of species' distributions have been attributed to climate warming, but evidence...
We analyse distribution records for 51 British butterfly species to investigate altitudinal and lati...
Climate warming threatens the survival of species at their warm, trailing‐edge range boundaries but ...
Habitat degradation and climate change are thought to be altering the distributions and abundances ...
As the climate changes, we expect species geographic ranges to shift to higher latitudes and elevati...
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...
The combination of climate change and anthropogenic land use changes are having a substantial effect...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
Current climate change may be a major threat to global biodiversity, but the extent of species loss ...
1. Prediction of species distributions in an altered climate requires knowledge on how global- and l...
Until recently, published evidence for the responses of species to climate change had revealed more ...
The ecological impacts of global warming are clear, with changes in species’ ranges, interactions be...
1. The ranges of many species have expanded in cool regions but contracted at warm margins in respon...
There is ample evidence that the ongoing climate change has large impacts on the distribution of spe...