Anticipating the effect of climate change on biodiversity, in particular on changes in community composition, is crucial for adaptive ecosystem management but remains a critical knowledge gap. Here, we use climate velocity trajectories, together with information on thermal tolerances and habitat preferences, to project changes in global patterns of marine species richness and community composition under IPCC Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) 4.5 and 8.5. Our simple, intuitive approach emphasizes climate connectivity, and enables us to model over 12 times as many species as previous studies. We find that range expansions prevail over contractions for both RCPs up to 2100, producing a net local increase in richness globally, and te...
Marine protected areas (MPAs) represent a mature approach for conserving biodiversity, but a major w...
© 2019 Rapid anthropogenic climate change is a major threat to ocean biodiversity, increasing the ch...
Marine environments have increased in temperature by an average of 1°C since pre-industrial (1850) t...
Anticipating the effect of climate change on biodiversity, in particular on changes in community com...
The reorganization of patterns of species diversity driven by anthropogenic climate change, and the ...
There is a growing literature describing responses in the abundance, and distribution of species to ...
In a changing climate, organisms can either adapt to the new environment or adopt new geographical d...
Climate change is reshaping global biodiversity as species respond to changing temperatures. However...
Driven by climate change, marine biodiversity is undergoing a phase of rapid change that has proven ...
Ambient temperature is very likely the most important environmental factor determining the distribut...
Aim: The dispersal and distribution patterns of many marine organisms are driven by oceanographic co...
The reorganization of patterns of species diversity driven by anthropogenic climate change, and the ...
Climate change involves shifts in environmental conditions which will affect the distribution and bi...
The paradigm that climate change will alter global marine biodiversity is one of the most widely acc...
Climate change can impact the pattern of marine biodiversity through changes in species' distributio...
Marine protected areas (MPAs) represent a mature approach for conserving biodiversity, but a major w...
© 2019 Rapid anthropogenic climate change is a major threat to ocean biodiversity, increasing the ch...
Marine environments have increased in temperature by an average of 1°C since pre-industrial (1850) t...
Anticipating the effect of climate change on biodiversity, in particular on changes in community com...
The reorganization of patterns of species diversity driven by anthropogenic climate change, and the ...
There is a growing literature describing responses in the abundance, and distribution of species to ...
In a changing climate, organisms can either adapt to the new environment or adopt new geographical d...
Climate change is reshaping global biodiversity as species respond to changing temperatures. However...
Driven by climate change, marine biodiversity is undergoing a phase of rapid change that has proven ...
Ambient temperature is very likely the most important environmental factor determining the distribut...
Aim: The dispersal and distribution patterns of many marine organisms are driven by oceanographic co...
The reorganization of patterns of species diversity driven by anthropogenic climate change, and the ...
Climate change involves shifts in environmental conditions which will affect the distribution and bi...
The paradigm that climate change will alter global marine biodiversity is one of the most widely acc...
Climate change can impact the pattern of marine biodiversity through changes in species' distributio...
Marine protected areas (MPAs) represent a mature approach for conserving biodiversity, but a major w...
© 2019 Rapid anthropogenic climate change is a major threat to ocean biodiversity, increasing the ch...
Marine environments have increased in temperature by an average of 1°C since pre-industrial (1850) t...