The current and projected impacts of climate change are shaped by unprecedented rates of change in environmental conditions. These changes likely mismatch the existing coping capacities of organisms within-generations and impose challenges for population resilience across generations. To better understand the impacts of projected scenarios of climate change on organismal fitness and population maintenance, it is crucial to consider and integrate the proximate sources of variability of plastic and adaptive responses to environmental change in future empirical approaches. Here we explore the implications of considering: (a) the variability in different time-scale events of climate change; (b) the variability in plastic responses from embryoni...
Natural resources managers are being asked to follow practices that accommodate for the impact of cl...
Aim To identify hypotheses for how climate change affects long‐term population persistence that can ...
Human activities are exposing organisms not only to direct threats (e.g. habitat loss) but also to i...
The current and projected impacts of climate change are shaped by unprecedented rates of change in e...
The current and projected impacts of climate change are shaped by unprecedented rates of change in e...
We review the evidence of how organisms and populations are currently responding to climate change t...
1. Rapid climate change both imposes strong selective pressures on natural populations – potentially...
We review the evidence of how organisms and populations are currently responding to climate change t...
By causing changes in abiotic and biotic environmental conditions, climate change generates intense ...
We review the evidence of how organisms and populations are currently responding to climate change t...
Predicting if, when, and how populations can adapt to climate change constitutes one of the greatest...
Phenotypic plasticity, both within and across generations, is an important mechanism that organisms ...
Many species are experiencing sustained environmental change mainly due to human activities. The unu...
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Phenotypic plasticity, both within and across generations, is an import...
An integrated view on the possible effects of global climate change is provided while taking into ac...
Natural resources managers are being asked to follow practices that accommodate for the impact of cl...
Aim To identify hypotheses for how climate change affects long‐term population persistence that can ...
Human activities are exposing organisms not only to direct threats (e.g. habitat loss) but also to i...
The current and projected impacts of climate change are shaped by unprecedented rates of change in e...
The current and projected impacts of climate change are shaped by unprecedented rates of change in e...
We review the evidence of how organisms and populations are currently responding to climate change t...
1. Rapid climate change both imposes strong selective pressures on natural populations – potentially...
We review the evidence of how organisms and populations are currently responding to climate change t...
By causing changes in abiotic and biotic environmental conditions, climate change generates intense ...
We review the evidence of how organisms and populations are currently responding to climate change t...
Predicting if, when, and how populations can adapt to climate change constitutes one of the greatest...
Phenotypic plasticity, both within and across generations, is an important mechanism that organisms ...
Many species are experiencing sustained environmental change mainly due to human activities. The unu...
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Phenotypic plasticity, both within and across generations, is an import...
An integrated view on the possible effects of global climate change is provided while taking into ac...
Natural resources managers are being asked to follow practices that accommodate for the impact of cl...
Aim To identify hypotheses for how climate change affects long‐term population persistence that can ...
Human activities are exposing organisms not only to direct threats (e.g. habitat loss) but also to i...