The climatic conditions of mountain habitats are greatly influenced by topography. Large differences in microclimate occur with small changes in elevation, and this complex interaction is an important determinant of mountain plant distributions. In spite of this, elevation is not often considered as a relevant predictor in species distribution models (SDMs) for mountain plants. Here, we evaluated the importance of including elevation as a predictor in SDMs for mountain plant species. We generated two sets of SDMs for each of 73 plant species that occur in the Pacific Northwest of North America; one set of models included elevation as a predictor variable and the other set did not. AUC scores indicated that omitting elevation as a predictor ...
Understanding species’ elevational distributions in mountain ecosystems is needed under climate chan...
Understanding the environmental factors determining the distribution of species with different range...
Explanatory studies suggest that using very high resolution (VHR) topo-climatic predictors may impro...
Species distribution models (SDMs) are increasingly used to forecast impacts of climate change on sp...
Aim: Climatic niche modelling of species and community distributions implicitly assumes strong and c...
<div><p>Both climatic and edaphic conditions determine plant distribution, however many species dist...
Both climatic and edaphic conditions determine plant distribution, however many species distribution...
Aim: To investigate the potential of a large range of soil variables to improve topo-climatic models...
Species distribution models (SDMs) are popular tools for predicting the geographic ranges of species...
Indirect topographic variables have been used successfully as surrogates for disturbance processes i...
Recent advances in remote sensing technologies have facilitated the generation of very high resoluti...
International audienceClimate warming is shifting the distributions of mountain plant species to hig...
Recent studies suggest that species distribution models (SDMs) based on fine-scale climate data may ...
Tropical montane systems are characterized by a high plant species diversity and complex environment...
International audienceAlthough the importance of edaphic factors and habitat structure for plant gro...
Understanding species’ elevational distributions in mountain ecosystems is needed under climate chan...
Understanding the environmental factors determining the distribution of species with different range...
Explanatory studies suggest that using very high resolution (VHR) topo-climatic predictors may impro...
Species distribution models (SDMs) are increasingly used to forecast impacts of climate change on sp...
Aim: Climatic niche modelling of species and community distributions implicitly assumes strong and c...
<div><p>Both climatic and edaphic conditions determine plant distribution, however many species dist...
Both climatic and edaphic conditions determine plant distribution, however many species distribution...
Aim: To investigate the potential of a large range of soil variables to improve topo-climatic models...
Species distribution models (SDMs) are popular tools for predicting the geographic ranges of species...
Indirect topographic variables have been used successfully as surrogates for disturbance processes i...
Recent advances in remote sensing technologies have facilitated the generation of very high resoluti...
International audienceClimate warming is shifting the distributions of mountain plant species to hig...
Recent studies suggest that species distribution models (SDMs) based on fine-scale climate data may ...
Tropical montane systems are characterized by a high plant species diversity and complex environment...
International audienceAlthough the importance of edaphic factors and habitat structure for plant gro...
Understanding species’ elevational distributions in mountain ecosystems is needed under climate chan...
Understanding the environmental factors determining the distribution of species with different range...
Explanatory studies suggest that using very high resolution (VHR) topo-climatic predictors may impro...