Recent global change has had a substantial influence on the distribution of organisms, and many species are currently expanding their ranges. To evaluate the underlying processes, long-term data with good geographic resolution are essential. One important but generally overlooked data source is offered by the taxon-specific national catalogues of first provincial records that are kept in many countries. Here, we use such data to quantify trait-based influences on range expansion in Swedish butterflies and moths between 1973 and 2010. Of 282 species meeting pre-defined quality criteria, 170 expanded their northern range margin, with a mean expansion rate of 2.7 km per year. The analyses demonstrate that habitat and diet generalists, forest s...
Climate change allows species to expand polewards, but non-changing environmental features may limit...
Species can adapt to climate change by adjusting in situ or by dispersing to new areas, and these st...
Population fluctuations and synchrony influence population persistence; species with larger fluctuat...
Climate change is an important driver of range shifts and community composition changes. Still, litt...
Climate change is considered one of the greatest future threats against biodiversity. One predicted ...
Simple Summary There has been a widespread decline of many plants and animals driven at least partly...
Aim: Changes in community composition resulting from environmental changes modify biotic interaction...
Generalist species and phenotypes are expected to perform best under rapid environmental change. In ...
Aim: Species ranges are highly dynamic, shifting in space and time as a result of complex ecological...
The "oscillation hypothesis" has been proposed as a general explanation for the exceptional diversif...
International audienceAs species' poleward range limits expand under climate change, generalists are...
Aim: Latitudinal clines in dietary specialisation and range size are used to explain biodiversity di...
Aim: Climate change is currently altering the geographical distribution of species, but how this pro...
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Contemporary climate change triggers a poleward range shift in many s...
Acknowledgements I thank M. C. Singer for helpful discussions and comments. I thank I. Kitching for ...
Climate change allows species to expand polewards, but non-changing environmental features may limit...
Species can adapt to climate change by adjusting in situ or by dispersing to new areas, and these st...
Population fluctuations and synchrony influence population persistence; species with larger fluctuat...
Climate change is an important driver of range shifts and community composition changes. Still, litt...
Climate change is considered one of the greatest future threats against biodiversity. One predicted ...
Simple Summary There has been a widespread decline of many plants and animals driven at least partly...
Aim: Changes in community composition resulting from environmental changes modify biotic interaction...
Generalist species and phenotypes are expected to perform best under rapid environmental change. In ...
Aim: Species ranges are highly dynamic, shifting in space and time as a result of complex ecological...
The "oscillation hypothesis" has been proposed as a general explanation for the exceptional diversif...
International audienceAs species' poleward range limits expand under climate change, generalists are...
Aim: Latitudinal clines in dietary specialisation and range size are used to explain biodiversity di...
Aim: Climate change is currently altering the geographical distribution of species, but how this pro...
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd Contemporary climate change triggers a poleward range shift in many s...
Acknowledgements I thank M. C. Singer for helpful discussions and comments. I thank I. Kitching for ...
Climate change allows species to expand polewards, but non-changing environmental features may limit...
Species can adapt to climate change by adjusting in situ or by dispersing to new areas, and these st...
Population fluctuations and synchrony influence population persistence; species with larger fluctuat...