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Australia’s savanna herbivores : bioclimatic distributions and an assessment of the potential impact of regional climate change

journal contribution
posted on 2008-11-01, 00:00 authored by Euan RitchieEuan Ritchie, E Bolitho
The future impacts of climate change are predicted to significantly affect the survival of many species. Recent studies indicate that even species that are relatively mobile and/or have large geographic ranges may be at risk of range contractions or extinction. An ecologically and evolutionary significant group of mammals that has been largely overlooked in this research is Australia’s large marsupial herbivores, the macropodids (kangaroos). The aims of our investigation were to define and compare the climatic conditions that influence the current distributions of four sympatric large macropodids in northern Australia (Macropus antilopinus, Macropus robustus, Macropus giganteus, and Macropus rufus) and to predict the potential future impact of climate change on these species. Our results suggest that contemporary distributions of these large macropodids are associated with well‐defined climatic gradients (tropical and temperate conditions) and that climatic seasonality is also important. Bioclimatic modeling predicted an average reduction in northern Australian macropodid distributions of in response to increases of 2.0°C. At this temperature, the distribution of M. antilopinus was reduced by . We predict that increases of 6.0°C may cause severe range reductions for all four macropodids ( ) in northern Australia, and this range reduction may result in the extinction of M. antilopinus.

History

Journal

Physiological and biochemical zoology

Volume

81

Issue

6

Pagination

880 - 890

Publisher

The University of Chicago Press

Location

Chicago, Il.

ISSN

1522-2152

eISSN

1537-5293

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008 by The University of Chicago.