Conservation implications of omitting narrow-ranging taxa from species distribution models, now and in the future

Author:

Platts Philip J.1ORCID,Garcia Raquel A.234,Hof Christian5,Foden Wendy67,Hansen Louis A.2,Rahbek Carsten28,Burgess Neil D.2910

Affiliation:

1. Environment Department; University of York; Heslington YO10 5DD York UK

2. Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate; Natural History Museum of Denmark; University of Copenhagen; Copenhagen Denmark

3. Department of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology; National Museum of Natural Sciences; CSIC; Calle José Gutierrez Abascal; 28006 Madrid Spain

4. Rui Nabeiro Biodiversity Chair; University of Évora; CIBIO; Largo dos Colegiais 7000 Évora Portugal

5. Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK-F) & Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung; Senckenberganlage 25 60325 Frankfurt Germany

6. School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences; University of the Witwatersrand; 2050 Johannesburg South Africa

7. Climate Change Specialist Group; IUCN Species Survival Commission; Gland Switzerland

8. Department of Life Sciences; Faculty of Natural Sciences; Imperial College London; Silwood Park, Buckhurst Road Ascot SL5 7PY Berkshire UK

9. United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre; 219 Huntingdon Road CB3 0DL Cambridge UK

10. World Wildlife Fund-US; 1250 24th Street NW Washington 20037 DC USA

Funder

Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference89 articles.

1. Conservation and the botanist effect;Ahrends;Biological Conservation,2011

2. Uses and misuses of bioclimatic envelope modeling;Araújo;Ecological Society of America,2012

3. Why biodiversity surveys are good value;Balmford;Nature,1999

4. Appropriateness of full-, partial- and no-dispersal scenarios in climate change impact modelling;Bateman;Diversity and Distributions,2013

5. Range expansion through fragmented landscapes under a variable climate;Bennie;Ecology Letters,2013

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