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Climate Change Forcing Animals to Move Up
SAN FRANCISCO -- From the mountains of Yosemite to the tropical lowlands of Costa Rica, global warming is forcing animals and plants to move to higher and higher elevations, searching for climates that have allowed them to evolve and thrive for millions of years.
Climate change forcing animals to move up
Scientist went to sites, including Mono Lake (pictured here), examined decades ago by Joseph Grinnell, to look at effects of climate change. (Michael Macor / The Chronicle) The exodus from less tolerable habitats to cooler and more benign
environments has been taking place for nearly a century, according to
scientists who scrambled over rocks and ridges, through steamy rain
forests and up steep volcanic slopes to complete their painstaking
surveys.
And in a few cases, the moves are taking a toll: Some mountain animals, left with smaller ranges to forage for food, may face extinction, while others are up against Darwinian competition as their new habitats intrude on already-established animal populations.
"These kinds of changes have been going on forever," said James L. Patton, a biologist at UC Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology. "The only difference is that this has probably happened in our lifetime. It's the speed with which these changes are taking place that gives one pause."
As the pace of global warming quickens, change is everywhere: from glaciers melting in Greenland, to ice shelves crumbling in Antarctica, to coral reefs dying in tropic seas - and now to animal and plant life in many parts of the world.
In a report appearing today in the journal Science, Craig Moritz, also of the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Patton and their colleagues describe how they surveyed 28 species of mammals studied by the late UC ornithologist Joseph Grinnell beginning in 1914. They covered many of Grinnell's sites from the San Joaquin Valley across all of Yosemite, over the crest, and down to Mono Lake and then compared the results.
Their report is appearing with another one on the effects of climate change in Costa Rica by an international group headed by Robert K. Colwell, an entomologist at the University of Connecticut who was formerly also a UC Berkeley scientist.
The impacts of warming
Moritz and Patton note that since Grinnell completed his work, the central Sierra has seen continuous warming, with nighttime low temperatures averaging 5 degrees Fahrenheit higher than they were 90 years ago. During the same period, more than half of the species he studied have shifted their ranges upward by as much as 1,600 feet, the researchers said.
Many of the others, Moritz and Patton said, stayed put in ranges that shrank over time, largely the result of human development rather than climate change.
The California vole, the California pocket mouse and the western harvest mouse, for example, have all increased their ranges by moving up-slope, while the bushy-tailed wood rat and Allen's chipmunk remained at lower levels but their ranges have diminished, the Berkeley scientists found.
Another chipmunk, the alpine species, saw its range shrink before it moved upward more than 2,000 feet seeking a friendly climate, Patton said. Ninety years ago, that same species of alpine chipmunk was common in lodgepole forests below 7,800 feet, but Patton said he found none living lower than 9,600 feet. As a result, he said, it may now face the risk of extinction because of its diminished range.
Similar changes are also endangering plant and insect species in some of the warmest places on Earth, according to the international survey team headed by Colwell, an evolutionary biologist.
In the tropics the climate has warmed by nearly 1.5 degrees Fahrenheit since 1975, Colwell's report in Science notes, and climate models for the tropics indicate it could get hotter by nearly an additional 6 degrees before the end of the century.
Working their way up the forested slopes of Volcan Barba in Costa Rica - from sea level to the volcano's summit at nearly 10,000 feet - Colwell and his team of scientists surveyed the ranges of 1,902 different species of insects and plants, including moths and ants, orchids, mosses, ferns, fungi and the shrubs and bushes that live beneath forest canopies.
Trouble ahead for insects
Based on their observations, the scientists foresee trouble ahead: As the climate warms, even in the wet tropics, Colwell said, the ranges of many insect species will become more isolated in their higher habitats.
Some species now living part way up the volcano will have to move their ranges as much as 2,000 feet higher if the climate heats up by as much as 6 degrees, and that will put them into wholly new environments facing competition that evolution hasn't equipped them to face, the scientists said.
At the same time, species already living near the volcano's summit will find themselves with nowhere higher to move. In Colwell's words, they'll face "mountaintop extinction" as the climate warms even more.
In the tropical lowlands, little opportunity exists for plants or animals to escape future increases in temperature by migrating either north or south - it's all hot everywhere. So as temperatures increase, according to Colwell's report, about half the species the Costa Rica team studied will disappear - unless they retained the genetic tolerance for greater heat that their ancestors possessed some 55 million years ago when the world was far hotter than it is now.
The others may seek new habitats in wetter regions that are at least somewhat cooler than where they live now, but even then the warming trend will increase the dangers from drought and forest fire.
So the future looks tough all over.

9 Comments so far
Show AllAnd to think the oceans are turning more acidic, the summer arctic will be ice free, a possible methane release, and what this article points out, the threat of mass species extinction due to climate on top of a mass extinction of species due to habitat loss. Do we really realize the repercussions of all this stuff? This is going to be civilizations last stand (as we know it).
Oh, on top of all this, throw in a global recession or depression.
"Our civilization is going through a most profound crisis that threatens to undermine the very foundations of the existence of humankind." - Mikhail Gorbachev - Former President of the Soviet Union
www.oneplanetonelife.com
Good day.
But folks, it's not just the critters and plants that suffer due to our self-centered arrogance. The night sky is vanishing too, the stars, the Milky Way, a deep-seated part of our entire past as a species. But unlike the critters and plants, the sky can not climb higher or move elsewhere.
It saddens me to see us so focused on our money, our possessions, our greed for more and more and more whilst Earth and Sky suffer so. We talk about doing something to slow the damage to our beloved Earth, our only home, but we do very little. Our eyes are focused on ourselves.
Not even the great economic crisis we are facing drives us into the streets crying out for manifest change--real substantive change--not the tinkering at the edges, the fringes of the system. We need to strike at the nexus of the mess we've created for ourselves, lest we lose everything, and the nighttime sky!
We have become Earth Eaters and Starlight Stealers!
'Tis not the candidates who will save us, 'tis ourselves. Only we have the power to save ourselves!
Earth First in All Things and Thoughts, Deeds and Decisions! Try living by this simple creed just one hour each day, then after a month, try extending it to two hours, then three hours, then....
Thank you for reading...
http://www.darkskyinitiative.org
Earth first is a nice slogan but unfortunately you have people like Michael Pollan and small meat and dairy exploiters who pollute the airwaves by trying to make lazy rich liberals feel good about themselves by doing nothing substantial. They think we can solve the destruction caused by a meat and dairy based diet by a) going back to small farms and b) hunting.
They dont think big picture--and I think it is a willful ignorance on their part since both make some $$ off such rhetoric.
In addition to the effects that livestock rearing has on climate, you also have the wasting of grain and soy to feed them, as well as the water loss that goes with it--and the killing of wild species that are seen as competitors for grazing land(buffalo--as well as wolves etc).
Factory farms all started as small farms. It just means we go back to the type of farm agriculture that made Leo Tolstoy, Albert Schweitzer and George Bernard Shaw vegetarians.
In other words we dont need slow food, we need slowest food.
"Factory farms all started as small farms"
Nope, actually factory farms were a whole different set of ideas and they're the ones that CRUSHED most of the small ones. When the oil runs out though, a return to factory farms is inevitable. The planet's human population is going to witness a SEVERE drop sooner or later. I don't think it can go past 10 billion. In fact, I'm surprised it went past 5 billion to begin with.
In a couple or few years (2012) humankind may no longer be here anyway. Then the critters and creatures can take back all we've taken from them. Of course some of those neat little microbes that clean up places like Chernobal, oil slicks and such will have to do some evolving in order to get rid of all the plastic and other crud we've filled the oceans with, but eventually Earth will become the Garden of Eden again, and the stars will shine brightly enough to see by, and the Milky Way will dazzle the eyes of the wolves and cyotees howling at the moon. And the Creater may be wiser next time and put the human creations on a big boulder-type planet. Let them use their wonderful ingenuity on that!
Why did I think this article was about Wall Street types getting larger condos?
nice one...........
I just posted a 100 word comment but it never appeared.
Actually, I don't care anymore.
~Kem~ Hows it goin COCO?
hi kem, i've been disconnected for a while..........but back on track now. your predictions are certainly coming true. remember that 'depression' you talked about a while ago???? life's a beach and then you fry...............