AI Article Synopsis

  • Climate refugia are essential areas where species survive adverse climate conditions, protecting biodiversity during historical climate shifts in the Quaternary period.
  • To better understand these refugia, researchers need to combine fossil records, species distribution models, and phylogeographic surveys to trace species movements in and out of these areas.
  • Case studies on species like European beech and Douglas-fir demonstrate how integrating these approaches can reveal complex species histories and aid in identifying modern refugia critical for conservation efforts.

Article Abstract

Climate refugia, locations where taxa survive periods of regionally adverse climate, are thought to be critical for maintaining biodiversity through the glacial-interglacial climate changes of the Quaternary. A critical research need is to better integrate and reconcile the three major lines of evidence used to infer the existence of past refugia - fossil records, species distribution models and phylogeographic surveys - in order to characterize the complex spatiotemporal trajectories of species and populations in and out of refugia. Here we review the complementary strengths, limitations and new advances for these three approaches. We provide case studies to illustrate their combined application, and point the way towards new opportunities for synthesizing these disparate lines of evidence. Case studies with European beech, Qinghai spruce and Douglas-fir illustrate how the combination of these three approaches successfully resolves complex species histories not attainable from any one approach. Promising new statistical techniques can capitalize on the strengths of each method and provide a robust quantitative reconstruction of species history. Studying past refugia can help identify contemporary refugia and clarify their conservation significance, in particular by elucidating the fine-scale processes and the particular geographic locations that buffer species against rapidly changing climate.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.12929DOI Listing

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