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Forecasting the distribution of a range-expanding bat reveals future response to climate change and habitat

dc.contributor.authorTrue, Michael C.en
dc.contributor.authorPerry, Roger W.en
dc.contributor.authorFord, W. Marken
dc.date.accessioned2021-11-19T14:12:20Zen
dc.date.available2021-11-19T14:12:20Zen
dc.date.issued2021-06en
dc.description.abstractMany terrestrial vertebrate species are exhibiting geographic distribution changes including poleward range limit shifts in response to increases in regional temperature. Bats are a highly mobile taxa capable of rapid responses to changes in abiotic or biotic conditions. In North America, recent extralimital records of the non-hibernating Lasiurus seminolus (Seminole bat) have been attributed to climate change, however such attributions remain speculative and potentially subject to sampling bias in the form of increased recent sampling efforts at latitudes north of the historical range. We used historical occurrence records and simple environmental variables within a Maxent modeling framework to model the historical distribution of suitable areas for this species. We transferred the model using near current environmental conditions and measured the ability of the model to capture the apparent expansion in distribution using recent extralimital occurrence records. Our model transferred well over time concluding that the distribution expansion may be largely attributed to increasing minimum temperatures. We used the model to forecast the expansion in distribution of suitable areas at three 20-year intervals and various climate change scenarios and provide extrapolation risk maps for each scenario. Although increasing temperatures may increase potentially occupiable areas, the species is associated with forests and often roosts in pines (Pinus spp.). This suitable habitat is more limited to the northwest of the species' range, which may constrain the future species expansion despite favorable temperatures. We demonstrated this effect by mapping limiting factors through future climate change scenarios. We discovered a broad shift of effects that constrained the distribution from minimum temperature to an abundance metric of evergreen cover type as time and climate change intensity increased. Although uncertainties exist, we predict further expansion of the Seminole bat widely over the next 60 years across the eastern United States where suitable habitat and climate conditions converge. Our results appear consistent with other bat species showing similar range extensions and in turn provide further evidence that bats may serve as bioindicators of global change.en
dc.description.adminPublic domain – authored by a U.S. government employeeen
dc.description.notesWe thank S. Loeb and M. B. Adams for earlier reviews of this manuscript. Additionally, we thank R. Odom for miscellaneous collaborative efforts and E. A. Frimpong and S. N. Winter for statistical modeling advice. This work was supported by the Virginia Department of Wildlife Resources contracts AT-63514 and EP2489066 to Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation Manipulation and filtering of occurrence data, manipulating and calculating environmental raster datasets, and all Maxent modeling were performed in R (R Core Team, 2019) and associated codes are available on a GitHub repository (github.com/mtrue2/seminolebats) for reproducibility purposes. Questions about codes should be directed to the corresponding author (mtrue@vt.edu).en
dc.description.sponsorshipVirginia Department of Wildlife Resources [AT-63514, EP2489066]en
dc.description.versionPublished versionen
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfen
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.3161/15081109ACC2021.23.1.011en
dc.identifier.eissn1733-5329en
dc.identifier.issn1508-1109en
dc.identifier.issue1en
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/106685en
dc.identifier.volume23en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.rightsPublic Domain (U.S.)en
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/mark/1.0/en
dc.subjectclimate changeen
dc.subjectdistribution expansionen
dc.subjectLasiurus seminolusen
dc.subjectlimiting factorsen
dc.subjectMaxenten
dc.subjectPinus spp.en
dc.subjectspecies distribution modelingen
dc.titleForecasting the distribution of a range-expanding bat reveals future response to climate change and habitaten
dc.title.serialActa Chiropterologicaen
dc.typeArticle - Refereeden
dc.type.dcmitypeTexten

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