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Travels in ecosystem science

Some observations and musings from the field and the office.
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To get regular updates on the science-focussed postings on this blog you can follow me on Twitter (@ymalhi)

National Geographic piece on our Andes work on species shifts under climate change

17/9/2013

1 Comment

 
Another piece from Justin Catanoso on our Andes work - this time in National Geographic
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2013/09/130915-climate-change-amazon-rain-forest-science/

Rain Forest Plants Race to Outrun Global Warming
Justin Catanoso
From a 13,000-foot peak of the Andes Mountains in southern Peru, gazing east over the dense rain forests of the Amazon basin, all you see is undulating green—one of the most verdant places on the planet.
It's what you can't see that matters.
The plants are on the run, trying to move to higher ground, where the air is cool enough to support their existence.Most of these species are not going to be able to tolerate climate change," saysKen Feeley, a tropical biologist from Florida International University in Miami, "mostly because climate change is happening so fast."
Feeley spoke as we hiked into the jungle with a small group of other scientists—through an area that contains more tree, plant, bird, and animal species than the entire eastern seaboard of the United States.
It is here that an international collective of scientists, called the Andes Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research Group, has mapped one of the largest field grids of its kind for a wide range of climate change studies.
According to a decade of research by Feeley and his colleagues, including tropical biologist Miles Silman of Wake Forest University, tropical species are frantically migrating upslope as they reproduce. But they may not be moving fast enough.
Tropical Andean tree species are shifting roughly 8 to 12 vertical feet (2.5 to 3.5 meters) a year on average—the arboreal equivalent of a dash. Yet for those trees to remain in equilibrium with their preferred temperatures, they need to migrate more than 20 vertical feet a year....(more)
Picture
Kosnipata Valley, Peru. Image by Justin Catanoso
1 Comment
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    Yadvinder Malhi is an ecosytem ecologist and Professor of Ecosystem Science at Oxford University

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