January
8, 2019 by Kris Sales, The
Conversation
Since the
1980s, increasingly
frequent and intense heatwaves have contributed to more
deaths than any other extreme weather event. The fingerprints of extreme events
and climate change are widespread in the natural world, where populations are
showing stress responses.
A common
fingerprint of a warmer world is a range shift, where the distribution of
a species moves to
higher altitudes or migrates toward the poles. A review of several hundred
studies found an average shift of 17km
poleward, and 11 metres upslope, every decade. However,
if temperature changes are
too intense or lead species to geographic dead ends, local extinctions occur in
the heat.
In
2003, 80 percent of relevant
studies found the fingerprints were seen among species,
from grasses to trees and molluscs to mammals. Some migrated, some changed
colour, some altered their bodies and some shifted their life cycle timings. A
recent review of more than 100 studies found 8-50 percent of all
species will be threatened by climate change as
a result.
High
temperatures and extinctions
Currently,
we have a disturbingly limited
knowledge of which biological traits are sensitive to
climate change and therefore responsible for local extinctions. However, a
potential candidate is male
reproduction, because a range of medical and agricultural
studies in
warm blooded animals have shown that male infertility
happens during heat stress.
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