Terrestrial Biodiversity Adaptation Research Network

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Home Publications Adaptation Potential for mountaintop boulder fields to buffer species against extreme heat stress under climate change.
Potential for mountaintop boulder fields to buffer species against extreme heat stress under climate change. PDF Print E-mail
Publications, Adaptation, Refugia
Tuesday, 22 February 2011 09:21

“Species may circumvent or minimize some impacts resulting from climate change by utilizing microhabitats that buffer against extreme events (e.g., heat waves). Boulder field habitats are considered to have functioned as important refugia for rainforest fauna during historical climate fluctuations. However, quantitative data on microhabitat buffering potential in these habitats is lacking. We characterized temperature buffering over small distances (i.e., depths) within an exposed and forested boulder field on a tropical mountain. We demonstrate that temperatures are cooler and become more stable at increasing depths within boulder fields. The magnitude of difference is most pronounced in exposed situations where temperatures within boulder fields can be as much as 10A degrees C lower than near surface conditions. Our data provide a first step toward building models that more realistically predict exposure to heat stress for fauna that utilize rocky habitats...”

Shoo, L. P., C. Storlie, Y. M. Williams, and S. E. Williams. Potential for mountaintop boulder fields to buffer species against extreme heat stress under climate change. International Journal of Biometeorology 54:475-478.

Last Updated on Tuesday, 22 February 2011 09:31