Home Featured Content Study: Non-native Species, Climate Change Impact On Native Species, Including Southeast Alaska Salmon In The Future The following is courtesy of Oregon State University: A spawning redband trout (O. mykiss) from the Upper Klamath Basin. Photo Credit: Jonny Armstrong, Oregon State University. Climate change, non-native species pose double trouble for native species, study shows By Sean Nealon CORVALLIS, Ore. – Climate change could pose a dual threat to native species by reducing their suitable habitats and increasing predation pressure from non-native species, a new study by Oregon State University researchers finds. The effects of climate change and biological invasions on the geographical distribution of native species have been studied separately, but their combined effects remain overlooked, said Ivan Arismendi, an associate professor in Oregon State’s Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences. The new study, published in Global Change Biology, begins to change that. The researchers found that future climate conditions will reduce habitat suitability for native and non-native species, but an increase in habitat overlap might exacerbate the negative effects of non-native species, potentially leading to local extinctions of native species. “Climate change and biological invasions are increasingly affecting ecosystems globally,” Arismendi said. “It’s critical to understand their combined impacts so that we can anticipate and adapt management strategies that account for shifting interactions between native and non-native species.” Using ecological niche models, which are computational tools that use environmental data to predict where species live, Arismendi, Guillermo Giannico and Arif Jan developed a framework to assess how climate change influences the range of and habitat overlap among species. For the study, they evaluated the invasion of non-native smallmouth bass and northern pike in the Pacific Northwest and their impact on native redband trout and bull trout. While they focused narrowly on those species, they […]
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