Climate Change: Anticipating and Adapting to the Impacts on Terrestrial Species
Citation
Lawler, J., Oakes, L. E., Ettinger, A. K., & Y., L. (2013). Climate Change: Anticipating and Adapting to the Impacts on Terrestrial Species. In Encyclopedia of Biodiversity (2nd ed., Vol. 2, pp. 100–114).
Abstract

Addressing the impacts of climate change on terrestrial species requires knowledge of how climates will change, how species will respond, and what is the scope of actions that can be taken to help species and systems adapt. There is a rapidly growing understanding of how species will respond to projected climatic changes with changes in their phenologies, distributions, population dynamics, interspecific interactions, and disease dynamics. Many management strategies have been proposed for addressing these changes, including general principles such as fostering resilience, practicing adaptive management, and expanding the scale of management as well as more specific recommendations such as increasing landscape connectivity and increasing the extent of reserve networks.