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Oases of the Future? Springs as Potential Hydrologic Refugia in Drying Climates

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Jennifer M Cartwright, Kathleen A Dwire, Zach Freed, Samantha Hammer, Blair McLaughlin, Louise Misztal, Edward R Schenk, John R Spence, Abe Springer, and Lawrence E Stevens, 2020-06-01, Oases of the Future? Springs as Potential Hydrologic Refugia in Drying Climates: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, v. 18, iss. 5, p. 245-253.

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Abstract (from ESA): Natural springs in water‐limited landscapes are biodiversity hotspots and keystone ecosystems that have a disproportionate influence on surrounding landscapes despite their usually small size. Some springs served as evolutionary refugia during previous climate drying, supporting relict species in isolated habitats. Understanding whether springs will provide hydrologic refugia from future climate change is important to biodiversity conservation but is complicated by hydrologic variability among springs, data limitations, and multiple non‐climate threats to groundwater‐dependent ecosystems. We present a conceptual framework for categorizing springs as potentially stable, relative, or transient hydrologic refugia [...]

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  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalFrontiers in Ecology and the Environment
parts
typeDOI
value10.1002/fee.2191
typeVolume
value18
typeIssue
value5
typePages
value245-253

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