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Fish distribution models for the Red River under historical and future climate scenarios

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2010
End Date
2050

Citation

Thomas Neeson, Ken Gill, and Rachel Fovargue, 20201210, Hotspots of species loss do not vary across future climate scenarios in drought-prone Red River basin: , https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.1g1jwstsn.

Summary

This dataset includes the modeled distributions of 31 fish species across the Red River under historical conditions and 9 future climate scenarios. Species distributions were modeled using a suite of environmental covariates derived from high-resolution hydrologic and climatic modeling of the basin. The dataset includes Maxent model outputs of the distributions of 31 fish species in the Red River of Oklahoma and Texas. Data are probability of occurrence maps for the 31 species for historical and future (year 2050) time periods for each of nine climate scenarios.

Contacts

Point of Contact :
Thomas Neeson
Originator :
Thomas Neeson, Ken Gill, Rachel Fovargue
Metadata Contact :
Thomas Neeson
Distributor :
U.S. Geological Survey

Attached Files

Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.

Model maxent outputs.zip
“Historical and Future Stream Fish Distributions ”
3.36 MB application/zip

Purpose

Climate change is expected to alter the distributions of species around the world, but estimates of species’ outcomes vary widely among competing climate scenarios. These fish distribution models inform efforts to understand how changing climate conditions and water availability might alter fish species distributions across a range of future climate scenarios.

Map

Communities

  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • South Central CASC

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Provenance

Data source
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