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Climate change and expanding invasive species drive widespread declines of native trout in the northern Rocky Mountains, USA

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Bell, D.A., Kovach, R.P., Muhlfeld, C.C., Al-Chokhachy, R., Cline, T.J., Whited, D.C., Schmetterling, D.A., Lukacs, P.M. & Whiteley, A.R. Climate change and expanding invasive species drive widespread declines of native trout in the northern Rocky Mountains, USA. Science Advances 7(52). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abj5471

Summary

Climate change and invasive species are major threats to native biodiversity, but few empirical studies have examined their combined effects at large spatial and temporal scales. Using 21,917 surveys collected over 30 years, we quantified the impacts of climate change on the past and future distributions of five interacting native and invasive trout species throughout the northern Rocky Mountains, USA. We found that the occupancy of native bull trout and cutthroat trout declined by 18 and 6%, respectively (1993–2018), and was predicted to decrease by an additional 39 and 16% by 2080. However, reasons for these occupancy reductions markedly differed among species: Climate-driven increases in water temperature and decreases in summer [...]

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  • National CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers
  • Northwest CASC

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citationTypeJournal Article
journalScience Advances

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