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Global Synthesis of Projected and Documented Effects of Climate Change on Inland Fish

Dates

Publication Date
Start Date
2015
End Date
2017

Citation

Bonnie J.E. Myers, Abigail J. Lynch, David B. Bunnell, Cindy Chu, Jeffrey A. Falke, Ryan P. Kovach, Trevor J. Krabbenhoft, Thomas J. Kwak, and Craig P. Paukert, 2017. Global Synthesis of Projected and Documented Effects of Climate Change on Inland Fish: U.S. Geological Survey.

Summary

Although climate change is an important factor affecting inland fishes globally, a comprehensive review of how climate change has impacted and will continue to impact inland fishes worldwide does not currently exist. We conducted an extensive, systematic primary literature review to identify peer-reviewed publications with projected and documented examples of climate change impacts on inland fishes globally. Since the mid-1980s, scientists have projected the effects of climate change on inland fishes, and more recently, documentation of climate change impacts on inland fishes has increased. Of the thousands of title and abstracts reviewed, we selected 624 publications for a full text review: 63 of these publications documented an effect [...]

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Literature Citations Used in Synthesis_Clean_4-21.csv 37.07 KB text/csv
Metadata_Global_Synthesis_of_Projected_and_Documented_Effects_of_Climate_Change_on_Inland_Fish_Cleaned 4-21.xml
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36.54 KB application/fgdc+xml
Publication Details__Clean_4-21.csv 74.93 KB text/csv

Purpose

To date, no comprehensive literature review has been conducted to identify the current research on climate change effects on inland fish globally. We collected peer-reviewed publications in the primary literature to address the following objectives: (1) identify peer-reviewed studies with projected and documented effects of climate change on various aspects of inland fishes (i.e., demographic rates, distributions, phenological changes, assemblage dynamics, and evolutionary changes) published in the scientific primary literature from 1985 to 2015; (2) qualitatively and quantitatively examine and compare patterns in these studies by geographic region, species, fish response (e.g., fish demographic and phenological response), and species guilds (e.g., thermal guild); and (3) identify the most commonly cited management recommendations for mitigating the potential effects of climate change on inland fish.

Communities

  • National CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers

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