Extrapolating demography with climate, proximity and phylogeny: approach with caution

SR Coutts, R Salguero‐Gómez, AM Csergő… - Ecology …, 2016 - Wiley Online Library
Ecology Letters, 2016Wiley Online Library
Plant population responses are key to understanding the effects of threats such as climate
change and invasions. However, we lack demographic data for most species, and the data
we have are often geographically aggregated. We determined to what extent existing data
can be extrapolated to predict population performance across larger sets of species and
spatial areas. We used 550 matrix models, across 210 species, sourced from the
COMPADRE Plant Matrix Database, to model how climate, geographic proximity and …
Abstract
Plant population responses are key to understanding the effects of threats such as climate change and invasions. However, we lack demographic data for most species, and the data we have are often geographically aggregated. We determined to what extent existing data can be extrapolated to predict population performance across larger sets of species and spatial areas. We used 550 matrix models, across 210 species, sourced from the COMPADRE Plant Matrix Database, to model how climate, geographic proximity and phylogeny predicted population performance. Models including only geographic proximity and phylogeny explained 5–40% of the variation in four key metrics of population performance. However, there was poor extrapolation between species and extrapolation was limited to geographic scales smaller than those at which landscape scale threats typically occur. Thus, demographic information should only be extrapolated with caution. Capturing demography at scales relevant to landscape level threats will require more geographically extensive sampling.
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