COS 88 - Climate Change: Ranges And Phenology

Thursday, August 15, 2019: 1:30 PM-5:00 PM
M112, Kentucky International Convention Center
Presider:
Robert K. Shriver
1:50 PM
Aerial insectivore response to global change
Lucy R. Zipf, Boston University; Richard Primack, Boston University; Elissa Landre, Mass Audubon
2:10 PM
Genetic architecture constrains dispersal evolution in range shifts
Christopher P. Weiss-Lehman, University of Minnesota; Allison Shaw, University of Minnesota
2:30 PM
Reproductive consequences of climate-driven co-flowering between Linum lewisii and Potentilla pulcherrima
Marie, N. Faust, Chicago Botanic Garden; Amy Iler, Chicago Botanic Garden
2:50 PM
Virtual transplant experiments reveal that climate filters mountain plant communities via interactions with phenological traits
Ian K. Breckheimer, Harvard University Herbaria; Paul J. CaraDonna, Chicago Botanic Garden, Northwestern University; Rebecca A. Durham, University of Montana, MPG Ranch; Amy Iler, Chicago Botanic Garden, Northwestern University; Jane E. Ogilvie, Chicago Botanic Garden, Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory; Elli J. Theobald, University of Washington; David W. Inouye, Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory
3:10 PM
3:20 PM
Integrating tree recruitment to improve predictions of climate-induced range shifts
Paige Copenhaver-Parry, George Fox University; Matthew V. Talluto, University of Innsbruck
3:40 PM
Past and present range filling of North American trees reveals the importance of non-climatic factors and dispersal limitations in driving climatic disequilibrium
Benjamin Seliger, University Of Maine; Brian McGill, University of Maine; Jacquelyn Gill, University of Maine
4:00 PM
Foliar phenology shifts affect tree seedling recruitment performance in Great Lakes forests
Ben Lee, University of Michigan; Inés Ibáñez, University of Michigan
4:20 PM
Quantifying the demographic vulnerabilities of pinyon-juniper woodlands to climate change using landscape-scale population models
Robert K. Shriver, U.S. Geological Survey; Charles B. Yackulic, US Geological Survey; David M Bell, USDA Forest Service; John B. Bradford, U.S. Geological Survey
4:40 PM
The multiple drivers and consequences of distributional dynamics under climate change in an asymmetrically dispersed epiphyte metapopulation
Miguel Acevedo, University of Florida; Lydia Beaudrot, University of Michigan; Elvia Meléndez- Ackerman, Institute for Tropical Ecosystem Studies; Raymond L. Tremblay, University of Puerto Rico at Humacao
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