Plants seek climate refuge across our changing planet

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External News Details

Plants, like animals and people, seek refuge from climate change. And when they move, they take ecosystems with them. To understand why and how plants have trekked across landscapes throughout time, researchers are calling for a new framework. The key to protecting biodiversity in the future may be understanding the past. Jenny McGuire, assistant professor in the School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences and the School of Biological Sciences, spearheaded a U.S. National Science Foundation-supported paper on the topic in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. McGuire and her collaborators highlight the outstanding needs for successful future conservation efforts. The paper brings together conservation research that illuminates the complex and constantly evolving dynamics brought on by climate change and the ever-shifting ways humans use land. These factors, McGuire said, interact over time to create dynamic changes and illustrate the need to incorporate time perspectives into conservation strategies by looking deep into the past.

Additional Information

Groups

College of Sciences, EAS, School of Biological Sciences

Categories
Environment
Keywords
College of Sciences, School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, School of Biological Sciences, Jenny McGuire, National Science Foundation, climate change, climate migration, Biodiversity, conservation
Status
  • Created By: Renay San Miguel
  • Workflow Status: Published
  • Created On: Mar 9, 2023 - 12:42pm
  • Last Updated: Mar 9, 2023 - 12:42pm