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Temperature-driven density gradients of two congeneric felids reveal contrasting responses to climate change at a range margin

dataset
posted on 2025-11-23, 03:00 authored by Sujay Singh, Daniel Thornton, Lindsay S. Welfelt
<p>Climate change causes divergent range shifts in cold versus warm-tolerant species, potentially reshuffling biotic interactions at range margins. Yet, outside of coarse distributional metrics, little information exists regarding the ecology of species along range peripheries. Here, we use camera traps and spatially-explicit capture-recapture (secr) modeling to examine how climatic gradients influence current and future patterns of density, abundance, and density overlap between two congeneric felids - cold-adapted Canada lynx (<em>Lynx canadensis</em>) and warm-adapted bobcats (<em>Lynx rufus</em>) - at a range margin in Washington, United States. Temperature drove density patterns along the range margin, with lynx densities declining and bobcat densities increasing as a function of temperature. Future abundances, obtained via projection of current-day models onto future climate scenarios, declined for lynx but were stable for bobcats, with both species experiencing upward elevational shifts. Areas of the landscape with high-lynx and low-bobcat densities declined in the future, but areas with low-lynx and high-bobcat densities increased, with only limited high-elevation refugia for lynx from expanding bobcat populations. Our approach reveals how temperature gradients shape density patterns of cold and warm-tolerant mammals and could be applied to other species and montane systems to better understand mammalian population trajectories and spatial associations at range edges.</p>

Funding

Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife: 23-20522

Climate Adaptation Science Centers: G23AC00517

USDA-NIFA: 1018967

History

Data contact name

Singh, Sujay

Data contact email

sujay.singh8991@gmail.com

Publisher

Dryad

Theme

  • Not specified

ISO Topic Category

  • biota

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

climate; mark-recapture studies; species; Washington (state); cameras; cold; ecology; refuge habitats; Lynx rufus; landscapes; Lynx canadensis; Felidae; temperature; mammals; climate change

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

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