Climate and animal distribution: a climatic analysis of the Australian marsupial Trichosurus caninus

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Climate and animal distribution: a climatic analysis of the Australian marsupial Trichosurus caninus. / Fischer, J.; Lindenmayer, D. B.; Nix, H. A. et al.
In: Journal of Biogeography, Vol. 28, No. 3, 03.2001, p. 293-304.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Fischer J, Lindenmayer DB, Nix HA, Stein JL, Stein JA. Climate and animal distribution: a climatic analysis of the Australian marsupial Trichosurus caninus. Journal of Biogeography. 2001 Mar;28(3):293-304. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2699.2001.00554.x

Bibtex

@article{4ae32a66b44a4c81a034c7b29bb367e7,
title = "Climate and animal distribution: a climatic analysis of the Australian marsupial Trichosurus caninus",
abstract = "Aim: A detailed bioclimatic analysis was completed for an Australian arboreal marsupial, the mountain brushtail possum Trichosurus caninus. This was done to explore climatic factors underpinning the distribution of the species. Location: Location data used for bioclimatic modelling comprised of 879 records, covering the entire known range of T. caninus throughout eastern Australia. Methods The computer package BIOCLIM was used to generate a bioclimatic profile of T. caninus. Frequency distributions of climatic attributes in the profile were examined using histograms and a pattern analysis (using the computer package PATN) to determine if there were bioclimatically distinct groups of possums. Results: Initial analyses of bioclimatic attributes of all records split the location data into two discrete groups based on the frequency distribution of 'mean temperature of the wettest quarter' of an average year, as this had a discontinuous, bimodal frequency distribution. Pattern analysis produced groupings congruent with this. When analysed separately, the bioclimatic domains of the two groups were geographically discrete. Although many key bioclimatic attributes were similar (particularly those defining light and moisture regimes that relate to vegetation structure), temperature regimes and seasonality of rainfall regime were very different for each group. Main conclusions: The two groups identified in this study were congruent with two groups established by an earlier multivariate morphometric analysis of T. caninus. Further targeted field research together with genetic analyses, are needed to further investigate the taxonomic significance of findings on (1) the bioclimatic domain(s) and (2) the morphology of T. caninus.",
keywords = "Biology, BIOCLIM, Trichosurus caninus, climate analysis of distribution, Australia, Environmental planning",
author = "J. Fischer and Lindenmayer, {D. B.} and Nix, {H. A.} and J.L. Stein and J.A. Stein",
note = "Times Cited: 17",
year = "2001",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1046/j.1365-2699.2001.00554.x",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "293--304",
journal = "Journal of Biogeography",
issn = "0305-0270",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Climate and animal distribution

T2 - a climatic analysis of the Australian marsupial Trichosurus caninus

AU - Fischer, J.

AU - Lindenmayer, D. B.

AU - Nix, H. A.

AU - Stein, J.L.

AU - Stein, J.A.

N1 - Times Cited: 17

PY - 2001/3

Y1 - 2001/3

N2 - Aim: A detailed bioclimatic analysis was completed for an Australian arboreal marsupial, the mountain brushtail possum Trichosurus caninus. This was done to explore climatic factors underpinning the distribution of the species. Location: Location data used for bioclimatic modelling comprised of 879 records, covering the entire known range of T. caninus throughout eastern Australia. Methods The computer package BIOCLIM was used to generate a bioclimatic profile of T. caninus. Frequency distributions of climatic attributes in the profile were examined using histograms and a pattern analysis (using the computer package PATN) to determine if there were bioclimatically distinct groups of possums. Results: Initial analyses of bioclimatic attributes of all records split the location data into two discrete groups based on the frequency distribution of 'mean temperature of the wettest quarter' of an average year, as this had a discontinuous, bimodal frequency distribution. Pattern analysis produced groupings congruent with this. When analysed separately, the bioclimatic domains of the two groups were geographically discrete. Although many key bioclimatic attributes were similar (particularly those defining light and moisture regimes that relate to vegetation structure), temperature regimes and seasonality of rainfall regime were very different for each group. Main conclusions: The two groups identified in this study were congruent with two groups established by an earlier multivariate morphometric analysis of T. caninus. Further targeted field research together with genetic analyses, are needed to further investigate the taxonomic significance of findings on (1) the bioclimatic domain(s) and (2) the morphology of T. caninus.

AB - Aim: A detailed bioclimatic analysis was completed for an Australian arboreal marsupial, the mountain brushtail possum Trichosurus caninus. This was done to explore climatic factors underpinning the distribution of the species. Location: Location data used for bioclimatic modelling comprised of 879 records, covering the entire known range of T. caninus throughout eastern Australia. Methods The computer package BIOCLIM was used to generate a bioclimatic profile of T. caninus. Frequency distributions of climatic attributes in the profile were examined using histograms and a pattern analysis (using the computer package PATN) to determine if there were bioclimatically distinct groups of possums. Results: Initial analyses of bioclimatic attributes of all records split the location data into two discrete groups based on the frequency distribution of 'mean temperature of the wettest quarter' of an average year, as this had a discontinuous, bimodal frequency distribution. Pattern analysis produced groupings congruent with this. When analysed separately, the bioclimatic domains of the two groups were geographically discrete. Although many key bioclimatic attributes were similar (particularly those defining light and moisture regimes that relate to vegetation structure), temperature regimes and seasonality of rainfall regime were very different for each group. Main conclusions: The two groups identified in this study were congruent with two groups established by an earlier multivariate morphometric analysis of T. caninus. Further targeted field research together with genetic analyses, are needed to further investigate the taxonomic significance of findings on (1) the bioclimatic domain(s) and (2) the morphology of T. caninus.

KW - Biology

KW - BIOCLIM

KW - Trichosurus caninus

KW - climate analysis of distribution

KW - Australia

KW - Environmental planning

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0034952313&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1046/j.1365-2699.2001.00554.x

DO - 10.1046/j.1365-2699.2001.00554.x

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 28

SP - 293

EP - 304

JO - Journal of Biogeography

JF - Journal of Biogeography

SN - 0305-0270

IS - 3

ER -

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