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Oct. 10, 2008
Climate Change And Tropical Habitats
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As the world gets warmer due to climate change, species may need to find cooler habitats to compensate. In some places, the normal range for a species may be able to shift to higher latitudes to deal with changing temperatures. In the tropics, however, small changes in latitude don't result in major changes in temperature -- so the only way for a species to compensate for warming temperatures may be to move to higher elevations. Writing in the journal Science, a team of ecologists describe studies in Costa Rica looking at moths, ants, canopy-dwelling plants known as epiphytes, and shrubs related to coffee plants. The effects of climate change on theses species are hard to predict, with the potential for unusual stresses and a loss of biodiversity, especially in the tropic lowlands. Since 1975, temperatures in the tropics have warmed by more than 3/4 degrees Centigrade -- and climate models predict an additional increase of more than 3 degrees Centigrade over the next century. In this segment, we'll talk about the potential effects of warming temperatures on plants and insects in the tropics. |
Produced by Charles Bergquist, Director and Contributing Producer
Guests
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Robert Colwell
Professor, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
University of Connecticut
Storrs, Connecticut



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