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Many Localities (many + locality)
Selected AbstractsTrends in New Zealand daily temperature and rainfall extremesINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, Issue 12 2001M.J. Salinger Abstract Trends in daily temperature and rainfall indices are described for New Zealand. Two periods were examined: 1951,1998, to describe significant trends in temperature and rainfall parameters; and 1930,1998, to ascertain the effects of two main circulation changes that have occurred in the New Zealand region around 1950 and 1976. Indices examined included frequencies of daily maximum and minimum temperatures, above and below specified percentile levels and at those levels, as well as frequencies of these above and below fixed temperature thresholds. Extreme daily rainfall intensity and frequency above the 95th percentile and the length of consecutive dry day sequences were the rainfall indices selected. There were no significant trends in maximum temperature extremes (,hot days') but a significant increase in minimum temperatures was associated with decreases in the frequency of extreme ,cold nights' over the 48-year period. There was a non-significant tendency for an increase in the frequency of maximum temperature extremes in the north and northeast of New Zealand. A decline occurred in frequency of the minimum temperature 5th percentile (,cold nights') of 10,20 days a year in many locations. Trends in rainfall indices show a zonal pattern of response, with the frequency of 1-day 95th percentile extremes decreasing in the north and east, and increasing in the west over the 1951,1996 period. Changes in the frequency of threshold temperatures above 24.9°C (25°C days) and below 0°C (frost days) are strongly linked to atmospheric circulation changes, coupled with regional warming. From 1930,1950 more south to southwest anomalous flow occurred relative to later years. In this period, 25°C days were less frequent in all areas except the northeast, and there was markedly more frost days in all but inland areas of the South Island compared with the 1951,1975 period. There was more airflow from the east and northeast from 1951 to 1975, the frequency of 25°C days increased and frost days decreased in many areas of New Zealand. In the final period examined (1976,1998), more prevalent airflow from the west and southwest was accompanied by more anticyclonic conditions. Days with a temperature of 25°C increased in the northeast only. Frost day frequencies decreased between 5 and 15 days a year in many localities, with little change in the west of the South Island and at higher elevation locations. Copyright © 2001 Royal Meteorological Society [source] Glacial refugia of temperate trees in Europe: insights from species distribution modellingJOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, Issue 6 2008Jens-Christian Svenning Summary 1The Pleistocene is an important period for assessing the impact of climate change on biodiversity. During the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM; 21 000 years ago), large glaciers and permafrost reached far south in Europe. Trees are traditionally thought to have survived only in scattered Mediterranean refugia (southern refugia hypothesis), but a recent proposal suggests that trees may have been much more widely and northerly distributed (northern refugia hypothesis). 2In this study, the southern vs. northern refugia hypotheses were investigated by estimating the potential LGM distributions of 7 boreal and 15 nemoral widespread European tree species using species distribution modelling. The models were calibrated using data for modern species distributions and climate and projected onto two LGM climate simulations for Europe. Five modelling variants were implemented. 3Models with moderate to good predictive ability for current species range limits and species richness patterns were developed. 4Broadly consistent results were obtained irrespective of the climate simulation and modelling variant used. Our results indicate that LGM climatic conditions suitable for boreal species existed across Central and Eastern Europe and into the Russian Plain. In contrast, suitable climatic conditions for nemoral tree species were largely restricted to the Mediterranean and Black Sea regions. Large proportions of these northern and southern regions would have been suitable for a number of boreal or boreal plus nemoral tree species, respectively. 5These findings are consistent with recent palaeoecological and phylogeographic data regarding LGM distributions of trees and other boreal and nemoral taxa. 6Synthesis. It is clear that the view of the LGM landscape in Europe as largely treeless, especially north of the Alps, needs to be revised. Trees were probably much more widespread during the LGM than hitherto thought, although patchily distributed at low densities due to low atmospheric CO2 concentrations and high wind-speeds. The findings presented here help explain the occurrence of mammal assemblages with mixtures of forest, tundra and steppe species at many localities in southern Central and Eastern Europe during the LGM, as well as the phylogeographic evidence for the extra-Mediterranean persistence of many boreal species. [source] The stripe-backed weasel Mustela strigidorsa: taxonomy, ecology, distribution and statusMAMMAL REVIEW, Issue 4 2008A. V. ABRAMOV ABSTRACT 1The stripe-backed weasel Mustela strigidorsa is one of the rarest and least-known mustelids in the world. Its phylogenetic relationships with other Mustela species remain controversial, though several unique morphological features distinguish it from congeners. 2It probably lives mainly in evergreen forests in hills and mountains, but has also been recorded from plains forest, dense scrub, secondary forest, grassland and farmland. Known sites range in altitude from 90 m to 2500 m. Data are insufficient to distinguish between habitat and altitudes which support populations, and those where only dispersing animals may occur. 3It has been confirmed from many localities in north-east India, north and central Myanmar, south China, north Thailand, north and central Laos, and north and central Vietnam. Given the limited survey effort, the number of recent records shows that the species is not as rare as hitherto believed. Neither specific nor urgent conservation needs are apparent. [source] DEVONIAN TRILOBITES FROM THE FALKLAND ISLANDSPALAEONTOLOGY, Issue 1 2006MARIA DA GLORIA PIRES DE CARVALHO Abstract:, New trilobite material is described from the Fox Bay Formation (Lower Devonian; Pragian) of the Falkland Islands (South Atlantic). The fossils were collected from many localities in both East and West Falkland and represent the first significant collection of trilobites from East Falkland. The trilobites belong to three higher taxa: Proetida (the first proetid record in these islands); Homalonotidae, Burmeisteria Salter, 1865; and Calmoniidae, including Bainella Rennie, 1930 and Metacryphaeus Reed, 1907. All of the forms except proetids have now been found in both East and West Falkland. [source] |