Abstract

Climate change is altering the distribution of wildlife across the globe. These distributional changes, paired with the environmental and vegetative shifts that spurred them, are likely to change co-occurrence patterns and interspecific interactions of native and invasive wildlife. A mesocosm of global change, we worked on Sanibel Island; a low-lying ∼4,900 ha barrier island in southwestern Florida, USA. Sanibel Island possessed a freshwater interior lined with mangrove forests to the north. Sanibel was ∼50% developed, ∼50% conserved, hydrologically degraded, shrub-encroached, and susceptible to inundation by sea-level rise. We used a Bayesian multispecies occupancy modeling approach to investigate how the effects of climate change might change co-occurrence patterns of 2 native island-endemic species (Sanibel Island rice rat [Oryzomys palustris sanibeli]; insular hispid cotton rat [Sigmodon hispidus insulicola]) and 1 exotic invasive species (black rat [Rattus rattus]). We found that co-occurrence is likely to increase between cotton rats and black rats with unknown impacts on interspecific interactions. We also found that climate change may threaten the persistence of cotton rats and black rats on Sanibel Island, but not rice rats so long as mangrove forests persist. Broadly our research demonstrates the importance of investigating interactions between climate change and co-occurrence when assessing contemporary and future wildlife distributions.

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