Abstract

The velocity of climate change and its subsequent impact on vegetation has been well characterized at high elevations and latitudes, including the Arctic. But whether species and ecosystems are keeping pace with the velocity of temperature change is not as well documented. Some evidence indicates that species are less able to keep pace with the velocity of climate change along elevational gradients than latitudinal ones. If substantiated this finding could warrant reconsideration of a current cornerstone of conservation planning. Here we use 27 years of high-resolution satellite data to quantify changes in vegetation cover across elevation within nine mountain ranges in western North America, spanning tropical Mexico to subarctic Canada and from coastal California to interior deserts. Across these ranges we show a uniform pattern at the highest elevations in each range, where increases in vegetation have occurred ubiquitously over the past three decades. At these highest elevations, the realized velocity of vegetation varies among mountain ranges from 19.8–112.8 m · decade-1 (mean = 67.3 m · decade-1). This is equivalent, with respect to gradients in temperature, to a 14.4–104.3 km · decade-1 poleward shift (mean = 56.1 km · decade-1). This realized velocity is 4.4 times larger than previously reported for plants, and is among the fastest rates predicted for the velocity of climate change. However, in three of the five mountain ranges with long-term climate data, realized velocities fail to keep pace with changes in temperature, a finding with important implications for conservation of biological diversity.

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