Arctic animals showing climate adaptation, but it may be causing declines: study
A huge new archive of how animals move across the Arctic from season to season gives the clearest picture yet of how species from eagles to caribou are evolving in the face of climate change and hints at why some of them are in decline.
“This is evolution,” said Mark Hebblewhite, a University of Montana biologist who’s one of 148 co-authors of the study published Thursday in the journal Science.
“These are just as much evolutionary responses to climate change as environmental changes.”
The paper combines — for the first time, the authors say — millions of data points on thousands of animals from different herds, flocks and 96 species into one archive.