Conserving southeast asian trees requires mitigating both climate and land-use change

HIGHLIGHTS

  • What: The study shows that while a clearly most positive pathway exists for tree distributions in SEA, the combined effects of both global changes and variability in outcomes among species groups will likely mean the lack of a clear "second choice". Because the authors intended to use temporally dynamic ecological niche models (ENMs), occurrence thinning was applied using a 5-year moving window from 2019 to 1960 (i.e., prioritising more recent occurrences). The authors focused the study on the biogeographical regions of Indo-Burma and Sundaland inclusive of subtropical East Asia. Assessments of species threat statuses . . .

     

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