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Featured researches published by William B. Monahan.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Managing climate change refugia for climate adaptation

Toni Lyn Morelli; Christopher Daly; Solomon Z. Dobrowski; Deanna M. Dulen; Joseph L. Ebersole; Stephen T. Jackson; Jessica D. Lundquist; Constance I. Millar; Sean P. Maher; William B. Monahan; Koren R. Nydick; Kelly T. Redmond; Sarah C. Sawyer; Sarah L. Stock; Steven R. Beissinger

Refugia have long been studied from paleontological and biogeographical perspectives to understand how populations persisted during past periods of unfavorable climate. Recently, researchers have applied the idea to contemporary landscapes to identify climate change refugia, here defined as areas relatively buffered from contemporary climate change over time that enable persistence of valued physical, ecological, and socio-cultural resources. We differentiate historical and contemporary views, and characterize physical and ecological processes that create and maintain climate change refugia. We then delineate how refugia can fit into existing decision support frameworks for climate adaptation and describe seven steps for managing them. Finally, we identify challenges and opportunities for operationalizing the concept of climate change refugia. Managing climate change refugia can be an important option for conservation in the face of ongoing climate change.


Ecological Applications | 2014

Exposure of U.S. National Parks to land use and climate change 1900–2100

Andrew J. Hansen; Nathan B. Piekielek; Cory R. Davis; Jessica R. Haas; David M. Theobald; John E. Gross; William B. Monahan; Tom Olliff; Steven W. Running

Many protected areas may not be adequately safeguarding biodiversity from human activities on surrounding lands and global change. The magnitude of such change agents and the sensitivity of ecosystems to these agents vary among protected areas. Thus, there is a need to assess vulnerability across networks of protected areas to determine those most at risk and to lay the basis for developing effective adaptation strategies. We conducted an assessment of exposure of U.S. National Parks to climate and land use change and consequences for vegetation communities. We first defined park protected-area centered ecosystems (PACEs) based on ecological principles. We then drew on existing land use, invasive species, climate, and biome data sets and models to quantify exposure of PACEs from 1900 through 2100. Most PACEs experienced substantial change over the 20th century (> 740% average increase in housing density since 1940, 13% of vascular plants are presently nonnative, temperature increase of 1 degree C/100 yr since 1895 in 80% of PACEs), and projections suggest that many of these trends will continue at similar or increasingly greater rates (255% increase in housing density by 2100, temperature increase of 2.5 degrees-4.5 degrees C/100 yr, 30% of PACE areas may lose their current biomes by 2030). In the coming century, housing densities are projected to increase in PACEs at about 82% of the rate of since 1940. The rate of climate warming in the coming century is projected to be 2.5-5.8 times higher than that measured in the past century. Underlying these averages, exposure of individual park PACEs to change agents differ in important ways. For example, parks such as Great Smoky Mountains exhibit high land use and low climate exposure, others such as Great Sand Dunes exhibit low land use and high climate exposure, and a few such as Point Reyes exhibit high exposure on both axes. The cumulative and synergistic effects of such changes in land use, invasives, and climate are expected to dramatically impact ecosystem function and biodiversity in national parks. These results are foundational to developing effective adaptation strategies and suggest policies to better safeguard parks under broad-scale environmental change.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Climate Exposure of US National Parks in a New Era of Change

William B. Monahan; Nicholas A. Fisichelli

US national parks are challenged by climate and other forms of broad-scale environmental change that operate beyond administrative boundaries and in some instances are occurring at especially rapid rates. Here, we evaluate the climate change exposure of 289 natural resource parks administered by the US National Park Service (NPS), and ask which are presently (past 10 to 30 years) experiencing extreme (<5th percentile or >95th percentile) climates relative to their 1901–2012 historical range of variability (HRV). We consider parks in a landscape context (including surrounding 30 km) and evaluate both mean and inter-annual variation in 25 biologically relevant climate variables related to temperature, precipitation, frost and wet day frequencies, vapor pressure, cloud cover, and seasonality. We also consider sensitivity of findings to the moving time window of analysis (10, 20, and 30 year windows). Results show that parks are overwhelmingly at the extreme warm end of historical temperature distributions and this is true for several variables (e.g., annual mean temperature, minimum temperature of the coldest month, mean temperature of the warmest quarter). Precipitation and other moisture patterns are geographically more heterogeneous across parks and show greater variation among variables. Across climate variables, recent inter-annual variation is generally well within the range of variability observed since 1901. Moving window size has a measureable effect on these estimates, but parks with extreme climates also tend to exhibit low sensitivity to the time window of analysis. We highlight particular parks that illustrate different extremes and may facilitate understanding responses of park resources to ongoing climate change. We conclude with discussion of how results relate to anticipated future changes in climate, as well as how they can inform NPS and neighboring land management and planning in a new era of change.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Protected Area Tourism in a Changing Climate: Will Visitation at US National Parks Warm Up or Overheat?

Nicholas A. Fisichelli; Gregor W. Schuurman; William B. Monahan; Pamela Ziesler

Climate change will affect not only natural and cultural resources within protected areas but also tourism and visitation patterns. The U.S. National Park Service systematically collects data regarding its 270+ million annual recreation visits, and therefore provides an opportunity to examine how human visitation may respond to climate change from the tropics to the polar regions. To assess the relationship between climate and park visitation, we evaluated historical monthly mean air temperature and visitation data (1979–2013) at 340 parks and projected potential future visitation (2041–2060) based on two warming-climate scenarios and two visitation-growth scenarios. For the entire park system a third-order polynomial temperature model explained 69% of the variation in historical visitation trends. Visitation generally increased with increasing average monthly temperature, but decreased strongly with temperatures > 25°C. Linear to polynomial monthly temperature models also explained historical visitation at individual parks (R2 0.12-0.99, mean = 0.79, median = 0.87). Future visitation at almost all parks (95%) may change based on historical temperature, historical visitation, and future temperature projections. Warming-mediated increases in potential visitation are projected for most months in most parks (67–77% of months; range across future scenarios), resulting in future increases in total annual visits across the park system (8–23%) and expansion of the visitation season at individual parks (13–31 days). Although very warm months at some parks may see decreases in future visitation, this potential change represents a relatively small proportion of visitation across the national park system. A changing climate is likely to have cascading and complex effects on protected area visitation, management, and local economies. Results suggest that protected areas and neighboring communities that develop adaptation strategies for these changes may be able to both capitalize on opportunities and minimize detriment related to changing visitation.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Niche Tracking and Rapid Establishment of Distributional Equilibrium in the House Sparrow Show Potential Responsiveness of Species to Climate Change

William B. Monahan; Morgan W. Tingley

The ability of species to respond to novel future climates is determined in part by their physiological capacity to tolerate climate change and the degree to which they have reached and continue to maintain distributional equilibrium with the environment. While broad-scale correlative climatic measurements of a species’ niche are often described as estimating the fundamental niche, it is unclear how well these occupied portions actually approximate the fundamental niche per se, versus the fundamental niche that exists in environmental space, and what fitness values bounding the niche are necessary to maintain distributional equilibrium. Here, we investigate these questions by comparing physiological and correlative estimates of the thermal niche in the introduced North American house sparrow (Passer domesticus). Our results indicate that occupied portions of the fundamental niche derived from temperature correlations closely approximate the centroid of the existing fundamental niche calculated on a fitness threshold of 50% population mortality. Using these niche measures, a 75-year time series analysis (1930–2004) further shows that: (i) existing fundamental and occupied niche centroids did not undergo directional change, (ii) interannual changes in the two niche centroids were correlated, (iii) temperatures in North America moved through niche space in a net centripetal fashion, and consequently, (iv) most areas throughout the range of the house sparrow tracked the existing fundamental niche centroid with respect to at least one temperature gradient. Following introduction to a new continent, the house sparrow rapidly tracked its thermal niche and established continent-wide distributional equilibrium with respect to major temperature gradients. These dynamics were mediated in large part by the species’ broad thermal physiological tolerances, high dispersal potential, competitive advantage in human-dominated landscapes, and climatically induced changes to the realized environmental space. Such insights may be used to conceptualize mechanistic climatic niche models in birds and other taxa.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Ecologically-Relevant Maps of Landforms and Physiographic Diversity for Climate Adaptation Planning.

David M. Theobald; Dylan Harrison-Atlas; William B. Monahan; Christine M. Albano

Key to understanding the implications of climate and land use change on biodiversity and natural resources is to incorporate the physiographic platform on which changes in ecological systems unfold. Here, we advance a detailed classification and high-resolution map of physiography, built by combining landforms and lithology (soil parent material) at multiple spatial scales. We used only relatively static abiotic variables (i.e., excluded climatic and biotic factors) to prevent confounding current ecological patterns and processes with enduring landscape features, and to make the physiographic classification more interpretable for climate adaptation planning. We generated novel spatial databases for 15 landform and 269 physiographic types across the conterminous United States of America. We examined their potential use by natural resource managers by placing them within a contemporary climate change adaptation framework, and found our physiographic databases could play key roles in four of seven general adaptation strategies. We also calculated correlations with common empirical measures of biodiversity to examine the degree to which the physiographic setting explains various aspects of current biodiversity patterns. Additionally, we evaluated the relationship between landform diversity and measures of climate change to explore how changes may unfold across a geophysical template. We found landform types are particularly sensitive to spatial scale, and so we recommend using high-resolution datasets when possible, as well as generating metrics using multiple neighborhood sizes to both minimize and characterize potential unknown biases. We illustrate how our work can inform current strategies for climate change adaptation. The analytical framework and classification of landforms and parent material are easily extendable to other geographies and may be used to promote climate change adaptation in other settings.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Correction: Managing Climate Change Refugia for Climate Adaptation

Toni Lyn Morelli; Christopher Daly; Solomon Z. Dobrowski; Deanna M. Dulen; Joseph L. Ebersole; Stephen T. Jackson; Jessica D. Lundquist; Constance I. Millar; Sean P. Maher; William B. Monahan; Koren R. Nydick; Kelly T. Redmond; Sarah C. Sawyer; Sarah J. Stock; Steven R. Beissinger

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0159909.].


Archive | 2016

Assessing Vulnerability to Land Use and Climate Change at Landscape Scales Using Landforms and Physiographic Diversity as Coarse-Filter Targets

David M. Theobald; William B. Monahan; Dylan Harrison-Atlas; Andrew J. Hansen; Patrick Jantz; John E. Gross; S. Thomas Olliff

In this chapter, we examine how climate change will likely affect areas of the Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative (Great Northern LCC), but rather than using a fine-filter approach that focuses on a particular species, as has been done in many of the other chapters (e.g., chaps. 9, 10, and 12), we have applied a coarse-filter approach with which we consider our conservation targets to be broader levels of biodiversity. A coarse-filter approach focuses not on an individual species but, rather, on the community that supports a species (Noss 1987) or even on the physical environments as “arenas” of biological activity (Hunter, Jacobson, and Webb 1988). More recently, coarse-filter conservation has been interpreted in a climate change context, in which coarse-filter strategies seek to conserve sites that are minimally affected by climate change (Tingley, Darling, and Wilcove 2014).


Archive | 2016

Potential Impacts of Climate Change on Vegetation for National Parks in the Eastern United States

Patrick Jantz; William B. Monahan; Andrew J. Hansen; Brendan M. Rogers; Scott Zolkos; Tina Cormier; Scott J. Goetz

Forests in the eastern United States have a long history of change related to climate and land use. Eighteen thousand years ago, temperatures were considerably lower and glaciers covered much of the area where deciduous forests currently grow. As glaciers retreated and temperatures rose, tree species advanced from southern areas (Delcourt and Delcourt 1988) and may also have dispersed from low-density populations near the edge of the Laurentide ice sheet (McLachlan, Clark, and Manos 2005). A variety of other processes have also influenced the distribution of tree species. Derechos, tornadoes, and fires cause frequent, small- to intermediate-scale disturbances that are important influences on canopy structure and species composition, while larger disturbances, such as hurricanes, cause less frequent but more extensive changes (Dale et al. 2001).


Archive | 2012

Upstream Landscape Dynamics of US National Parks with Implications for Water Quality and Watershed Management

William B. Monahan; John E. Gross

The mission of the United States (US) National Park Service (NPS) is to “conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wild life therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations” (NPS, 1916). NPS currently manages 397 parks covering about 358,200 km2, or approximately 4% of all US states and territories. The National Park system includes approximately 300 parks that are considered to contain significant natural resources. These parks are key components of a larger network of protected areas that anchor the conservation of natural resources in the US. They also afford direct protection for a number of important and defining resources in the US, including 421 species of threatened or endangered plants and animals, nearly two-thirds of native fishes in the 50 states (Lawrence et al., 2011), the highest point in North America (Mt. McKinley in Denali National Park, 6,194 m), the longest cave system in the world (Mammoth Cave National Park with more than 587 mapped km of caves), the country’s deepest lake (Crater Lake in Crater Lake National Park, 589 m), the lowest terrestrial point in the western hemisphere (Badwater Basin in Death Valley National Park at 86 m below sea level), and – within these extremes – many other natural resources that are significant at local, regional, and national scales.

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Constance I. Millar

United States Forest Service

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