Extralimital terrestrials: A reassessment of range limits in Alaska’s land mammals
Andrew P. Baltensperger, Hayley C. Lanier, Link E. Olson

TL;DR
This paper reassesses the geographic ranges of land mammals in Alaska to understand how climate change is affecting their distribution.
Contribution
The study provides updated, data-driven range maps and identifies extralimital records for 63.9% of terrestrial mammals in Alaska.
Findings
Extralimital records were found for 39 of 61 terrestrial mammal species in Alaska.
Alaska Gap Analysis Project ranges were overestimated for 13 species.
The study highlights the need for updated standards in archiving and mapping species distributions.
Abstract
Understanding and mitigating the effects of anthropogenic climate change on species distributions requires the ability to track range shifts over time. This is particularly true for species occupying high-latitude regions, which are experiencing more extreme climate change than the rest of the world. In North America, the geographic ranges of many mammals reach their northernmost extent in Alaska, positioning this region at the leading edge of climate-induced distribution change. Over a decade has elapsed since the publication of the last spatial assessments of terrestrial mammals in the state. We compared public occurrence records against commonly referenced range maps to evaluate potential extralimital records and develop repeatable baseline range maps. We compared occurrence records from the Global Biodiversity Information Facility for 61 terrestrial mammal species native to mainland…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpecies Distribution and Climate Change · Wildlife Ecology and Conservation · Rangeland and Wildlife Management
