Claim: Tropical species are moving northward in U.S. as winters warm

Insects, reptiles, fish and plants migrating north as winter freezes in South become less frequent

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA – BERKELEY

Research News

IMAGE
IMAGE: A MONARCH BUTTERFLY CATERPILLAR. MONARCHS ARE INTOLERANT OF FREEZING WEATHER, AND TYPICALLY OVERWINTERED IN MEXICO. THEY NOW ARE OVERWINTERING IN CALIFORNIA, THANKS TO MILDER WINTER TEMPERATURES. view more CREDIT: NOAH WHITEMAN, UC BERKELEY

Notwithstanding last month’s cold snap in Texas and Louisiana, climate change is leading to warmer winter weather throughout the southern U.S., creating a golden opportunity for many tropical plants and animals to move north, according to a new study appearing this week in the journal Global Change Biology.

Some of these species may be welcomed, such as sea turtles and the Florida manatee, which are expanding their ranges northward along the Atlantic Coast. Others, like the invasive Burmese python — in the Florida Everglades, the largest measured 18 feet, end-to-end –maybe less so.

Equally unwelcome, and among the quickest to spread into warming areas, are the insects, including mosquitoes that carry diseases such as West Nile virus, Zika, dengue and yellow fever, and beetles that destroy native trees.

“Quite a few mosquito species are expanding northward, as well as a lot of forestry pests: bark beetles, the southern mountain pine beetle,” said Caroline Williams, associate professor of integrative biology at the University of California, Berkeley, and a co-author of the paper. “In our study, we were really focusing on that boundary in the U.S. where we get that quick tropical-temperate transition. Changes in winter conditions are one of the major, if not the major, drivers of shifting distributions.”

That transition zone, northward of which freezes occur every winter, has always been a barrier to species that evolved in more stable temperatures, said Williams, who specializes in insect metabolism — in particular, how winter freezes and snow affect the survival of species.

“For the vast majority of organisms, if they freeze, they die,” she said. “Cold snaps like the recent one in Texas might not happen for 30 or 50 or even 100 years, and then you see these widespread mortality events where tropical species that have been creeping northward are suddenly knocked back. But as the return times become longer and longer for these extreme cold events, it enables tropical species to get more and more of a foothold, and even maybe for populations to adapt in situ to allow them to tolerate more cold extremes in the future.”

The study, conducted by a team of 16 scientists led by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), focused on the effects warming winters will have on the movement of a broad range of cold-sensitive tropical plants and animals into the Southern U.S., especially into the eight subtropical U.S. mainland states: Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California. Williams and Katie Marshall of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver co-wrote the section on insects for the study.

The team found that a number of tropical species, including insects, fish, reptiles, amphibians, mammals, grasses, shrubs and trees, are enlarging their ranges to the north. Among them are species native to the U.S., such as mangroves, which are tropical salt-tolerant trees; and snook, a warm water coastal sport fish; and invasive species such as Burmese pythons, Cuban tree frogs, Brazilian pepper trees and buffelgrass.

“We don’t expect it to be a continuous process,” said USGS research ecologist Michael Osland, the study’s lead author. “There’s going to be northward expansion, then contraction with extreme cold events, like the one that just occurred in Texas, and then movement again. But by the end of this century, we are expecting tropicalization to occur.”

The authors document several decades’ worth of changes in the frequency and intensity of extreme cold snaps in San Francisco, Tucson, New Orleans and Tampa – all cities with temperature records stretching back to at least 1948. In each city, they found, mean winter temperatures have risen over time, winter’s coldest temperatures have gotten warmer, and there are fewer days each winter when the mercury falls below freezing.

Temperature records from San Francisco International Airport, for example, show that before 1980, each winter would typically see several sub-freezing days. For the past 20 years, there has been only one day with sub-freezing temperatures.

Changes already underway or anticipated in the home ranges of 22 plant and animal species from California to Florida include:

  • Continuing displacement of temperate salt marsh plants by cold-sensitive mangrove forests along the Gulf and southern Atlantic coasts. While this encroachment has been happening over the last 30 years, with sea-level rise, mangroves may also move inland, displacing temperate and freshwater forests.
  • Buffelgrass and other annual grasses moving into Southwestern deserts, fueling wildfire in native plant communities that have not evolved in conjunction with frequent fire.
  • The likelihood that tropical mosquitos that can transmit encephalitis, West Nile virus and other diseases will further expand their ranges, putting millions of people and wildlife species at risk of these diseases.
  • Probable northward movement, with warming winters, of the southern pine beetle, a pest that can damage commercially valuable pine forests in the Southeast.
  • Recreational and commercial fisheries’ disruption by changing migration patterns and the northward movement of coastal fishes.

The changes are expected to result in some temperate zone plant and animal communities found today across the southern U.S. being replaced by tropical communities.

“Unfortunately, the general story is that the species that are going to do really well are the more generalist species — their host plants or food sources are quite varied or widely distributed, and they have relatively wide thermal tolerance, so they can tolerate a wide range of conditions,” Williams said. “And, by definition, these tend to be the pest species — that is why they are pests: They are adaptable, widespread and relatively unbothered by changes in conditions, whereas, the more specialized or boutique species are tending to decline as they get displaced from their relatively narrow niche.”

She cautioned that insect populations overall are falling worldwide.

“We are seeing an alarming decrease in total numbers in natural areas, managed areas, national parks, tropical rain forests — globally,” she said. ” So, although we are seeing some widespread pest species increasing, the overall pattern is that insects are declining extremely rapidly.”

The authors suggest in-depth laboratory studies to learn how tropical species can adapt to extreme conditions and modeling to show how lengthening intervals between cold snaps will affect plant and animal communities.

“On a hopeful note, it is not that we are heading for extinction of absolutely everything, but we need to prepare for widespread shifts in the distribution of biodiversity as climate, including winter climate, changes,” Williams said. “The actions that we take over the next 20 years are going to be critical in determining our trajectory. In addition to obvious shifts, like reducing our carbon footprint, we need to protect and restore habitat for insects. Individuals can create habitat in their own backyards for insects by cultivating native plants that support pollinators and other native insects. Those are little things that people can do and that can be important in providing corridors for species to move through our very fragmented habitats.”

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To bed B
March 20, 2021 1:21 pm

I can’t read it to see how they deal with the obvious – the range is limited by the occasional extremes of cold. How many polar vortexes have we had? A degree warmer, on average, doesn’t make a difference.

A neighbour, a few years ago, lost his new avocado farm because of frost, well outside the tropics.

March 20, 2021 1:24 pm

Odd. Looked for the new paper at Global Change Biology. Neither in any recent published issue nor in their list of accepted, available but not yet in an citable issue. Was curious about any data and methods rather than just a rank speculation.

I tore apart a longish paper with similar conclusions based on about 615 insects and their highest reported latitudes over the past 50 years. Turns out the paper was just junk. Mostly Invasive insects in new regions with similar ecosystems only higher latitudes, for example the emerald ash borer from China. Funniest part was the most extreme ‘northing’ examples in the paper were all related to indoor ornamental plants or greenhouse vegetable gardens, NOTHING to do with climate at all. Essay Greehouse Effects in ebook Blowing Smoke

Vuk
March 20, 2021 1:44 pm

“Tropical species are moving northward in U.S. as winters warm”but wind is getting stronger:
White House blames the WIND for knocking over US President Joe Biden THREE times as he walked up the stairs of Air Force One
https://nypost.com/2021/03/19/white-house-blames-wind-for-bidens-air-force-one-steps-fall/
68 kg, I say a lightweight President ?
DJT 110 kg, now that was a man size heavy duty President.

Reply to  Vuk
March 20, 2021 2:10 pm

What BS, his feeds hasn’t exposed to wind 😀
And it was wind, not storm 😀

rah
Reply to  Vuk
March 20, 2021 2:48 pm

You know I believe it! A slight breeze would knock that shell of a man down.

ResourceGuy
March 20, 2021 2:02 pm

OMG, it’s also happening with Homo sapiens. We’re doomed!

ResourceGuy
March 20, 2021 2:05 pm

It’s the regional version of the doomsday clock–always spinning.

john
March 20, 2021 2:12 pm

Biden Admin to Start Flying Illegals from Southern Border to Red States Near Canadian Border on Taxpayer Dime

http://www.domigood.com/2021/03/biden-admin-to-start-flying-illegals.html?m=1

Drake
Reply to  john
March 20, 2021 2:40 pm

As long as those northern states push them across the border to Canada so Treaudo can take care of them. I mean we can’t keep the illegals in Mexico or more southern stable countries because only the US is a fair enough leftist country to protect them. But why stop here when Canada is such a BETTER place for them to end up, the US is just in the way.

rah
Reply to  john
March 20, 2021 2:50 pm

When are these Red state governors going to grow a pair?

Tom Abbott
Reply to  rah
March 21, 2021 3:40 pm

It sounds like it is about time to put about 25,000 National Guard troops down on the southern border. They can start by relocating the National Guard that are lazing around Washington DC down to the border where they are actually needed.

Glenn
Reply to  john
March 20, 2021 2:57 pm

On red states dime, not on the feds.That way the dems win double, the immigrants see how poorly they are treated (state money stretched) and hear dems promising help, so they will get even more votes. Their purpose is obvious.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  john
March 21, 2021 3:38 pm

They ought to send the illegal aliens to Nancy Pelosi’s house and Chuck Shumer’s house, and any overflow goes to Washington DC.

I hear there are so many illegal aliens that the Biden administration is going to start releasing them into the U.S. without giving them a court date to appear for an asylum hearing.

In other words, the Biden administration is throwing the doors to the United States wide open to the world, and damn the consequences.

Gerald Machnee
March 20, 2021 3:01 pm

A few years ago the Audubon Society did a “study” which showed that more than half the birds will lose their habitat due to climate change and move northward. They did not check the habitat to the north or food supply, but used only the temperatures based on the erroneous assumptions of IPCC.
They used a faulty projection to make another faulty projection. They defend their “science”.

Steve Reddish
March 20, 2021 3:13 pm

“Others, like the invasive Burmese python — in the Florida Everglades, the largest measured 18 feet, end-to-end –maybe less so.”

WHOA!! Burmese pythons have extended their range into Florida? How did that happen?
And the author thought it necessary to explain that 18 feet was the length, not the girth?
I couldn’t stomach reading past that point.

Reply to  Steve Reddish
March 21, 2021 8:34 am

She seems to have no ability to discern why an introduced species will almost certainly be increasing it’s population when it winds up in a new area that it can thrive in.
Or with climate induced widening of a species’ range as opposed to an introduced species expanding the new area it is inhabiting until it reaches places where there are conditions that limit it’s ability to expand further.
Introduced species can expand for a very long time in certain cases, both because there is a large area with the proper conditions and resources for that species, but also because it may only be able to spread at some particular rate…a few tens of miles a year or whatever.
I wonder if she is aware of the history of the range of armadilloes in the US over the past hundred years?
That one case history alone is pretty much enough to put a big permanent hole in the fauiled hypothesis of “CO2 as thermostat of the planet” jackassery.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  Nicholas McGinley
March 21, 2021 3:42 pm

I bet there were no pythons thriving in the Texas cold. If Texas has this problem, the arctic cold front probably eliminated it.

March 20, 2021 3:55 pm

How long have we to wait for predictions, polar bears will move northward ?? /s

Reply to  Krishna Gans
March 21, 2021 8:26 am

If anyone is really worried about the polar bears, they can always take a few breeding pairs to Antarctica.
The penguins there are 100% defenseless on land…there will be scads of polar bears in no time.

Tom
March 20, 2021 4:35 pm

<blockquote>”Temperature records from San Francisco International Airport, for example, show that before 1980, each winter would typically see several sub-freezing days. For the past 20 years, there has been only one day with sub-freezing temperatures.”</blockquote>

I’ve lived just a few miles from the San Antonio airport for more than a decade. We’ve had several sub freezing days every year I’ve been here. All the SA airport data has done is prove that UHI effect is far greater than the climate ‘scientists’ are willing to admit.

March 20, 2021 5:01 pm

A total load of manure. The entire “study” as summarized here appears to be model-based projections of what “will” happen. Nowhere does it show or emphasize that they are collecting field data on any or all of the species mentioned. They keep saying “will” occur, not saying field data shows that something measurable IS occurring. According to even worst case climate change projections using totally implausible scenarios and models that run hot, the change over the next 80-100 years will be the equivalent of a person moving from northern Iowa to southern Iowa. Ooh! Scary.

Reply to  Pflashgordon
March 21, 2021 8:22 am

Yuppers…you nailed it.
There has been no measured warming in the US.
The only cause of any trend upwards, rahter than cyclical fluctations, has been got by altering what was actually measured.
And that right there is a fact.
Mann-made global warming…every Nanojoule, Terawatt, Manhatten, and Hiroshima of it

zack aa
March 20, 2021 10:51 pm

Alaskans must be so happy not to have mosquitos.

Reply to  zack aa
March 21, 2021 8:19 am

Haha!
Oh, snap!

Reply to  zack aa
March 21, 2021 8:39 am

Exactly, it’s so cold here, in northern canada there are no mosquitos in summer.

Except of course, the ones that pick up and carry away entire caribou

David Long
March 20, 2021 11:32 pm

The recent Texas freeze was colder than most, but everyplace in Texas has freezes one time or another. The really unusual thing about this last one was it’s wide extent.
We live on the water near Galveston. Our little town has no room to grow so there’s no change due to heat island effects. We can grow bananas and they survive many winters, but every few years they get frozen out. This was just another one of those years.

March 21, 2021 1:02 am

 “But by the end of this century, we are expecting tropicalization to occur.” said USGS research ecologist Michael Osland.

Good grief, and they say listen to the “scientist’s”.

Reply to  Climate believer
March 21, 2021 8:16 am

Exactly.
“Nothing has changed except some fluctations, but we are expecting that long after we are dead, things will be different.”

sky king
March 21, 2021 1:04 am

I remain in awe of the U.S. being so wealthy as to pay salaries and retirement benefits to people for writing such drivel.

griff
March 21, 2021 1:43 am

I don’t understand why posters here are arguing with the evidence… in the UK, with its records stretching back in detail well over 100 years, there’s clear evidence of species extending/moving their range northwards at a rate not seen in the past.

New species are also moving into the UK. (The Great White Egret, Little Egret and Cattle Egret are all now resident species in the UK and indeed in my part of it, where there were none before the mid 1990s)

Reply to  griff
March 21, 2021 8:15 am

Those are not cases of climate caused enlargement of range…those are introduced species, my charmingly dull-witted friend.

Reply to  griff
March 21, 2021 8:37 am

Griff, if these species are spreading into Britain it’s because it’s part of their natural range
As it’s been much warmer in the last 10,000 years than it is today these species must have lived there in the past and are now only reestablishing their presence.

Why can’t you celebrate a return to the natural order? To species increasing their ranges

What is wrong with you?

Ulises
Reply to  Pat from kerbob
March 22, 2021 9:33 am

“Griff, if these species are spreading into Britain it’s because it’s part of their natural range”

Why just now ? For centuries, Britain was not “part of their natural range”, but something changed. What ? More frogs around ? Never say “climate”.

March 21, 2021 7:29 am

Very apt that the first word was “notwithstanding”.
Unfortunately, nearly every word of the rest of the text of her essay is flat out wrong, or a pack of lies, dreeadfully mistaken, or otherwise completely untrue, not so, and to the contrary.

This is very simply because, a species moving into a place where there are extremes of temperature or moisture that the species is unable to survive in, will be eliminated from that location.
This is exactly the sort of event that delineates the boundaries of a given species’ range.
Plants and animals and the microrganisms that make up our biosphere are constantly seeking to reproduce and to expand into new areas.
It is this tendancy that allows us all to survive to begin with, when circumstances change…which they always do.
And various forces and factors are generally pushing back against this tendancy to reproduce and spread.
Competitition for resources, and the ability to adapt successfully to the full range of conditions that prevail in a given location, are among the most powerful of these countervailing forces.

Those species that we call “native” to a given location, are those ones which are fully able to survive the full range of variability in the availability of various resources, as well as every variation in the prevailing climatic and weather conditions of that place and at that time.
Pine trees could not survive near Hudson Bay 18,000 years ago. Now they can.
Every habitat consists of many seperate independant or co-dependant or mutually exclusive ecological niches, and each of these niches will tend to fill with some or another biome, or mixture of species, which is suited to survival in that particular habitat and group of niches.

It is amazing that someone who claims to be some sort of biologist would paint a picture that casts the ability of life to survive and thrive as a bad thing.
I wonder if she has spent any time pondering how many species, entire biomes, habitats, and trillions upon trillions of individual living organisms, were wiped out when the current ice age began?
Or how it is that there are now a diversity of species across entire continent sized areas that were miles deep in ice a mere 12,000 years ago?
We are all assigned a death sentence at birth, as are many species (But not all. Consider a bacteria which endlessly reproduces by splitting into two daughter cells. Do any of those that have successfully reproduced ever really die?) and many entire lineages.
Unless we can forestall the next reglaciation event, everything will die across vast regions of the Earth, and those areas will be nearly sterile and barren wastelands for many tens of thousands of years.

It is sickening to listen to jackasses like this person bemoan the good times on planet Water, on Planet Warmth, on planet Life…on planet Earth.

She is not even very good at what she claims as her specialty. Either that is she is a deliberate disembler and/or a liar.
Zika is not spreading throughout the US. Neither is Dengue. Dengue is one of the diseases that various alarmist types have warned is heading for the US for decades. It has never taken foothold here, let alone spread. Having a suitable insect vector is only one small part of the many co-dependant factors that must exist for a insect vector-borne disease-causing organism to thrive and spread.
We have no malaria here in the US, although we did have it back in the Little Ice Age. And people come back to the US infected with the pathogen all the frickin time!
We have no Yellow Fever here, not since a US Army doctor, Major Walter Reed, overturned several of the prevailing paradigms of dieases and disease transmission, and in so doing ended the disease here in the US, along with several others, and allowed other countries and people to follow suit. Having the proper conditions for a mosquito to survive will not cause an infectious organism to be presnt or allow it to spread, not necessarily and certainly not as a consequence of merely being present. If that was true we would never have gotten rid of any diseases, and nor would other countries, many of them 100% tropical, have done so or be currently continuing to do so, all the time.

People in the US protect themselves from mosquitoes by several means and methods, only some of which have any chance of ever ridding a region of them entirely.

Our sanitary, hygienic, cultural, nutritional, and lifestyle choices and conditions prevent many diseases from being much of a threat to us here, even when such diseases find their way to our shores. The simple truth is, many disease simply fizzle here…like Dengue, like Zika, and like many others.

As well as being spectacularly uninformative re infectious disease causing organisms and their vectors, she apparently has a poor or absent grasp of ecology, as well as the causes and factors involved in changing forestry ecology in the US.

Greg
March 21, 2021 8:10 am

Can I ask a silly question?

If the range of these species is moving north, can I ask how far? I mean, gosh, I might have missed something when I read the article, correct me if I did, but when I read things like this I like to look for numbers.

So how far north? An inch? A foot? Ten feet? A mile? A whole lot of miles?

And as for San Francisco getting warming, doesn’t that have more to do with concrete than climate change? How are the frosts doing across the bay and over the hills where there is (somewhat) less concrete?

Coach Springer
March 21, 2021 8:12 am

I was taught that migration and evolution were natural. Along with climate change..

March 21, 2021 8:31 am

Different animals are expanding their ranges, likely still nowhere near as much as 1000years ago but still, good news

March 21, 2021 8:48 am

I grew up in south Saskatchewan in the 70’s, I had a paper route for a lot of years and I can assure everyone the polar vortex was the norm.
Temps in the -30s and incredible amounts of snow, my mom has her picture albums full of 10’ snow drifts, every year we could tunnel in standing up and make large open rooms. All of which ended the winter if 81-82.

Anyone who thinks it is imperative we somehow try to force the climate back to the awful 70s should be dragged by their heels through town and displayed as idiots for all to see

March 21, 2021 9:06 am

“….Tropical species are moving northward in U.S. as winters warm…” and possibly northern species are taking over larger areas of the continent as their general breeding conditions improve. Click-bait journalism loves stories that can be spun one way this week and the other next week.

Caligula Jones
March 22, 2021 7:53 am

Been waiting for these critters to invade Canada since the 70s:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Africanized_bee

Oh, and is there were we compare the malaria rates in Texas and Mexican border towns again?