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Identifying resilient restoration targets: range-wide habitat analysis and climate-change outcomes for American chestnut (Castanea dentata) in Eastern US
Abstract
In spite of the near-eradication of the American chestnut (Castanea dentata) over
the last century by an invasive fungal pathogen, meaningful progress has been made
in recent decades towards generating blight-resistant varieties for eventual restoration
in its former native range in the Eastern US. Using known surviving specimen locations
and environmental data, Maximum Entropy species distribution modeling software was
used to determine optimal present-day habitat characteristics. Model projection was
used to estimate shifts in ideal habitat under moderate and extreme carbon-emission
climate scenarios over several time horizons ranging between present day and 2100.
Sites with suitable habitat across all scenarios were identified and recommended as
restoration targets, most notably lowland New England and high-elevation Southern
and Mid-Atlantic Appalachian regions. The current study builds upon previous work
by combining fine-resolution data, regional-scale breadth, future climate models,
and a different source of chestnut location data to produce a species distribution
model that is concurrently useful to local sample collectors, state-level planners
and long-term restoration managers.
Type
Master's projectSubject
Castanea dentataAmerican chestnut
Maximum entropy (Maxent)
Climate change
Species restoration
Forest pathogens
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22660Citation
Noah, Paul (2021). Identifying resilient restoration targets: range-wide habitat analysis and climate-change
outcomes for American chestnut (Castanea dentata) in Eastern US. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/22660.Collections
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