A recent study by Cavanaugh et al. shows a polar expansion of mangroves. According to the study, the range extension toward the poles is most likely due to a decrease in severe cold events (the present polar vortex excluded).
As the authors write:
Coastal mangrove forests support a diverse array of associated species and provide ecosystem services to human communities. Mangroves cannot tolerate extreme freezing temperatures and so are generally limited to tropical environments. However, climate change in the form of increasing temperatures has the potential to facilitate increases in mangrove abundance near tropical–temperate transition zones. Here, we use 28 y of satellite imagery to demonstrate that increases in mangrove area have already occurred along the northeast coast of Florida. These increases correspond to decreases in the frequency of extreme cold events in this region. We also identify a temperature-related ecological threshold of −4°C. These results suggest that landscape-scale increases in mangrove area may occur in other regions where this threshold is crossed.
As the mangroves move toward the poles, so most likely will those species who live in, near, and among mangroves. Although this study only analyzed the northeast coast of Florida, perhaps the new bonefish hot spot will soon be in the panhandle.
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