Department of Biology

Lauren B. Buckley


Biogeography of climate change

Telephone: (919) 843-8732

E-mail: buckley@bio.unc.edu

Office: 340 Wilson Hall

Mailing Address:
CB# 3280, Coker Hall
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-3280

Assistant Professor (Initial Appointment: January 2009)
Ph.D., Stanford University (2005)
B.A., Williams College (2000)


Publications | Lab Home Page


Research synopsis

How does biology (morphology, physiology, and life history) determine an organism's response to environmental change? I combine theory, field and lab work, and ecoinformatics and approaches from functional ecology, biogeography, and population and community ecology to address this question. While I plan to investigate responses to environmental change across taxa, the research centers on reptiles and amphibians.

Mechanistic models of species' ranges in changing environments

One focus is developing mechanistic models of species distributions that scale from individual traits to energetics and ultimately population and community dynamics. The models are well poised to address challenges for statistical models such as novel environments, individualistic range shifts influenced by morphology and physiology, geographic trait variation and evolution, and biotic constraints. I have developed and tested the models for Anolis lizards abundance along elevation gradients in the Caribbean as well as ranges for North American lizards and those predicted to follow climate change (figure: Sceloporus undulatus). I use field and lab work documenting ecology and physiology to parameterize and test the models. Ongoing research aims to extend mechanistic distribution models across taxonomy and geography to address the following questions:

  • How can environmental data be translated into relevant physiological conditions experienced by organisms?
  • How do these physiological conditions influence population dynamics?
  • How should geographic trait variation be considered in distribution models?
  • How much trait adaptation is likely to occur in response to climate change? What will be the range implications of this adaptation?
  • Will interacting species have grossly different range shifts? If so, how might we consider species interactions when predicting shifts?
Energetic and ecological constraints on abundance and diversity 

Additional research applies ecoinformatic analyses to addresses energetic and ecological constraints on global patterns of vertebrate ectotherm abundance, richness, and species turnover (figure: island and mainland lizard densities). Comparing these constraints with those of vertebrate endotherms addresses the ecology of ectothermy.

   

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