PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Alke Voskamp AU - Christian Hof AU - Matthias F. Biber AU - Thomas Hickler AU - Aidin Niamir AU - Stephen G. Willis AU - Susanne A. Fritz TI - Climate change impacts on the phylogenetic diversity of the world’s terrestrial birds: more than species numbers AID - 10.1101/2020.12.02.378216 DP - 2020 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 2020.12.02.378216 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/12/03/2020.12.02.378216.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2020/12/03/2020.12.02.378216.full AB - Ongoing climate change is a major threat to biodiversity and impacts on species distributions and abundances are already evident. Heterogenous responses of species due to varying abiotic tolerances and dispersal abilities have the potential to further amplify or ameliorate these impacts through changes in species assemblages. Here we investigate the impacts of climate change on terrestrial bird distributions and, subsequently, on species richness as well as on different aspects of phylogenetic diversity of species assemblages across the globe. We go beyond previous work by disentangling the potential impacts on assemblage phylogenetic diversity of species gains vs. losses under climate change and compare the projected impacts to randomized assemblage changes.We show that climate change might not only affect species numbers and composition of global species assemblages but could also have profound impacts on assemblage phylogenetic diversity, which, across extensive areas, differ significantly from random changes. Both the projected impacts on phylogenetic diversity and on phylogenetic structure vary greatly across the globe. Projected increases in the evolutionary history contained within species assemblages, associated with either increasing phylogenetic diversification or clustering, are most frequent at high northern latitudes. By contrast, projected declines in evolutionary history, associated with increasing phylogenetic over-dispersion or homogenisation, are projected across all continents.The projected widespread changes in the phylogenetic structure of species assemblages show that changes in species richness do not fully reflect the potential threat from climate change to ecosystems. Our results indicate that the most severe changes to the phylogenetic diversity and structure of species assemblages are likely to be caused by species range shifts rather than range reductions and extinctions. Our findings highlight the importance of considering diverse measures in climate impact assessments and the value of integrating species-specific responses into assessments of entire community changes.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.