Habitat restoration will help some functional plant types persist under climate change in fragmented landscapes
Authored by Nancy Shackelford, Michael Renton, Rachel J Standish
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02677.x
Sponsors:
Alberta Conservation Association (ACA)
Cooperative Research Centres (CRC)
Woodland Health
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
In the next century, global climate change is predicted to have large
influences on species' distributions. Much of the research in this area
has focused on predicting the areas where conditions will be suitable
for the species in future, and thus the potential distribution of the
species. However, it is equally important to predict the relative
abilities of species to migrate into new suitable areas as conditions
shift, while accounting for dynamic processes, such as dispersal, maturation, mortality, and reproduction, as well as landscape
characteristics, such as level of habitat fragmentation and
connectivity. In this study, we developed a spatially explicit
individual-based model that addresses these factors. As a motivating
case study, we based aspects of the model on southwest Australia, a
global biodiversity hotspot, but stress that the results obtained are
generalizable beyond this region. Using the model, we enhanced current
understanding of climate change impacts by investigating how and to what
extent the functional traits of plant species affect their ability to
move with climate change across landscapes with various levels of
fragmentation. We also tested the efficacy of strategic restoration, such as planting corridors to increase connectivity among fragments. We
found that even if the landscape is fully intact, only an average of
34.2\% of all simulated functional groups had a good chance of
successfully tracking climate change. However, our study highlights the
power of strategic restoration as a tool for increasing species
persistence. Corridors linking fragments increased species persistence
rates by up to 24\%. The lowest persistence rates were found for trees, a functional group with high dispersal but also long generation times.
Our results indicate that for trees intervention techniques, such as
assisted migration might be required to prevent species losses.
Tags
Migration
Biodiversity
Seed dispersal
Change impacts
Global
change
Species richness
Western-australia
Australian floristic region
Cape proteaceae
Range shifts