Plant migration and persistence under climate change in fragmented landscapes: Does it depend on the key point of vulnerability within the lifecycle?

2013 ◽  
Vol 249 ◽  
pp. 50-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Renton ◽  
Samantha Childs ◽  
Rachel Standish ◽  
Nancy Shackelford
2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (9) ◽  
pp. 2917-2932 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo A. Imbach ◽  
Bruno Locatelli ◽  
Luis G. Molina ◽  
Philippe Ciais ◽  
Paul W. Leadley

Author(s):  
Adel Jalili ◽  
Ziba Jamzad ◽  
Ken Thompson ◽  
M. K. Araghi ◽  
Sohaila Ashrafi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 1203 (2) ◽  
pp. 022059
Author(s):  
Rocío Losada ◽  
Marcos Boullón ◽  
Andrés M. García ◽  
David Miranda

Abstract The EU Commission has established Green infrastructure as one of the tools to preserve biodiversity and grant the provision of ecosystem services that reduce impacts on natural values like those produced by climate change. Therefore, a European green infrastructure strategy has been created that commit member states to incorporate green infrastructure to their territorial planning. Yet, methodologies to delimit green infrastructure so as to facilitate its inclusion in territorial plans are still scarce. The available methods are mainly based in multicriteria evaluation and focus on zoning general green infrastructure areas taking into account the provision potential of just a few ecosystem services. Considering the provision of a wide range of ecosystem services to delimit green infrastructure elements is key to grant their multifunctionality and increase their efficiency mitigating climate change impacts in natural values and human population. However, the lack of data or the high cost to accurately map ecosystem services provision potential, leads most of the time to infer it from land cover data. This creates problems when using these maps to delimit green infrastructure in areas with fragmented landscapes; since identified green infrastructure areas may be irregular and scattered. There are heuristic methods like simulated annealing that have been used to identify ecosystem services hot spots which consider the regularity and size of the identified patches. These methods can be used to delimit green infrastructure in fragmented landscapes finding a balance between the regularity of the areas and their potential to provide multiple ecosystem services. In the current work, a comparison has been made between the performance of simulated annealing and current multicriteria evaluation methods to delimit green infrastructure multifunctional buffer zones in an area of north-western Spain with a very fragmented landscape. Results have shown that simulated annealing delimits more regular multifunctional buffer areas but with a less average potential for providing multiple ecosystem services. The conclusions of the paper indicate that simulated annealing is good produces more regular multifunctional areas but with a lower ESs provision potential. It was observed that in the case of ESs that were mapped considering factors at landscape scale, their provision potential did not vary too much between the multifunctional buffer areas delimited with each of the methods. This indicates that delineation methods may produce more regular GI elements if ESs provision potential is mapped considering the influence of biophysical factors at a wider landscape scale.


2009 ◽  
Vol 276 (1661) ◽  
pp. 1421-1427 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J Wilson ◽  
Zoe G Davies ◽  
Chris D Thomas

There is an increasing need for conservation programmes to make quantitative predictions of biodiversity responses to changed environments. Such predictions will be particularly important to promote species recovery in fragmented landscapes, and to understand and facilitate distribution responses to climate change. Here, we model expansion rates of a test species (a rare butterfly, Hesperia comma ) in five landscapes over 18 years (generations), using a metapopulation model (the incidence function model). Expansion rates increased with the area, quality and proximity of habitat patches available for colonization, with predicted expansion rates closely matching observed rates in test landscapes. Habitat fragmentation constrained expansion, but in a predictable way, suggesting that it will prove feasible both to understand variation in expansion rates and to develop conservation programmes to increase rates of range expansion in such species.


2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (3) ◽  
pp. 393-404
Author(s):  
Mark B. Bush

A 370,000-year paleoecological history of fire spanning four glacial cycles provides evidence of plant migration in response to Andean climate change. Charcoal, an indicator of fire, is only occasionally observed in this record, whereas it is ubiquitous in Holocene-aged Andean records. Fire is a transformative agent in Amazonian and Andean vegetation but is shown to be rare in nature. As humans promote fire, fire-free areas become microrefugia for fire-sensitive species. A distinction is drawn between microrefugia resulting from fire-free zones and those caused by unusual climatic conditions. The importance of this distinction lies in the lack of warmer-than-modern microrefugia aiding upslope migration in response to warming, whereas fire-free microrefugia support tree species above modern tree line or in areas of Amazonia least used by humans. The synergy between fire, deforestation, and climate change could promote a state-change in the ecosystem, one where new microrefugia would be needed to maintain biodiversity. Past tipping points are identified to have occurred within ca. 1°C–1.5°C of modern conditions. The recent climatic instability in both Amazonia and the Andes is viewed in the context of ecological flickering, while the drought-induced and fire-induced tree mortality are aspects of critical slowing down; both possibly portending an imminent tipping point.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 335-351
Author(s):  
Michael E. Braithwaite

There have been successive waves of plant migration north across the Scottish Border since the end of the Ice Age. For those species that never penetrated far into Scotland and which lack specialised means of long-distance dispersal, the distinctive distribution patterns shown by BSBI’s tetrad mapping provide evidence of the likely dates and dispersal mechanisms of the migrations, separating out migration relating to man’s activities. Twelve distribution maps have been prepared for native or archaeophyte species that illustrate contrasting histories. Conclusions are drawn as to whether or not species which lack specialised means of long-distance dispersal are able to migrate north over fragmented natural habitats in response to climate change.


BioScience ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 55 (9) ◽  
pp. 749 ◽  
Author(s):  
RONALD P. NEILSON ◽  
LOUIS F. PITELKA ◽  
ALLEN M. SOLOMON ◽  
RAN NATHAN ◽  
GUY F. MIDGLEY ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (21) ◽  
pp. 7660-7668 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul A. T. Higgins ◽  
John Harte

Projections of greenhouse gas concentrations over the twenty-first century generally rely on two optimistic, but questionable, assumptions about the carbon cycle: 1) that elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations will enhance terrestrial carbon storage and 2) that plant migration will be fast relative to climate changes. This paper demonstrates that carbon cycle uncertainty is considerably larger than currently recognized and that plausible carbon cycle responses could strongly amplify climate warming. This has important implications for societal decisions that relate to climate change risk management because it implies that a given level of human emissions could result in much larger climate changes than we now realize or that stabilizing atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations at a “safe” level could require lower human emissions than currently understood. These results also suggest that terrestrial carbon cycle responses could be sufficiently strong to account for the changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide that occurred during transitions between ice age and interglacial periods.


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