Climate change and the future of endemic flora in the South Western Alps: relationships between niche properties and extinction risk

被引:32
作者
Dagnino, Davide [1 ]
Guerrina, Maria [1 ]
Minuto, Luigi [1 ]
Mariotti, Mauro Giorgio [1 ]
Medail, Frederic [2 ]
Casazza, Gabriele [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Genoa, Dipartimento Sci Terra Ambiente & Vita DISTAV, Corso Europa 26, I-16132 Genoa, Italy
[2] Aix Marseille Univ, Avignon Univ, Inst Mediterraneen Biodiversite & Ecol Marine & C, CNRS,IRD, Campus Aix,Technopole Environm Arbois Mediterrane, F-13545 Aix En Provence 4, France
基金
欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
Biodiversity hotspot; Ecological niche; Endemic species; Global warming; Species distribution model; Vegetation belt; MOUNTAIN PLANTS; DISTRIBUTION MODELS; DISTRIBUTIONS; CONSERVATION; BIODIVERSITY; DIVERSITY; VELOCITY; SENSITIVITY; THRESHOLDS; SCENARIOS;
D O I
10.1007/s10113-020-01708-4
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Climate change seriously threatens biodiversity, particularly in mountain ecosystems. However, studies on climate change effects rarely consider endemic species and their niche properties. Using species distribution models, we assessed the impact of climate change on the endemic flora of the richest centre of endemism in the Alps: the South-Western Alps. We projected the potential distributions of 100 taxa under both an optimistic (RCP2.6) and a pessimistic (RCP8.5) climate scenario, analysing the relationships between range dynamics and several predictors (dispersal abilities, vegetation belts, niche marginality, niche breadth, altitudinal range and present range). The negative impact ranged from weak to severe according to the scenario, but the extinction risk was low. The dispersal abilities of species strongly affected these range dynamics. Colline and subalpine species were the most threatened and the relationship between range dynamics and predictors varied among vegetation belts. Our results suggest that the rough topography of the SW Alps will probably buffer the climate change effects on endemics, especially if climate will remain within the limits already experienced by species during the Holocene. The presence of the Mediterranean-mountain flora, less affected by climate change than the alpine one, may explain the lower number of species threatened by extinction in the SW Alps than in other European mountains. These results suggest that the relationship between plants' sensitivity to climate change, and both niche properties and vegetation belts, depends on the difference between the current climate in which species grow and the future climate, and not just on their niche breadth.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 85 条
[1]   Analysis of the flora of the Alps. 2: biodiversity and chorology [J].
Aeschimann, David ;
Rasolofo, Nathalie ;
Theurillat, Jean-Paul .
CANDOLLEA, 2011, 66 (02) :225-253
[2]   Assessing the accuracy of species distribution models: prevalence, kappa and the true skill statistic (TSS) [J].
Allouche, Omri ;
Tsoar, Asaf ;
Kadmon, Ronen .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2006, 43 (06) :1223-1232
[3]  
[Anonymous], **DATA OBJECT**, DOI [10.5281/zenodo.15336808, 10.15468/dd.4whdmm, 10.5061/dryad.kd1d4]
[4]   Ensemble forecasting of species distributions [J].
Araujo, Miguel B. ;
New, Mark .
TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION, 2007, 22 (01) :42-47
[5]   Selecting pseudo-absences for species distribution models: how, where and how many? [J].
Barbet-Massin, Morgane ;
Jiguet, Frederic ;
Albert, Cecile Helene ;
Thuiller, Wilfried .
METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2012, 3 (02) :327-338
[6]   Impacts of climate change on the future of biodiversity [J].
Bellard, Celine ;
Bertelsmeier, Cleo ;
Leadley, Paul ;
Thuiller, Wilfried ;
Courchamp, Franck .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2012, 15 (04) :365-377
[7]   Simulating potential effects of climatic warming on altitudinal patterns of key species in Mediterranean-alpine ecosystems [J].
Benito, Blas ;
Lorite, Juan ;
Penas, Julio .
CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2011, 108 (03) :471-483
[8]   Random forests [J].
Breiman, L .
MACHINE LEARNING, 2001, 45 (01) :5-32
[9]  
Breiman L., 1984, Classification and Regression Trees, DOI DOI 10.1201/9781315139470
[10]   Do geographic distribution, niche property and life form explain plants' vulnerability to global change? [J].
Broennimann, Olivier ;
Thuiller, Wilfried ;
Hughes, Greg ;
Midgley, Guy F. ;
Alkemade, J. M. Robert ;
Guisan, Antoine .
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2006, 12 (06) :1079-1093