Institute of Environmental Sciences, Boğaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 3;8(7):e68037. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068037. Print 2013.
In this study, we evaluated the potential impact of climate change on the distributions of Turkey's songbirds in the 21st century by modelling future distributions of 20 resident and nine migratory species under two global climate change scenarios. We combined verified data from an ornithological citizen science initiative (www.kusbank.org) with maximum entropy modeling and eight bioclimatic variables to estimate species distributions and projections for future time periods. Model predictions for resident and migratory species showed high variability, with some species projected to lose and others projected to gain suitable habitat. Our study helps improve the understanding of the current and potential future distributions of Turkey's songbirds and their responses to climate change, highlights effective strategies to maximize avian conservation efforts in the study region, and provides a model for using citizen science data for biodiversity research in a large developing country with few professional field biologists. Our results demonstrate that climate change will not affect every species equally in Turkey. Expected range reductions in some breeding species will increase the risk of local extinction, whereas others are likely to expand their ranges.
在这项研究中,我们通过建模未来 20 种留鸟和 9 种候鸟在两种全球气候变化情景下的分布情况,评估了气候变化对土耳其鸣禽分布的潜在影响。我们结合了鸟类学公民科学倡议(www.kusbank.org)的验证数据、最大熵模型和 8 个生物气候变量,以估计物种分布和未来时期的预测。留鸟和候鸟的模型预测显示出高度的可变性,一些物种预计会失去适宜的栖息地,而另一些物种预计会获得适宜的栖息地。我们的研究有助于提高对土耳其鸣禽当前和潜在未来分布及其对气候变化的响应的理解,突出了在研究区域最大限度地提高鸟类保护工作的有效策略,并为在一个专业野外生物学家较少的大型发展中国家利用公民科学数据进行生物多样性研究提供了模型。我们的结果表明,气候变化不会在土耳其对每种物种产生同等影响。一些繁殖物种的预期范围缩小将增加局部灭绝的风险,而其他物种则可能扩大其范围。