Galbraith Hector, DesRochers David W, Brown Stephen, Reed J Michael
Manomet Center for Conservation Sciences, Manomet, Massachusetts, United States of America; National Wildlife Federation, Springfield, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Department of Natural Sciences, Dalton State College, Dalton, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 30;9(9):e108899. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0108899. eCollection 2014.
Despite an increase in conservation efforts for shorebirds, there are widespread declines of many species of North American shorebirds. We wanted to know whether these declines would be exacerbated by climate change, and whether relatively secure species might become at-risk species. Virtually all of the shorebird species breeding in the USA and Canada are migratory, which means climate change could affect extinction risk via changes on the breeding, wintering, and/or migratory refueling grounds, and that ecological synchronicities could be disrupted at multiple sites. To predict the effects of climate change on shorebird extinction risks, we created a categorical risk model complementary to that used by Partners-in-Flight and the U.S. Shorebird Conservation Plan. The model is based on anticipated changes in breeding, migration, and wintering habitat, degree of dependence on ecological synchronicities, migration distance, and degree of specialization on breeding, migration, or wintering habitat. We evaluated 49 species, and for 3 species we evaluated 2 distinct populations each, and found that 47 (90%) taxa are predicted to experience an increase in risk of extinction. No species was reclassified into a lower-risk category, although 6 species had at least one risk factor decrease in association with climate change. The number of species that changed risk categories in our assessment is sensitive to how much of an effect of climate change is required to cause the shift, but even at its least sensitive, 20 species were at the highest risk category for extinction. Based on our results it appears that shorebirds are likely to be highly vulnerable to climate change. Finally, we discuss both how our approach can be integrated with existing risk assessments and potential future directions for predicting change in extinction risk due to climate change.
尽管针对滨鸟的保护力度有所加大,但北美许多滨鸟物种仍在广泛减少。我们想了解这些减少是否会因气候变化而加剧,以及相对安全的物种是否会成为濒危物种。几乎所有在美国和加拿大繁殖的滨鸟物种都是迁徙性的,这意味着气候变化可能通过繁殖地、越冬地和/或迁徙中途停歇地的变化影响灭绝风险,而且生态同步性可能在多个地点被打乱。为了预测气候变化对滨鸟灭绝风险的影响,我们创建了一个与“鸟类伙伴”和《美国滨鸟保护计划》所使用的风险模型互补的分类风险模型。该模型基于繁殖、迁徙和越冬栖息地的预期变化、对生态同步性的依赖程度、迁徙距离以及对繁殖、迁徙或越冬栖息地的专业化程度。我们评估了49个物种,其中3个物种我们分别评估了2个不同的种群,结果发现47个(90%)分类单元预计灭绝风险会增加。没有物种被重新分类到风险较低的类别,尽管有6个物种至少有一个风险因素因气候变化而降低。在我们的评估中,改变风险类别的物种数量对导致这种转变所需的气候变化影响程度很敏感,但即使在最不敏感的情况下,仍有20个物种处于最高的灭绝风险类别。根据我们的结果,滨鸟似乎很可能对气候变化高度敏感。最后,我们讨论了我们的方法如何与现有的风险评估相结合,以及预测气候变化导致的灭绝风险变化的潜在未来方向。