Harris Rebecca Mary Bernadette, Carter Oberon, Gilfedder Louise, Porfirio Luciana Laura, Lee Greg, Bindoff Nathaniel Lee
Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre (ACE CRC), University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia.
Resource Management and Conservation Division, Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water & Environment, Hobart, Australia.
PLoS One. 2015 Apr 16;10(4):e0124014. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124014. eCollection 2015.
Effective conservation of threatened ecological communities requires knowledge of where climatically suitable habitat is likely to persist into the future. We use the critically endangered Lowland Grassland community of Tasmania, Australia as a case study to identify options for management in cases where future climatic conditions become unsuitable for the current threatened community.
We model current and future climatic suitability for the Lowland Themeda and the Lowland Poa Grassland communities, which make up the listed ecological community. We also model climatic suitability for the structurally dominant grass species of these communities, and for closely related grassland and woodland communities. We use a dynamically downscaled regional climate model derived from six CMIP3 global climate models, under the A2 SRES emissions scenario.
All model projections showed a large reduction in climatically suitable area by mid-century. Outcomes are slightly better if closely related grassy communities are considered, but the extent of suitable area is still substantially reduced. Only small areas within the current distribution are projected to remain climatically suitable by the end of the century, and very little of that area is currently in good condition.
As the climate becomes less suitable, a gradual change in the species composition, structure and habitat quality of the grassland communities is likely. Conservation management will need to focus on maintaining diversity, structure and function, rather than attempting to preserve current species composition. Options for achieving this include managing related grassland types to maintain grassland species at the landscape-scale, and maximising the resilience of grasslands by reducing further fragmentation, weed invasion and stress from other land uses, while accepting that change is inevitable. Attempting to maintain the status quo by conserving the current structure and composition of Lowland Grassland communities is unlikely to be a viable management option in the long term.
有效保护受威胁的生态群落需要了解未来气候适宜的栖息地可能存在的位置。我们以澳大利亚塔斯马尼亚极度濒危的低地草原群落为例,来确定在未来气候条件变得不适宜当前受威胁群落生存的情况下的管理方案。
我们对构成所列生态群落的低地梯牧草和低地早熟禾草原群落当前和未来的气候适宜性进行建模。我们还对这些群落中结构上占主导地位的草种以及密切相关的草原和林地群落的气候适宜性进行建模。我们使用从六个CMIP3全球气候模型推导出来的动态降尺度区域气候模型,采用A2情景特别排放报告中的排放情景。
所有模型预测都显示,到本世纪中叶,气候适宜面积将大幅减少。如果考虑密切相关的草地群落,结果会稍好一些,但适宜面积的范围仍然大幅减少。预计到本世纪末,当前分布范围内只有小面积区域仍将保持气候适宜,而且目前该区域状况良好的面积非常小。
随着气候变得越来越不适宜,草原群落的物种组成、结构和栖息地质量可能会逐渐发生变化。保护管理需要侧重于维持多样性、结构和功能,而不是试图保护当前的物种组成。实现这一目标的选择包括管理相关草地类型,以便在景观尺度上维持草地物种,并通过减少进一步的破碎化、杂草入侵和其他土地利用带来的压力,最大限度地提高草地的恢复力,同时承认变化是不可避免的。从长远来看,试图通过保护低地草原群落的当前结构和组成来维持现状不太可能是一个可行的管理选择。