Lee Jasmine R, Maggini Ramona, Taylor Martin F J, Fuller Richard A
School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
School of Biological Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions (CEED), The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2015 May 27;10(5):e0124766. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124766. eCollection 2015.
Effective conservation management for climate adaptation rests on understanding the factors driving species' vulnerability in a spatially explicit manner so as to direct on-ground action. However, there have been only few attempts to map the spatial distribution of the factors driving vulnerability to climate change. Here we conduct a species-level assessment of climate change vulnerability for a sample of Australia's threatened species and map the distribution of species affected by each factor driving climate change vulnerability across the continent. Almost half of the threatened species assessed were considered vulnerable to the impacts of climate change: amphibians being the most vulnerable group, followed by plants, reptiles, mammals and birds. Species with more restricted distributions were more likely to show high climate change vulnerability than widespread species. The main factors driving climate change vulnerability were low genetic variation, dependence on a particular disturbance regime and reliance on a particular moisture regime or habitat. The geographic distribution of the species impacted by each driver varies markedly across the continent, for example species impacted by low genetic variation are prevalent across the human-dominated south-east of the country, while reliance on particular moisture regimes is prevalent across northern Australia. Our results show that actions to address climate adaptation will need to be spatially appropriate, and that in some regions a complex suite of factors driving climate change vulnerability will need to be addressed. Taxonomic and geographic variation in the factors driving climate change vulnerability highlights an urgent need for a spatial prioritisation of climate adaptation actions for threatened species.
有效的气候适应保护管理依赖于以空间明确的方式理解驱动物种脆弱性的因素,从而指导实地行动。然而,绘制驱动气候变化脆弱性因素的空间分布的尝试很少。在此,我们对澳大利亚一些受威胁物种进行了物种层面的气候变化脆弱性评估,并绘制了整个大陆受每个驱动气候变化脆弱性因素影响的物种分布情况。几乎一半被评估的受威胁物种被认为易受气候变化影响:两栖动物是最脆弱的群体,其次是植物、爬行动物、哺乳动物和鸟类。分布范围较窄的物种比分布广泛的物种更有可能表现出高气候变化脆弱性。驱动气候变化脆弱性的主要因素是低遗传变异、对特定干扰 regime 的依赖以及对特定水分 regime 或栖息地的依赖。受每个驱动因素影响的物种的地理分布在整个大陆有显著差异,例如,受低遗传变异影响的物种在该国人类主导的东南部很普遍,而对特定水分 regime 的依赖在澳大利亚北部很普遍。我们的结果表明,应对气候适应的行动需要在空间上具有针对性,并且在一些地区需要应对一系列复杂的驱动气候变化脆弱性的因素。驱动气候变化脆弱性因素的分类学和地理变异凸显了对受威胁物种的气候适应行动进行空间优先排序的迫切需求。