School of Archaeology, Geography and Environmental Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, UK.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, UK.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 Dec;25(12):4339-4351. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14755. Epub 2019 Aug 10.
Brazil's Araucaria tree (Araucaria angustifolia) is an iconic living fossil and a defining element of the Atlantic Forest global biodiversity hotspot. But despite more than two millennia as a cultural icon in southern Brazil, Araucaria is on the brink of extinction, having lost 97% of its extent to 20th-century logging. Although logging is now illegal, 21st-century climate change constitutes a new-but so far unevaluated-threat to Araucaria's future survival. We use a robust ensemble modelling approach, using recently developed climate data, high-resolution topography and fine-scale vegetation maps, to predict the species' response to climate change and its implications for conservation on meso- and microclimate scales. We show that climate-only models predict the total disappearance of Araucaria's most suitable habitat by 2070, but incorporating topographic effects allows potential highland microrefugia to be identified. The legacy of 20th-century destruction is evident-more than a third of these likely holdouts have already lost their natural vegetation-and 21st-century climate change will leave just 3.5% of remnant forest and 28.4% of highland grasslands suitable for Araucaria. Existing protected areas cover only 2.5% of the surviving microrefugia for this culturally important species, and none occur in any designated indigenous territory. Our results suggest that anthropogenic climate change is likely to commit Araucaria to a second consecutive century of significant losses, but targeted interventions could help ensure its survival in the wild.
巴西的南洋杉树(Araucaria angustifolia)是一种标志性的活化石,也是大西洋森林全球生物多样性热点地区的一个重要组成部分。但尽管在巴西南部已有两千多年的文化象征意义,南洋杉仍处于灭绝的边缘,其 97%的分布范围因 20 世纪的伐木而消失。尽管现在伐木是非法的,但 21 世纪的气候变化对南洋杉的未来生存构成了新的、但迄今尚未评估的威胁。我们使用强大的集成建模方法,利用最新开发的气候数据、高分辨率地形和精细植被图,预测该物种对气候变化的反应及其对中尺度和小气候尺度保护的影响。我们表明,仅气候模型预测到 2070 年,南洋杉最适宜生境将完全消失,但纳入地形效应可以确定潜在的高海拔微观生境。20 世纪破坏的遗留影响显而易见——超过三分之一的这些可能的避难所已经失去了其自然植被——21 世纪的气候变化将使仅剩下 3.5%的剩余森林和 28.4%的高海拔草原适合南洋杉生长。现有的保护区仅覆盖了这种具有重要文化意义的物种幸存的微观生境的 2.5%,而且在任何指定的土著领土都没有保护区。我们的研究结果表明,人为气候变化很可能使南洋杉连续第二个世纪遭受重大损失,但有针对性的干预措施可能有助于确保其在野外的生存。