Institute of Physical Geography, Goethe University Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (SBiK-F), Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Conserv Biol. 2022 Dec;36(6):e13968. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13968. Epub 2022 Oct 13.
Africa's protected areas (PAs) are the last stronghold of the continent's unique biodiversity, but they appear increasingly threatened by climate change, substantial human population growth, and land-use change. Conservation planning is challenged by uncertainty about how strongly and where these drivers will interact over the next few decades. We investigated the combined future impacts of climate-driven vegetation changes inside African PAs and human population densities and land use in their surroundings for 2 scenarios until the end of the 21 century. We used the following 2 combinations of the shared socioeconomic pathways (SSPs) and representative greenhouse gas concentration pathways (RCPs): the "middle-of-the-road" scenario SSP2-RCP4.5 and the resource-intensive "fossil-fueled development" scenario SSP5-RCP8.5. Climate change impacts on tree cover and biome type (i.e., desert, grassland, savanna, and forest) were simulated with the adaptive dynamic global vegetation model (aDGVM). Under both scenarios, most PAs were adversely affected by at least 1 of the drivers, but the co-occurrence of drivers was largely region and scenario specific. The aDGVM projections suggest considerable climate-driven tree cover increases in PAs in today's grasslands and savannas. For PAs in West Africa, the analyses revealed climate-driven vegetation changes combined with hotspots of high future population and land-use pressure. Except for many PAs in North Africa, future decreases in population and land-use pressures were rare. At the continental scale, SSP5-RCP8.5 led to higher climate-driven changes in tree cover and higher land-use pressure, whereas SSP2-RCP4.5 was characterized by higher future population pressure. Both SSP-RCP scenarios implied increasing challenges for conserving Africa's biodiversity in PAs. Our findings underline the importance of developing and implementing region-specific conservation responses. Strong mitigation of future climate change and equitable development scenarios would reduce ecosystem impacts and sustain the effectiveness of conservation in Africa.
非洲的保护区(PAs)是非洲独特生物多样性的最后堡垒,但它们似乎越来越受到气候变化、人口大量增长和土地利用变化的威胁。保护规划面临着挑战,因为不确定这些驱动因素在未来几十年内会以多强的力度相互作用以及在何处相互作用。我们调查了未来几十年内,非洲保护区内的气候驱动植被变化以及周围地区的人口密度和土地利用情况的综合影响,研究了两种情景:到 21 世纪末的 SSP2-RCP4.5“中间道路”情景和资源密集型“化石燃料驱动发展”情景 SSP5-RCP8.5。我们使用了以下两种共享社会经济途径(SSP)和代表性温室气体浓度途径(RCP)的组合:“中间道路”情景 SSP2-RCP4.5 和资源密集型“化石燃料驱动发展”情景 SSP5-RCP8.5。气候变化对树木覆盖和生物群落类型(即沙漠、草原、稀树草原和森林)的影响采用自适应动态全球植被模型(aDGVM)进行模拟。在这两种情景下,大多数保护区都受到至少一个驱动因素的不利影响,但驱动因素的共同发生在很大程度上是区域和情景特定的。aDGVM 预测表明,在今天的草原和稀树草原保护区内,树木覆盖面积会因气候驱动而大幅增加。对于西非的保护区,分析表明,气候驱动的植被变化与未来人口和土地利用压力的热点地区相结合。除了北非的许多保护区外,未来人口和土地利用压力下降的情况很少见。在非洲大陆范围内,SSP5-RCP8.5 导致树木覆盖面积的气候驱动变化更大,土地利用压力更高,而 SSP2-RCP4.5 的特点是未来人口压力更高。两种 SSP-RCP 情景都意味着保护区保护非洲生物多样性的挑战越来越大。我们的研究结果强调了制定和实施特定区域保护对策的重要性。未来气候变化的强烈缓解和公平的发展情景将减少生态系统的影响,并维持非洲保护的有效性。