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Projecting climate change impacts on species distributions in megadiverse South African Cape and Southwest Australian Floristic Regions: Opportunities and challenges

机译:预测气候变化对南非多样化海角和西南澳大利亚植物区的物种分布的影响:机遇与挑战

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Increasing evidence shows that anthropogenic climate change is affecting biodiversity. Reducing or stabilizing greenhouse gas emissions may slow global warming, but past emissions will continue to contribute to further unavoidable warming for more than a century. With obvious signs of difficulties in achieving effective mitigation worldwide in the short term at least, sound scientific predictions of future impacts on biodiversity will be required to guide conservation planning and adaptation. This is especially true in Mediterranean type ecosystems that are projected to be among the most significantly affected by anthropogenic climate change, and show the highest levels of confidence in rainfall projections. Multiple methods are available for projecting the consequences of climate change on the main unit of interest – the species – with each method having strengths and weaknesses. Species distribution models (SDMs) are increasingly applied for forecasting climate change impacts on species geographic ranges. Aggregation of models for different species allows inferences of impacts on biodiversity, though excluding the effects of species interactions. The modelling approach is based on several further assumptions and projections and should be treated cautiously. In the absence of comparable approaches that address large numbers of species, SDMs remain valuable in estimating the vulnerability of species. In this review we discuss the application of SDMs in predicting the impacts of climate change on biodiversity with special reference to the species-rich South West Australian Floristic Region and South African Cape Floristic Region. We discuss the advantages and challenges in applying SDMs in biodiverse regions with high levels of endemicity, and how a similar biogeographical history in both regions may assist us in understanding their vulnerability to climate change. We suggest how the process of predicting the impacts of climate change on biodiversity with SDMs can be improved and emphasize the role of field monitoring and experiments in validating the predictions of SDMs.
机译:越来越多的证据表明,人为气候变化正在影响生物多样性。减少或稳定温室气体排放可能减缓全球变暖,但过去一个多世纪以来,过去的排放将继续助长不可避免的进一步变暖。至少从短期来看,在全球范围内难以实现有效缓解的明显迹象表明,将需要对未来对生物多样性的影响做出可靠的科学预测,以指导保护规划和适应。在地中海型生态系统中尤其如此,预计该生态系统受人为气候变化影响最大,并且对降雨预测显示出最高的信心。可以采用多种方法来预测气候变化对主要目标物种(物种)的影响,每种方法都有其优点和缺点。物种分布模型(SDM)越来越多地用于预测气候变化对物种地理范围的影响。尽管不包括物种相互作用的影响,但针对不同物种的模型的汇总可以推断出对生物多样性的影响。建模方法基于其他一些假设和预测,应谨慎对待。在缺乏解决大量物种的可比方法的情况下,SDM在评估物种的脆弱性方面仍然很有价值。在本文中,我们将讨论SDM在预测气候变化对生物多样性的影响方面的应用,并特别参考物种丰富的西南澳大利亚植物区和南非开普植物区。我们讨论了在具有高流行性的生物多样性地区应用SDM的优势和挑战,以及两个地区相似的生物地理历史如何帮助我们理解其对气候变化的脆弱性。我们建议如何改进使用SDM预测气候变化对生物多样性的影响的过程,并强调现场监测和实验在验证SDM预测中的作用。

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