Using traits to assess threatened plant species response to climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Amelia Dudley
Nathalie Butt
Tony D. Auld
Rachael V. Gallagher
机构
[1] Macquarie University,Department of Biological Sciences
[2] The University of Queensland,School of Biological Sciences
[3] University of Oxford,School of Geography and the Environment
[4] New South Wales Office of Environment and Heritage,Science Division
[5] University of Wollongong,School of Biological Sciences
[6] University of New South Wales,Centre for Ecosystem Science
来源
关键词
Adaptive capacity; Conservation management; Global change; Life history traits; Threatened species; Vulnerability;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Climate change poses significant challenges to the long-term management of threatened species. Pre-emptive assessments of the capacity for threatened species to adapt to climate change are essential for choosing appropriate management actions that minimise extinction risk. Here, we use species traits and range metrics linked to ecological performance to assess the capacity to respond to climate change of 342 plant species, listed as threatened under IUCN-compatible criteria in the Australian state of New South Wales (NSW). Traits capturing variation in phenology, morphology, physiology and geographic range were used to assess species’ response(s) to four factors likely to influence their climate change response: Reproduction, Movement Capability, Abiotic Niche Specialisation, and risk spreading across Spatial Coverage. Assessment scores were combined into high, medium and low rankings based on two complementary approaches for assessing climate change risk: (i) fully precautionary, where species were classified as high risk if any one of the four response factors was high; and (ii) integrative, combining scores across all four response factors to assign an overall risk ranking. 84% of threatened species assessed had a high risk ranking for at least one response factor, whereas 30, 55 and 15% of species were ranked high, medium or low respectively, based on our integrative measure of risk. Importantly, basic information for at least one trait for an additional 237 threatened plants in NSW was not available, despite thorough searching across 727 resources. This lack of fundamental baseline data for threatened plants may have wide-ranging implications for their management, including an inability to assess their response capacity to threats, and plan accordingly.
引用
收藏
页码:1905 / 1919
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Understanding the plant's response to global climate change using Omics
    Penna, Suprasanna
    Naithani, Sushma
    CURRENT PLANT BIOLOGY, 2022, 29
  • [42] Species' traits influenced their response to recent climate change (vol 7, pg 205, 2017)
    Pacifici, Michela
    Visconti, Piero
    Butchart, Stuart H. M.
    Watson, James E. M.
    Cassola, Francesca M.
    Rondinini, Carlo
    NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2018, 8 (08) : 750 - 750
  • [43] Correction: Predicting the distribution of plant species from southern South America: are the hotspots of genetic diversity threatened by climate change?
    Carolina Soliani
    Viviana Ceccarelli
    María Victoria Lantschner
    Evert Thomas
    Paula Marchelli
    Biodiversity and Conservation, 2024, 33 : 1869 - 1870
  • [44] A draft genome provides hypotheses on drought tolerance in a keystone plant species in Western North America threatened by climate change
    Melton, Anthony E.
    Beck, James
    Galla, Stephanie J.
    Jenkins, Jerry
    Handley, Lori
    Kim, Min
    Grimwood, Jane
    Schmutz, Jeremy
    Richardson, Bryce A.
    Serpe, Marcelo
    Novak, Stephen
    Buerki, Sven
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2021, 11 (21): : 15417 - 15429
  • [45] Shifting plant species composition in response to climate change stabilizes grassland primary production
    Liu, Huiying
    Mi, Zhaorong
    Lin, Li
    Wang, Yonghui
    Zhang, Zhenhua
    Zhang, Fawei
    Wang, Hao
    Liu, Lingli
    Zhu, Biao
    Cao, Guangmin
    Zhao, Xinquan
    Sanders, Nathan J.
    Classen, Aimee T.
    Reich, Peter B.
    He, Jin-Sheng
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2018, 115 (16) : 4051 - 4056
  • [46] PLANT-SPECIES RESPONSE TO CLIMATE-CHANGE - IMPLICATIONS FOR THE CONSERVATION OF EUROPEAN BIRDS
    HUNTLEY, B
    IBIS, 1995, 137 : S127 - S138
  • [47] Changes in the potential distribution of invasive plant species in continental Spain in response to climate change
    Fernandez de Castro, Alejandro G.
    Navajas, Alicia
    Fagundez, Jaime
    PLANT ECOLOGY & DIVERSITY, 2018, 11 (03) : 349 - 361
  • [48] Land use planning to support climate change adaptation in threatened plant communities
    Vijayan, Anu
    Maina, Joseph M.
    Lawson, Rochelle
    Chang, Hsing-Chung
    Beaumont, Linda J.
    Davies, Peter J.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2021, 298
  • [49] Predicting plant species climate niches on the basis of mechanistic traits
    Medeiros, Camila D.
    Henry, Christian
    Trueba, Santiago
    Anghel, Ioana
    Guerrero, Samantha Dannet Diaz de Leon
    Pivovaroff, Alexandria
    Fletcher, Leila R.
    John, Grace P.
    Lutz, James A.
    Alonzo, Rodrigo Mendez
    Sack, Lawren
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2023, 37 (11) : 2786 - 2808
  • [50] SPECIES TRAITS OF RELEVANCE FOR CLIMATE VULNERABILITY AND THE PREDICTION OF PHENOLOGICAL RESPONSES TO CLIMATE CHANGE
    Caldas, Astrid
    JOURNAL OF THE LEPIDOPTERISTS SOCIETY, 2014, 68 (03) : 197 - 202