African Plant Diversity and Climate Change

International goals have been set to protect global plant diversity and limit ecosystem damage due to climate change, but large-scale effects of changing climate on species distributions have yet to be fully considered in conservation efforts. For sub-Saharan Africa we study the shifts in climatical...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 2005-01, Vol.92 (2), p.139-152
Hauptverfasser: McClean, Colin J., Lovett, Jon C., Küper, Wolfgang, Hannah, Lee, Sommer, Jan Henning, Barthlott, Wilhelm, Termansen, Mette, Smith, Gideon F., Tokumine, Simon, James R. D. Taplin
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 139
container_title Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
container_volume 92
creator McClean, Colin J.
Lovett, Jon C.
Küper, Wolfgang
Hannah, Lee
Sommer, Jan Henning
Barthlott, Wilhelm
Termansen, Mette
Smith, Gideon F.
Tokumine, Simon
James R. D. Taplin
description International goals have been set to protect global plant diversity and limit ecosystem damage due to climate change, but large-scale effects of changing climate on species distributions have yet to be fully considered in conservation efforts. For sub-Saharan Africa we study the shifts in climatically suitable areas for 5197 African plant species under future climate models for the years 2025, 2055, and 2085 generated by the Hadley Center's third generation coupled ocean-atmosphere General Circulation Model. We use three species distribution models, a "Box model," a simple genetic algorithm, and a Bayes-based genetic algorithm. The results show major shifts in areas suitable for most species with large geographical changes in species composition. The areas of suitable climate for 81%-97% of the 5197 African plant species are projected to decrease in size and/or shift in location, many to higher altitudes, and 25%-42% are projected to lose all of their area by 2085. In particular, the models indicate dramatic change in the Guineo-Congolian forests, mirroring proposed ecological dynamics in the past. Although these models are preliminary and may overestimate potential extinctions, they suggest that efforts to protect African plant diversity should take future climate-forced distribution changes into account.
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subjects Biodiversity conservation
Climate change
Climate models
Climatic zones
Climatology
Modeling
Paleoclimatology
Plant biodiversity
Plants
Species
title African Plant Diversity and Climate Change
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