Agritrop
Accueil

Island biodiversity hotspots are getting hotter: vulnerability of tree species to climate change in New Caledonia

Pouteau Robin, Birnbaum Philippe. 2016. Island biodiversity hotspots are getting hotter: vulnerability of tree species to climate change in New Caledonia. Biological Conservation, 201 : 111-119.

Article de revue ; Article de revue à facteur d'impact
[img] Version publiée - Anglais
Accès réservé aux personnels Cirad
Utilisation soumise à autorisation de l'auteur ou du Cirad.
1-s2.0-S0006320716302555-main.pdf

Télécharger (698kB) | Demander une copie

Quartile : Q1, Sujet : BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION / Quartile : Q1, Sujet : ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES / Quartile : Q1, Sujet : ECOLOGY

Résumé : Future patterns of biodiversity have been extensively explored to design conservation strategies in large continental hotspots. However, little research has focused on island hotspots, although limited opportunities to migrate and the inherent characteristics of island species are likely to cause sensitivity to rapid environmental changes. This study addresses the question of how climate change could affect species richness in New Caledonia, the world's smallest biodiversity hotspot. An individual species distribution model was built for 469 native tree species and projected according to nine climate change scenarios. Results indicated that the range size of 87–96% of species will have declined by 2070, 52–84% will lose at least half of their current range, and 0–15% will become extinct. Surprisingly, these predictions did not significantly exceed those for larger biodiversity hotspots. Underlying reasons may include an oceanic buffering effect that attenuates increases in air temperature, and the complex topography that generates micro-refugia. Major losses in local species richness were predicted to occur on ultramafic substrates and at mid-elevation. Loss on ultramafic substrates may stem from the number of ultramafic-specialist species that will lack a suitable climate on this specific substrate, while substrate-ubiquitous species are more likely to find refugia. Loss at mid-elevation could mirror a shift in optimum temperature-precipitation value, whose role in shaping the current pattern of diversity may have been overestimated by the models. Hopefully, these results will encourage further research to define the right mitigation and adaptation strategies on oceanic islands, where extinctions would contribute disproportionally to global biodiversity decline.

Mots-clés Agrovoc : arbre forestier, forêt, biodiversité, changement climatique, adaptation aux changements climatiques, île, espèce en danger, température, précipitation, climat océanique, modèle de simulation, conservation des ressources génétiques, forêt tropicale humide, topographie

Mots-clés géographiques Agrovoc : Nouvelle-Calédonie, France

Mots-clés libres : Alpha diversity, Geographic range shift, Island conservation, Maximum entropy modeling, Tropical rain forest, Species extinctions

Classification Agris : K01 - Foresterie - Considérations générales
F40 - Écologie végétale
P01 - Conservation de la nature et ressources foncières
P40 - Météorologie et climatologie

Champ stratégique Cirad : Axe 6 (2014-2018) - Sociétés, natures et territoires

Auteurs et affiliations

  • Pouteau Robin, IAC (NCL)
  • Birnbaum Philippe, CIRAD-BIOS-UMR AMAP (NCL)

Source : Cirad-Agritrop (https://agritrop.cirad.fr/582327/)

Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop) Voir la notice (accès réservé à Agritrop)

[ Page générée et mise en cache le 2024-04-05 ]