Climate change will severely impact bird species by 2080: Study
- Country:
- United Kingdom
Climate change will not only impact the number of bird species by 2080 but also have profound effects on their diversity and community composition, according to a study.
The scientists related past bird distributions to climate data and then applied these relationships to two future climate scenarios -- based on low and medium greenhouse gas emissions -- to predict changes in species distributions.
The team looked not only at changes in numbers of species in areas but also at the types of species that would occur.
To summarise changes in species types they calculated something called phylogenetic diversity which summarises how many different types of birds would occur. For example, a community that had a lot of closely-related species, such as insect-eating songbirds, would have a much lower phylogenetic diversity score than a community that included a mix of more distantly-related species, for example, songbirds plus other species such as birds of prey, partridges or gulls.
The researchers analyzed how the communities of birds all over the world could change in the future and discovered that climate change will not only affect species numbers but will also have profound effects on phylogenetic diversity and community composition.
The study, published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, evaluated data for a total of 8,768 bird species globally to predict how many different lineages could be lost regionally, or added, as species respond to climate change by shifting their distributions.
Although the researcher's project species losses are most common in tropical and subtropical areas, phylogenetic restructuring of species communities is expected to occur around the world.
The study emphasizes that the preservation of local phylogenetic diversity can be a key to the resilience of biological diversity to environmental changes.
''In our study, we examined the effects of global warming on the regional distribution of terrestrial birds around the world,'' said study lead author, Alke Voskamp of Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre, Germany.
''The focus was on the effects on species richness as well as on various aspects of phylogenetic diversity, primarily how closely related the species are to each other,'' Voskamp said.
Study co-author, Professor Stephen Willis of Durham University, UK noted that the diversity of lineages is very often related to the diversity of traits that species possess and thus to their roles and functions in ecosystems.
''For example, species from more distant lineages often have different beak types, and hence eat different types of food,'' Willis said.
''Change means that the ecosystem functions that birds perform in an area may also change in the future, with potential consequences for food webs, seed dispersal, and plant pollination,'' he added.
The research highlights the importance of considering diverse measures in climate impact assessments.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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