Incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.

We examined the impact climate change (CC) will have on the availability of climatically suitable habitat for three native and one exotic riparian species. Due to its increasing prevalence in arid regions throughout the western US, we predicted that an exotic species, Tamarix, would have the greates...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dana H Ikeda, Kevin C Grady, Stephen M Shuster, Thomas G Whitham
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4162564?pdf=render
id doaj-82b45920f6e24f8fb10b3e5225fc10d7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-82b45920f6e24f8fb10b3e5225fc10d72020-11-24T21:50:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10703710.1371/journal.pone.0107037Incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.Dana H IkedaKevin C GradyStephen M ShusterThomas G WhithamWe examined the impact climate change (CC) will have on the availability of climatically suitable habitat for three native and one exotic riparian species. Due to its increasing prevalence in arid regions throughout the western US, we predicted that an exotic species, Tamarix, would have the greatest increase in suitable habitat relative to native counterparts under CC. We used an ecological niche model to predict range shifts of Populus fremontii, Salix gooddingii, Salix exigua and Tamarix, from present day to 2080s, under five general circulation models and one climate change scenario (A1B). Four major findings emerged. 1) Contrary to our original hypothesis, P. fremontii is projected to have the greatest increase in suitable habitat under CC, followed closely by Tamarix. 2) Of the native species, S. gooddingii and S. exigua showed the greatest loss in predicted suitable habitat due to CC. 3) Nearly 80 percent of future P. fremontii and Salix habitat is predicted to be affected by either CC or Tamarix by the 2080s. 4) By the 2080s, 20 percent of S. gooddingii habitat is projected to be affected by both Tamarix and CC concurrently, followed by S. exigua (19 percent) and P. fremontii (13 percent). In summary, while climate change alone will negatively impact both native willow species, Tamarix is likely to affect a larger portion of all three native species' distributions. We discuss these and other results in the context of prioritizing restoration and conservation efforts to optimize future productivity and biodiversity. As we are accounting for only direct effects of CC and Tamarix on native habitat, we present a possible hierarchy of effects- from the direct to the indirect- and discuss the potential for the indirect to outweigh the direct effects. Our results highlight the need to account for simultaneous challenges in the face of CC.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4162564?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dana H Ikeda
Kevin C Grady
Stephen M Shuster
Thomas G Whitham
spellingShingle Dana H Ikeda
Kevin C Grady
Stephen M Shuster
Thomas G Whitham
Incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Dana H Ikeda
Kevin C Grady
Stephen M Shuster
Thomas G Whitham
author_sort Dana H Ikeda
title Incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.
title_short Incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.
title_full Incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.
title_fullStr Incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.
title_full_unstemmed Incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.
title_sort incorporating climate change and exotic species into forecasts of riparian forest distribution.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description We examined the impact climate change (CC) will have on the availability of climatically suitable habitat for three native and one exotic riparian species. Due to its increasing prevalence in arid regions throughout the western US, we predicted that an exotic species, Tamarix, would have the greatest increase in suitable habitat relative to native counterparts under CC. We used an ecological niche model to predict range shifts of Populus fremontii, Salix gooddingii, Salix exigua and Tamarix, from present day to 2080s, under five general circulation models and one climate change scenario (A1B). Four major findings emerged. 1) Contrary to our original hypothesis, P. fremontii is projected to have the greatest increase in suitable habitat under CC, followed closely by Tamarix. 2) Of the native species, S. gooddingii and S. exigua showed the greatest loss in predicted suitable habitat due to CC. 3) Nearly 80 percent of future P. fremontii and Salix habitat is predicted to be affected by either CC or Tamarix by the 2080s. 4) By the 2080s, 20 percent of S. gooddingii habitat is projected to be affected by both Tamarix and CC concurrently, followed by S. exigua (19 percent) and P. fremontii (13 percent). In summary, while climate change alone will negatively impact both native willow species, Tamarix is likely to affect a larger portion of all three native species' distributions. We discuss these and other results in the context of prioritizing restoration and conservation efforts to optimize future productivity and biodiversity. As we are accounting for only direct effects of CC and Tamarix on native habitat, we present a possible hierarchy of effects- from the direct to the indirect- and discuss the potential for the indirect to outweigh the direct effects. Our results highlight the need to account for simultaneous challenges in the face of CC.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4162564?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT danahikeda incorporatingclimatechangeandexoticspeciesintoforecastsofriparianforestdistribution
AT kevincgrady incorporatingclimatechangeandexoticspeciesintoforecastsofriparianforestdistribution
AT stephenmshuster incorporatingclimatechangeandexoticspeciesintoforecastsofriparianforestdistribution
AT thomasgwhitham incorporatingclimatechangeandexoticspeciesintoforecastsofriparianforestdistribution
_version_ 1725882037412298752