TY - JOUR
T1 - Differentiating the effects of climate and land use change on European biodiversity
T2 - A scenario analysis
AU - Vermaat, Jan E.
AU - Hellmann, Fritz A.
AU - van Teeffelen, Astrid J.A.
AU - van Minnen, Jelle
AU - Alkemade, Rob
AU - Billeter, Regula
AU - Beierkuhnlein, Carl
AU - Boitani, Luigi
AU - Cabeza, Mar
AU - Feld, Christian K.
AU - Huntley, Brian
AU - Paterson, James
AU - WallisDeVries, Michiel F.
N1 - Funding Information:
This paper is based on the outcome of an expert workshop organized in March 2012 in the hamlet Ehrenberg-Seiferts, located in the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve Rh?n, Hessen, Germany (www.biosphaerenreservat-rhoen.de ). It was supported financially by the European Commission as part of the EU-funded FP7 project RESPONSES, Grant Agreement number 244092.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.
Copyright:
Copyright 2017 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/4/1
Y1 - 2017/4/1
N2 - Current observed as well as projected changes in biodiversity are the result of multiple interacting factors, with land use and climate change often marked as most important drivers. We aimed to disentangle the separate impacts of these two for sets of vascular plant, bird, butterfly and dragonfly species listed as characteristic for European dry grasslands and wetlands, two habitats of high and threatened biodiversity. We combined articulations of the four frequently used SRES climate scenarios and associated land use change projections for 2030, and assessed their impact on population trends in species (i.e. whether they would probably be declining, stable or increasing). We used the BIOSCORE database tool, which allows assessment of the effects of a range of environmental pressures including climate change as well as land use change. We updated the species lists included in this tool for our two habitat types. We projected species change for two spatial scales: the EU27 covering most of Europe, and the more restricted biogeographic region of ‘Continental Europe’. Other environmental pressures modelled for the four scenarios than land use and climate change generally did not explain a significant part of the variance in species richness change. Changes in characteristic bird and dragonfly species were least pronounced. Land use change was the most important driver for vascular plants in both habitats and spatial scales, leading to a decline in 50–100% of the species included, whereas climate change was more important for wetland dragonflies and birds (40–50 %). Patterns of species decline were similar in continental Europe and the EU27 for wetlands but differed for dry grasslands, where a substantially lower proportion of butterflies and birds declined in continental Europe, and 50 % of bird species increased, probably linked to a projected increase in semi-natural vegetation. In line with the literature using climate envelope models, we found little divergence among the four scenarios. Our findings suggest targeted policies depending on habitat and species group. These are, for dry grasslands, to reduce land use change or its effects and to enhance connectivity, and for wetlands to mitigate climate change effects.
AB - Current observed as well as projected changes in biodiversity are the result of multiple interacting factors, with land use and climate change often marked as most important drivers. We aimed to disentangle the separate impacts of these two for sets of vascular plant, bird, butterfly and dragonfly species listed as characteristic for European dry grasslands and wetlands, two habitats of high and threatened biodiversity. We combined articulations of the four frequently used SRES climate scenarios and associated land use change projections for 2030, and assessed their impact on population trends in species (i.e. whether they would probably be declining, stable or increasing). We used the BIOSCORE database tool, which allows assessment of the effects of a range of environmental pressures including climate change as well as land use change. We updated the species lists included in this tool for our two habitat types. We projected species change for two spatial scales: the EU27 covering most of Europe, and the more restricted biogeographic region of ‘Continental Europe’. Other environmental pressures modelled for the four scenarios than land use and climate change generally did not explain a significant part of the variance in species richness change. Changes in characteristic bird and dragonfly species were least pronounced. Land use change was the most important driver for vascular plants in both habitats and spatial scales, leading to a decline in 50–100% of the species included, whereas climate change was more important for wetland dragonflies and birds (40–50 %). Patterns of species decline were similar in continental Europe and the EU27 for wetlands but differed for dry grasslands, where a substantially lower proportion of butterflies and birds declined in continental Europe, and 50 % of bird species increased, probably linked to a projected increase in semi-natural vegetation. In line with the literature using climate envelope models, we found little divergence among the four scenarios. Our findings suggest targeted policies depending on habitat and species group. These are, for dry grasslands, to reduce land use change or its effects and to enhance connectivity, and for wetlands to mitigate climate change effects.
KW - Climate envelope modelling
KW - Dry grasslands
KW - Habitat connectivity
KW - Land use change
KW - Species sensitivity database
KW - SRES scenario articulation
KW - Wetlands
U2 - 10.1007/s13280-016-0840-3
DO - 10.1007/s13280-016-0840-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 27804097
AN - SCOPUS:84994065550
SN - 0044-7447
VL - 46
SP - 277
EP - 290
JO - Ambio
JF - Ambio
IS - 3
ER -