4.6 Article

Effects of climate change on the distribution of felids: mapping biogeographic patterns and establishing conservation priorities

Journal

BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
Volume 30, Issue 5, Pages 1375-1394

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-021-02147-1

Keywords

Felidae; Niche modelling; Zonation; Gap analysis; Leopardus guttulus

Funding

  1. Research Support Foundation of the State of Espirito Santo (Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Espirito Santo) [0833/2015]
  2. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior-Brasil-CAPES) [001]
  3. CNPq DCR fellowship [312627/2015-7]
  4. CAPES through the Program of National Cooperation in the Amazon (Programa Nacional de Cooperacao Academica na Amazonia) [88887.478136/2020-00]

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Climate changes may threaten the survival of felids by driving range shifts, altering biogeographical characteristics of their range, and decreasing range overlap with protected areas. Countries facing significant landcover changes such as Brazil, China, and India are also priority areas for felids conservation, highlighting the urgency and potential challenges in safeguarding felids. Expanding protected areas in felids distribution regions is necessary as the protected area network overlaps with just a small percentage of their current and future distribution.
Climate changes may threaten the survival of felids by driving range shifts, altering the biogeographical characteristics of their existing range, and decreasing range overlap with protected areas. In this study, we investigate these threats and delineate priority areas for conservation by comparing current (1950-1999) with future (2080-2100) distribution predicted by climatic niche modelling. Distribution changes encompass centroid displacement of up to 1067 km, range contractions of up to 460 km(2), and fragmentation into up to 29 populations. Some felids may expand their distribution by up to 1016 km(2), which could facilitate the reconnection of isolated populations if appropriate management plans are implemented. The protected area network overlaps with just 5.85% of the current distribution of felids and would decline to 3.69% in the future scenario, necessitating an expansion of protected areas in areas of felids distribution. However, countries that are subject to the greatest landcover changes worldwide (e.g. Brazil, China, and India) are also home to the priority areas to felids conservation, underscoring the urgency and potential challenges of safeguarding felids.

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