4.7 Article

Lowering the rate of timber harvesting tomitigate impacts of climate change on boreal caribou habitat quality in eastern Canada

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 838, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.156244

Keywords

Anthropogenic disturbances; Boreal populations of woodland caribou; Climate change; Modelling; Rangifer tarandus caribou; Resource selection functions

Funding

  1. Natural Resources Canada
  2. Fonds de recherche du Quebec-Nature et Technologies
  3. The Fonds de recherche forestiere du Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean
  4. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  5. Canada Economic Development
  6. MFFP
  7. Conseil de l'Industrie Forestiere du Quebec
  8. Federation Canadienne de la Faune
  9. Fondation de la Faune du Quebec
  10. World Wildlife Fund for Nature
  11. Resolute Forest Products
  12. UQAR

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This study evaluated how climate change will affect boreal caribou habitat, finding that it may lead to a decrease in habitat quality, a reduction in high-quality habitat, and a northward recession of suitable habitat. Timber harvesting was found to be the most important factor of change for the 2030-2050 horizon, although it may be replaced by changes in fire regime by 2100.
Many boreal populations of woodland caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) have declined in Canada, a trend essentially driven by the increasing footprint of anthropogenic disturbances and the resulting habitat-mediated apparent competition that increases predation pressure. However, the influence of climate change on these ecological processes remains poorly understood. We evaluated how climate change will affect boreal caribou habitat over the 2030-2100 horizon and in a 9.94 Mha study area, using a climate-sensitive simulation ensemble that integrates climate-induced changes in stand dynamics, fire regime, and different levels of commercial timber harvesting. We assessed the relative importance of these three drivers under projections made using different radiative forcing scenarios (RCP 2.6, 4.5, 8.5). Habitat qualitywas estimated fromresource selection functions built with telemetry data collected from 121 caribou between 2004 and 2011 in 7 local populations. At the beginning of our simulations, caribou habitat was already structured along a south-to-north increasing quality gradient. Simulations revealed changes in forest cover that are driven by climate-induced variations in fire regime and scenarios of harvesting levels, resulting in the loss of older coniferous forests and an increase in deciduous stands. These changes induced a generalized decrease in the average habitat quality and in the percentage of high-quality habitat for caribou, and in a northward recession of suitable habitat. Timber harvesting was the most important agent of change for the 2030-2050 horizon, although it was slowly replaced by changes in fire regime until 2100. Our results clearly showed that it is possible to maintain the current average habitat quality for caribou in future scenarios that consider a reduction in harvested volumes, the only lever under our control. This suggests that we still have the capacity to conciliate socioeconomic development and caribou conservation imperatives in the face of climate change, an important issue debated throughout the species distribution range.

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