4.7 Article

Ancient woodland indicators signal the climate change risk for dispersal-limited species

Journal

ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
Volume 53, Issue -, Pages 106-114

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2015.01.028

Keywords

Ancient woodland; Bioclimatic modelling; Climate change; Ecological continuity; Epiphytes; Lichens

Funding

  1. Esmee Fairbairn Foundation [09-3187]
  2. Scottish Government

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The climate change risk to biodiversity operates alongside a range of anthropogenic pressures. These include habitat loss and fragmentation, which may prevent species from migrating between isolated habitat patches in order to track their suitable climate space. Predictive modelling has advanced in scope and complexity to integrate: (i) projected shifts in climate suitability, with (ii) spatial patterns of landscape habitat quality and rates of dispersal. This improved ecological realism is suited to data-rich model species, though its broader generalisation comes with accumulated uncertainties, e.g. incomplete knowledge of species response to variable habitat quality, parameterisation of dispersal kernels etc. This study adopts ancient woodland indicator species (lichen epiphytes) as a guild that couples relative simplicity with biological rigour. Subjectively-assigned indicator species were statistically tested against a binary habitat map of woodlands of known continuity (>250 yr), and bioclimatic models were used to demonstrate trends in their increased/decreased environmental suitability under conditions of 'no dispersal'. Given the expectation of rapid climate change on ecological time-scales, no dispersal for ancient woodland indicators becomes a plausible assumption. The risk to ancient woodland indicators is spatially structured (greater in a relative continental compared to an oceanic climatic zone), though regional differences are weakened by significant variation (within regions) in woodland extent. As a corollary, ancient woodland indicators that are sensitive to projected climate change scenarios may be excellent targets for monitoring climate change impacts for biodiversity at a site-scale, including the outcome of strategic habitat management (climate change adaptation) designed to offset risk for dispersal-limited species. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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