4.8 Article

Warning times for species extinctions due to climate change

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 3, Pages 1066-1077

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12721

Keywords

climate change; IUCN Red List; linked demographic-habitat models; probability of extinction; Red List Categories and Criteria; threatened species

Funding

  1. NASA [NNX09AK19G]
  2. Direct For Biological Sciences
  3. Division Of Environmental Biology [1146198] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  4. NASA [115458, NNX09AK19G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Climate change is likely to become an increasingly major obstacle to slowing the rate of species extinctions. Several new assessment approaches have been proposed for identifying climate-vulnerable species, based on the assumption that established systems such as the IUCN Red List need revising or replacing because they were not developed to explicitly consider climate change. However, no assessment approach has been tested to determine its ability to provide advanced warning time for conservation action for species that might go extinct due to climate change. To test the performance of the Red List system in this capacity, we used linked niche-demographic models with habitat dynamics driven by a business-as-usual' climate change scenario. We generated replicate 100-year trajectories for range-restricted reptiles and amphibians endemic to the United States. For each replicate, we categorized the simulated species according to IUCN Red List criteria at annual, 5-year, and 10-year intervals (the latter representing current practice). For replicates that went extinct, we calculated warning time as the number of years the simulated species was continuously listed in a threatened category prior to extinction. To simulate data limitations, we repeated the analysis using a single criterion at a time (disregarding other listing criteria). Results show that when all criteria can be used, the Red List system would provide several decades of warning time (median=62years; >20years for 99% of replicates), but suggest that conservation actions should begin as soon as a species is listed as Vulnerable, because 50% of replicates went extinct within 20years of becoming uplisted to Critically Endangered. When only one criterion was used, warning times were substantially shorter, but more frequent assessments increased the warning time by about a decade. Overall, we found that the Red List criteria reliably provide a sensitive and precautionary way to assess extinction risk under climate change.

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