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Using species traits to guide conservation actions under climate change
by
Gallagher, Rachael
, Butt, Nathalie
in
Capacity
/ Climate change
/ Conservation
/ Coverage
/ Dispersal
/ Environmental changes
/ Environmental conditions
/ Environmental risk
/ Flowers & plants
/ Frameworks
/ Legislation
/ Life history
/ Management
/ Niche breadth
/ Niches
/ Plant species
/ Protection
/ Risk allocation
/ Soil
/ Species
/ Vulnerability
/ Wildlife conservation
2018
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Using species traits to guide conservation actions under climate change
by
Gallagher, Rachael
, Butt, Nathalie
in
Capacity
/ Climate change
/ Conservation
/ Coverage
/ Dispersal
/ Environmental changes
/ Environmental conditions
/ Environmental risk
/ Flowers & plants
/ Frameworks
/ Legislation
/ Life history
/ Management
/ Niche breadth
/ Niches
/ Plant species
/ Protection
/ Risk allocation
/ Soil
/ Species
/ Vulnerability
/ Wildlife conservation
2018
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Using species traits to guide conservation actions under climate change
by
Gallagher, Rachael
, Butt, Nathalie
in
Capacity
/ Climate change
/ Conservation
/ Coverage
/ Dispersal
/ Environmental changes
/ Environmental conditions
/ Environmental risk
/ Flowers & plants
/ Frameworks
/ Legislation
/ Life history
/ Management
/ Niche breadth
/ Niches
/ Plant species
/ Protection
/ Risk allocation
/ Soil
/ Species
/ Vulnerability
/ Wildlife conservation
2018
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Using species traits to guide conservation actions under climate change
Journal Article
Using species traits to guide conservation actions under climate change
2018
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Overview
Few assessments of species vulnerability to climate change used to inform conservation management consider the intrinsic traits that shape species’ capacity to respond to climate change. This omission is problematic as it may result in management actions that are not optimised for the long-term persistence of species as climates shift. We present a tool for explicitly linking data on plant species’ life history traits and range characteristics to appropriate management actions that maximise their capacity to respond to climate change. We deliberately target data on easily measured and widely available traits (e.g. dispersal syndrome, height, longevity) and range characteristics (e.g. range size, climatic/soil niche breadth), to allow for rapid comparison across many species. We test this framework on 1237 plants, categorising species on the basis of their potential climate change risk as related to four factors affecting their response capacity: reproduction, movement capability, abiotic niche specialisation and spatial coverage. Based on these four factors, species were allocated risk scores, and these were used to test the hypothesis that the current protection status under national legislation and related management actions capture species response capacity to climate change. Our results indicate that 20% of the plant species analysed (242 species) are likely to have a low capacity to respond to climate change based on the traits assessed, and are therefore at high risk. Of the 242 high risk species, only 10% (24 species) are currently listed for protection under conservation legislation. Importantly, many management plans for these listed species fail to address the capacity of species to respond to climate change with appropriate actions: 70% of approved management plans do not include crucial actions which may improve species’ ability to adapt to climate change. We illustrate how the use of easily attainable traits associated with ecological and evolutionary responses to changing environmental conditions can inform conservation actions for plant species globally.
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