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Recent climate-driven ecological change across a continent as perceived through local ecological knowledge
by
Leviston, Zoe
, Dickson, Fiona
, Raisbeck-Brown, Nat
, Williams, Kristen J.
, Prober, Suzanne M.
, Porter, Natasha B.
in
Adaptation
/ Animals
/ Australia
/ Biodiversity
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Birds
/ Change detection
/ Climate Change
/ Climate effects
/ Conservation of Natural Resources - methods
/ Earth Sciences
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecological monitoring
/ Ecological Parameter Monitoring
/ Ecology
/ Ecology - statistics & numerical data
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Ecosystem biology
/ Ecosystems
/ Environmental changes
/ Environmental impact
/ Farmers
/ Global climate
/ Global temperature changes
/ Humans
/ Indigenous animals
/ Indigenous species
/ Internet-Based Intervention - statistics & numerical data
/ Introduced plants
/ Introduced species
/ Knowledge
/ Land use
/ Local climates
/ Mapping
/ Mitigation
/ Nature
/ Northern Hemisphere
/ Novels
/ People and Places
/ Perceptions
/ Phenological changes
/ Plants
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Researchers
/ Social Sciences
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Southern Hemisphere
/ Surveys and Questionnaires - statistics & numerical data
/ Terrestrial environments
2019
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Recent climate-driven ecological change across a continent as perceived through local ecological knowledge
by
Leviston, Zoe
, Dickson, Fiona
, Raisbeck-Brown, Nat
, Williams, Kristen J.
, Prober, Suzanne M.
, Porter, Natasha B.
in
Adaptation
/ Animals
/ Australia
/ Biodiversity
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Birds
/ Change detection
/ Climate Change
/ Climate effects
/ Conservation of Natural Resources - methods
/ Earth Sciences
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecological monitoring
/ Ecological Parameter Monitoring
/ Ecology
/ Ecology - statistics & numerical data
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Ecosystem biology
/ Ecosystems
/ Environmental changes
/ Environmental impact
/ Farmers
/ Global climate
/ Global temperature changes
/ Humans
/ Indigenous animals
/ Indigenous species
/ Internet-Based Intervention - statistics & numerical data
/ Introduced plants
/ Introduced species
/ Knowledge
/ Land use
/ Local climates
/ Mapping
/ Mitigation
/ Nature
/ Northern Hemisphere
/ Novels
/ People and Places
/ Perceptions
/ Phenological changes
/ Plants
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Researchers
/ Social Sciences
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Southern Hemisphere
/ Surveys and Questionnaires - statistics & numerical data
/ Terrestrial environments
2019
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Recent climate-driven ecological change across a continent as perceived through local ecological knowledge
by
Leviston, Zoe
, Dickson, Fiona
, Raisbeck-Brown, Nat
, Williams, Kristen J.
, Prober, Suzanne M.
, Porter, Natasha B.
in
Adaptation
/ Animals
/ Australia
/ Biodiversity
/ Biology and Life Sciences
/ Birds
/ Change detection
/ Climate Change
/ Climate effects
/ Conservation of Natural Resources - methods
/ Earth Sciences
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecological monitoring
/ Ecological Parameter Monitoring
/ Ecology
/ Ecology - statistics & numerical data
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Ecosystem biology
/ Ecosystems
/ Environmental changes
/ Environmental impact
/ Farmers
/ Global climate
/ Global temperature changes
/ Humans
/ Indigenous animals
/ Indigenous species
/ Internet-Based Intervention - statistics & numerical data
/ Introduced plants
/ Introduced species
/ Knowledge
/ Land use
/ Local climates
/ Mapping
/ Mitigation
/ Nature
/ Northern Hemisphere
/ Novels
/ People and Places
/ Perceptions
/ Phenological changes
/ Plants
/ Research and Analysis Methods
/ Researchers
/ Social Sciences
/ Socioeconomic Factors
/ Southern Hemisphere
/ Surveys and Questionnaires - statistics & numerical data
/ Terrestrial environments
2019
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Recent climate-driven ecological change across a continent as perceived through local ecological knowledge
Journal Article
Recent climate-driven ecological change across a continent as perceived through local ecological knowledge
2019
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Overview
Documenting effects of climate change is an important step towards designing mitigation and adaptation responses. Impacts of climate change on terrestrial biodiversity and ecosystems have been well-documented in the Northern Hemisphere, but long-term data to detect change in the Southern Hemisphere are limited, and some types of change are generally difficult to measure. Here we present a novel approach using local ecological knowledge to facilitate a continent-scale view of climate change impacts on terrestrial biodiversity and ecosystems that people have perceived in Australia. We sought local knowledge using a national web-based survey, targeting respondents with close links to the environment (e.g. farmers, ecologists), and using a custom-built mapping tool to ask respondents to describe and attribute recent changes they had observed within an area they knew well. Results drawn from 326 respondents showed that people are already perceiving simple and complex climate change impacts on hundreds of species and ecosystems across Australia, significantly extending the detail previously reported for the continent. While most perceived trends and attributions remain unsubstantiated, >35 reported anecdotes concurred with examples in the literature, and >20 were reported more than once. More generally, anecdotes were compatible with expectations from global climate change impact frameworks, including examples across the spectrum from organisms (e.g. increased mortality in >75 species), populations (e.g. changes in recruitment or abundance in >100 species, phenological change in >50 species), and species (e.g. >80 species newly arriving or disappearing), to communities and landscapes (e.g. >50 examples of altered ecological interactions). The overarching pattern indicated by the anecdotes suggests that people are more often noticing climate change losers (typically native species) than winners in their local areas, but with observations of potential 'adaptation in action' via compositional and phenological change and through arrivals and range shifts (particularly for native birds and exotic plants). A high proportion of climate change-related anecdotes also involved cumulative or interactive effects of land use. We conclude that targeted elicitation of local ecological knowledge about climate change impacts can provide a valuable complement to data-derived knowledge, substantially extending the volume of explicit examples and offering a foundation for further investigation.
Publisher
Public Library of Science,Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
/ Animals
/ Birds
/ Conservation of Natural Resources - methods
/ Ecological Parameter Monitoring
/ Ecology
/ Ecology - statistics & numerical data
/ Ecology and Environmental Sciences
/ Farmers
/ Humans
/ Internet-Based Intervention - statistics & numerical data
/ Land use
/ Mapping
/ Nature
/ Novels
/ Plants
/ Research and Analysis Methods
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