首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>PLoS Clinical Trials >Harvesting interacts with climate change to affect future habitat quality of a focal species in eastern Canada’s boreal forest
【2h】

Harvesting interacts with climate change to affect future habitat quality of a focal species in eastern Canada’s boreal forest

机译:采伐与气候变化相互作用,影响加拿大东部北方森林的重点物种未来的栖息地质量

代理获取
本网站仅为用户提供外文OA文献查询和代理获取服务,本网站没有原文。下单后我们将采用程序或人工为您竭诚获取高质量的原文,但由于OA文献来源多样且变更频繁,仍可能出现获取不到、文献不完整或与标题不符等情况,如果获取不到我们将提供退款服务。请知悉。

摘要

Many studies project future bird ranges by relying on correlative species distribution models. Such models do not usually represent important processes explicitly related to climate change and harvesting, which limits their potential for predicting and understanding the future of boreal bird assemblages at the landscape scale. In this study, we attempted to assess the cumulative and specific impacts of both harvesting and climate-induced changes on wildfires and stand-level processes (e.g., reproduction, growth) in the boreal forest of eastern Canada. The projected changes in these landscape- and stand-scale processes (referred to as “drivers of change”) were then assessed for their impacts on future habitats and potential productivity of black-backed woodpecker (BBWO; Picoides arcticus), a focal species representative of deadwood and old-growth biodiversity in eastern Canada. Forest attributes were simulated using a forest landscape model, LANDIS-II, and were used to infer future landscape suitability to BBWO under three anthropogenic climate forcing scenarios (RCP 2.6, RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5), compared to the historical baseline. We found climate change is likely to be detrimental for BBWO, with up to 92% decline in potential productivity under the worst-case climate forcing scenario (RCP 8.5). However, large declines were also projected under baseline climate, underlining the importance of harvest in determining future BBWO productivity. Present-day harvesting practices were the single most important cause of declining areas of old-growth coniferous forest, and hence appeared as the single most important driver of future BBWO productivity, regardless of the climate scenario. Climate-induced increases in fire activity would further promote young, deciduous stands at the expense of old-growth coniferous stands. This suggests that the biodiversity associated with deadwood and old-growth boreal forests may be greatly altered by the cumulative impacts of natural and anthropogenic disturbances under a changing climate. Management adaptations, including reduced harvesting levels and strategies to promote coniferous species content, may help mitigate these cumulative impacts.
机译:许多研究依靠相关的物种分布模型来预测未来的鸟类范围。这样的模型通常不代表与气候变化和收获明显相关的重要过程,这限制了它们在景观尺度上预测和理解北方鸟类组合的未来的潜力。在这项研究中,我们试图评估采伐和气候变化对加拿大东部北方森林的野火和林分等级过程(例如繁殖,生长)的累积和具体影响。然后评估这些景观和林分尺度过程中的预计变化(称为“变化驱动力”)对它们对未来栖息地的影响以及重点支持物种黑背啄木鸟(BBWO; Picoides arcticus)的潜在生产力加拿大东部的枯木和旧生物多样性森林属性使用森林景观模型LANDIS-II进行模拟,并用于推断与历史基线相比在三种人为气候强迫情景(RCP 2.6,RCP 4.5和RCP 8.5)下BBWO的未来景观适应性。我们发现,气候变化可能对BBWO不利,在最坏的气候强迫情景下,潜在生产力最多下降92%(RCP 8.5)。但是,在基准气候下也预计将大幅度下降,突显了收获在确定未来BBWO生产率中的重要性。当今的采伐方式是造成老龄针叶林面积下降的最重要的唯一原因,因此,无论气候如何,它都是未来BBWO生产力的最重要的推动力。由气候引起的火灾活动的增加将进一步促进幼龄落叶林的生长,但会损害旧的针叶林的生长。这表明,在气候变化的情况下,自然和人为干扰的累积影响可能会大大改变与枯木和旧式北方森林相关的生物多样性。管理层的适应措施,包括降低收成水平和提高针叶树种含量的策略,可能有助于减轻这些累积影响。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
代理获取

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号