Litcius/Paper detail

Linking climate warming and land conversion to species’ range changes across Great Britain

Andrew J. Suggitt, Christopher J. Wheatley, Paula Aucott, Colin M. Beale, Richard Fox, Jane K. Hill, Nick J. B. Isaac, Blaise Martay, Humphrey Southall, Chris D. Thomas, Kevin J. Walker, Alistair G. Auffret

2023Nature Communications37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Although increased temperatures are known to reinforce the effects of habitat destruction at local to landscape scales, evidence of their additive or interactive effects is limited, particularly over larger spatial extents and longer timescales. To address these deficiencies, we created a dataset of land-use changes over 75 years, documenting the loss of over half (>3000 km 2 ) the semi-natural grassland of Great Britain. Pairing this dataset with climate change data, we tested for relationships to distribution changes in birds, butterflies, macromoths, and plants ( n = 1192 species total). We show that individual or additive effects of climate warming and land conversion unambiguously increased persistence probability for 40% of species, and decreased it for 12%, and these effects were reflected in both range contractions and expansions. Interactive effects were relatively rare, being detected in less than 1 in 5 species, and their overall effect on extinction risk was often weak. Such individualistic responses emphasise the importance of including species-level information in policies targeting biodiversity and climate adaptation.

Topics & Concepts

Extinction (optical mineralogy)Climate changeBiodiversityRange (aeronautics)GrasslandEcologyHabitatGlobal warmingLocal extinctionSpecies distributionClimate scienceAdaptation (eye)GeographyEnvironmental scienceBiologyPopulationBiological dispersalNeurosciencePaleontologyMaterials scienceSociologyComposite materialDemographySpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesWildlife Ecology and Conservation