Increased
climate stress causing extensive change to Australia’s eucalypt
ecosystems
Australia's standing as the home among the gumtrees could be challenged, with increased climate stress causing extensive change to Australia's eucalypt ecosystems.
3
February, 2014
By
Lucy Cormack
13 January 2014
A
study
by the National Environmental Research Program's Environmental
Decisions Hub has found that climate stress on eucalypts will mean
many of Australia's 750 species will struggle to cope with climate
change.
''Those
that will be most affected are the Eucalyptus and Corymbia species in
the central desert and open woodlands area,'' said author Nathalie
Butt of the NERP Environmental Decisions Hub and the University of
Queensland.
The
study found that ''under the mid-range climate scenario, these
species will lose 20 per cent of their climate space, and twice that
under the extreme scenario''.
The
mid-range scenario suggests that ''temperatures will increase by more
than 1C by 2055 and by more than 2C by 2085. For the extreme scenario
temperatures will increase by more than 1.5C and 2.5C respectively'',
Dr Butt said. She said there is additional concern for the impact
these conditions will have on wildlife in such areas. ''Trees are
habitats and food sources. So this will have a cascade effect on
birds, bats, and invertebrates that are reliant on eucalypt, and it
will affect pollinators as well,'' she said. [more]
ABSTRACT:
Global climate change is already impacting species and ecosystems
across the planet. Trees, although long-lived, are sensitive to
changes in climate, including climate extremes. Shifts in tree
species' distributions will influence biodiversity and ecosystem
function at scales ranging from local to landscape; dry and hot
regions will be especially vulnerable. The Australian continent has
been especially susceptible to climate change with extreme heat
waves, droughts, and flooding in recent years, and this climate
trajectory is expected to continue. We sought to understand how
climate change may impact Australian ecosystems by modeling
distributional changes in eucalypt species, which dominate or
codominate most forested ecosystems across Australia. We modeled a
representative sample of Eucalyptus and Corymbia species (n = 108, or
14% of all species) using newly available Representative
Concentration Pathway (RCP) scenarios developed for the 5th
Assessment Report of the IPCC, and bioclimatic and substrate
predictor variables. We compared current, 2025, 2055, and 2085
distributions. Overall, Eucalyptus and Corymbia species in the
central desert and open woodland regions will be the most affected,
losing 20% of their climate space under the mid-range climate
scenario and twice that under the extreme scenario. The least
affected species, in eastern Australia, are likely to lose 10% of
their climate space under the mid-range climate scenario and twice
that under the extreme scenario. Range shifts will be lateral as well
as polewards, and these east–west transitions will be more
significant, reflecting the strong influence of precipitation rather
than temperature changes in subtropical and midlatitudes. These net
losses, and the direction of shifts and contractions in range,
suggest that many species in the eastern and southern seaboards will
be pushed toward the continental limit and that large tracts of
currently treed landscapes, especially in the continental interior,
will change dramatically in terms of species composition and
ecosystem structure.
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