Spatial resolution impacts projected plant responses to climate change on topographically complex islands

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_DB0CB73BCE02
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Spatial resolution impacts projected plant responses to climate change on topographically complex islands
Journal
Diversity and Distributions
Author(s)
Patiño Jairo (co-first), Collart Flavien (co-first), Vanderpoorten Alain, Martin-Esquivel José Luis, Naranjo-Cigala Agustín, Mirolo Sébastien, Karger Dirk N.
ISSN
1366-9516
1472-4642
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
29
Number
10
Pages
1245-1262
Language
english
Abstract
Aim
Understanding how grain size affects our ability to characterize species responses to ongoing climate change is of crucial importance in the context of an increasing awareness for the substantial difference that exists between coarse spatial resolution macroclimatic data sets and the microclimate actually experienced by organisms. Climate change impacts on biodiversity are expected to peak in mountain areas, wherein the differences between macro and microclimates are precisely the largest. Based on a newly generated fine-scale environmental data for the Canary Islands, we assessed whether data at 100 m resolution is able to provide more accurate predictions than available data at 1 km resolution. We also analysed how future climate suitability predictions of island endemic bryophytes differ depending on the grain size of grids.
Location
Canary Islands.
Time period
Present (1979–2013) and late-century (2071–2100).
Taxa
Bryophytes.
Methods
We compared the accuracy and spatial predictions using ensemble of small models for 14 Macaronesian endemic bryophyte species. We used two climate data sets: CHELSA v1.2 (~1 km) and CanaryClim v1.0 (100 m), a downscaled version of the latter utilizing data from local weather stations. CanaryClim also encompasses future climate data from five individual model intercomparison projects for three warming shared socio-economic pathways.
Results
Species distribution models generated from CHELSA and CanaryClim exhibited a similar accuracy, but CanaryClim predicted buffered warming trends in mid-elevation ridges. CanaryClim consistently returned higher proportions of newly suitable pixels (8%–28%) than CHELSA models (0%–3%). Consequently, the proportion of species predicted to occupy pixels of uncertain suitability was higher with CHELSA (3–8 species) than with CanaryClim (0–2 species).
Main conclusions
The resolution of climate data impacted the predictions rather than the performance of species distribution models. Our results highlight the crucial role that fine-resolution climate data sets can play in predicting the potential distribution of both microrefugia and new suitable range under warming climate.
Keywords
bryophytes, Canary Islands, climate warning, microrefugia, range shift, species distribution models
Open Access
Yes
Funding(s)
Swiss National Science Foundation / 197777
Create date
30/07/2023 22:33
Last modification date
18/11/2023 8:07
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