Fuente: Science News
  Expuesto el: lunes, 14 de mayo de 2012 21:12
  Autor: Science News
  Asunto: Climate change may leave many mammals homeless
| In some places, projected    warming threatens the survival of more than one in three species Web    edition : 4:12    pm 
 Some 9 percent of mammal    species throughout the Western Hemisphere could, within roughly a century,    become climate refugees with no suitable homes, a new study finds. In some    areas conditions will be far worse, with 39 to 50 percent of mammals unable    to emigrate fast enough to find suitable ecosystems. “If species can’t migrate    spontaneously, they’re going to go extinct. That’s the bottom line,” says Nina    Hewitt of York University in Toronto, a biogeographer who was not involved in    the new analyses. The work is not the first    study to gauge whether species will keep pace with climate-induced changes to    their environments, including a warming or drying. But earlier efforts merely    looked at an ideal climate for some species and then evaluated whether and    where these conditions might exist decades down the line. Such studies    “assumed if a suitable climate existed, the species would move there,”    explains Carrie Schloss of the University of Washington in Seattle. Schloss    led the new study, which appeared online the week of May 14 in the Proceedings of the National    Academy of Sciences. The new study accounts    for species’ dispersal rates — how far each can travel to establish new homes    and how frequently such relocations occur. Mammals don’t typically    move much until they prepare to breed. The new analyses of 493 mammal species    found many simply cannot move quickly enough to reach hospitable new ranges.    Sometimes they’re too small, as in the case of moles and other small rodents.    Biology — what age a species reaches reproductive maturity and how often it    breeds — also can severely limit relocation rates. This proved especially    true for monkeys, which are especially likely to become climate refugees. The Washington team    looked at projections for the Americas from 10 different global-climate    computer programs for the period 1961 to 2071. “When dispersal is ignored,    the ranges of 149 of the 493 mammalian species in this study are on average    projected to expand,” Schloss says. But including how far each species can    travel to new homes reversed the trend and projected a range contraction for    86 of these species, or nearly 60 percent. Even these assessments    have probably underestimated the ability of mammals to keep pace with    climate, Schloss acknowledges, since her team unrealistically assumed all    species will reproduce at the youngest age possible and head for new home    ranges in precisely the right directions. Moreover, adds ecologist    Shaye Wolf of the Center for Biological Diversity in San Francisco, this    analysis doesn’t account for additional factors, such as whether a migrating    species’ food will exist in its newfound home or whether the animal will    confront new or more aggressive predators and competitors. Still, accounting for    species dispersal impacts “represents an important new contribution to    evaluating whether animals will be able to keep pace with climate change,”    she says.  Hewitt agrees. The new    analysis also points to where species conservation biologists may want to    focus their efforts for developing migration corridors for animals that will    need to move, she says, or programs to otherwise assist imperiled species in    reaching a new home range. 
 
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