logo

Welcome


AboutZoos, Since 2008





201315Jan21:10

Will changes in cli­mate wipe out mam­mals in Arc­tic and sub-​Arctic areas?

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 15 Jan­u­ary 2013 | mod­i­fied 15 Jan­u­ary 2013
Archived
LemmingThe cli­mate changes depicted by cli­ma­tol­o­gists up to the year 2080 will ben­e­fit most mam­mals that live in north­ern Europe’s Arc­tic and sub-​Arctic land areas today if they are able to reach their new cli­matic ranges. This is the con­clu­sion drawn by ecol­o­gists at Umeå Uni­ver­sity in an arti­cle pub­lished on Decem­ber 20 in the open access jour­nal Plos ONE.

The sci­en­tists Anouschka Hof, Roland Jans­son, and Chris­ter Nils­son of the Depart­ment of Ecol­ogy and Envi­ron­men­tal Sci­ence at Umeå Uni­ver­sity inves­ti­gated how future cli­mate changes may come to impact mam­mals in north­ern Europe’s Arc­tic and sub-​Arctic land areas, exclud­ing the Arc­tic seas and islands. These land masses are assumed to undergo major changes in cli­mate, and their nat­ural ecol­ogy is also regarded as espe­cially sus­cep­ti­ble to changes.

By mod­el­ling the dis­tri­b­u­tion of species, the researchers have deter­mined that the pre­dicted cli­mate changes up to the year 2080 will ben­e­fit most mam­mals that live in these areas today, with the excep­tion of some spe­cial­ists in cold cli­mate, such as the Arc­tic fox and the lemming.

This will be the case only on the con­di­tion that the species can reach the areas that take on the cli­mate these ani­mals are adapted to. We main­tain that it is highly improb­a­ble that all mam­mals will be able to do so, owing partly to the increased frag­men­ta­tion of their liv­ing envi­ron­ments caused by human beings. Such species will reduce the extent of their dis­tri­b­u­tion instead
(Chris­ter Nils­son, pro­fes­sor of land­scape ecol­ogy)

The researchers also show that even if cli­mate changes as such do not threaten the major­ity of Arc­tic and sub-​Arctic mam­mals, changes in the species mix may do so, for instance because preda­tors and their poten­tial prey that pre­vi­ously did not live together may wind up in the same areas.


(Source: Expertsvar press release, 14.01.2013)
UN Biodiversity decade
WWF Stop Wildlife Crime
Fight for Flight campaign
End Ivory-funded Terrorism
Support Rewilding Europe
NASA State of Flux

Goal: 7000 tigers in the wild

Tiger range countries map

Tiger map” (CC BY 2.5) by Sander­son et al., 2006.

about zoos and their mis­sion regard­ing breed­ing endan­gered species, nature con­ser­va­tion, bio­di­ver­sity and edu­ca­tion, which of course relates to the evo­lu­tion of species.
Fol­low me on: