Hot and bothered: Using trait-based approaches to assess climate change vulnerability in reptiles

One-fifth of the world's reptiles are currently estimated as threatened with extinction, primarily due to the immediate threats of habitat loss and overexploitation. Climate change presents an emerging slow-acting threat. However, few IUCN Red List assessments for reptiles explicitly consider t...

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Vydáno v:Biological conservation Ročník 204; s. 32 - 41
Hlavní autoři: Böhm, Monika, Cook, Daniel, Ma, Heidi, Davidson, Ana D., García, Andrés, Tapley, Benjamin, Pearce-Kelly, Paul, Carr, Jamie
Médium: Journal Article
Jazyk:angličtina
Vydáno: Elsevier Ltd 01.12.2016
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ISSN:0006-3207, 1873-2917
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Abstract One-fifth of the world's reptiles are currently estimated as threatened with extinction, primarily due to the immediate threats of habitat loss and overexploitation. Climate change presents an emerging slow-acting threat. However, few IUCN Red List assessments for reptiles explicitly consider the potential role of climate change as a threat. Thus, climate change vulnerability assessments can complement existing Red List assessments and highlight further, emerging priorities for conservation action. Here we present the first trait-based global climate change vulnerability assessment for reptiles to estimate the climate change vulnerability of a random representative sample of 1498 species of reptiles. We collected species-specific traits relating to three dimensions of climate change, sensitivity, low adaptability, and exposure, which we combined to assess overall vulnerability. We found 80.5% of species highly sensitive to climate change, primarily due to habitat specialisation, while 48% had low adaptability and 58% had high exposure. Overall, 22% of species assessed were highly vulnerable to climate change. Hotspots of climate change vulnerability did not always overlap with hotspots of threatened species richness, with most of the vulnerable species found in northwestern South America, southwestern USA, Sri Lanka, the Himalayan Arc, Central Asia and southern India. Most families were found to be significantly more vulnerable to climate change than expected by chance. Our findings build on previous work on reptile extinction risk to provide an overview of the risk posed to reptiles by climate change. Despite significant data gaps for a number of traits, we recommend that these findings are integrated into reassessments of species' extinction risk, to monitor both immediate and slow-acting threats to reptiles. •The first ever global trait-based analysis of climate change vulnerability in reptiles•Data were collected for a random sample of 1498 reptiles.•80.5% of species were highly sensitive to climate change.•Overall, 22% of species were found to be highly vulnerable to climate change.•Climate change vulnerable species do not spatially overlap species listed as threatened on the IUCN Red List.
AbstractList One-fifth of the world's reptiles are currently estimated as threatened with extinction, primarily due to the immediate threats of habitat loss and overexploitation. Climate change presents an emerging slow-acting threat. However, few IUCN Red List assessments for reptiles explicitly consider the potential role of climate change as a threat. Thus, climate change vulnerability assessments can complement existing Red List assessments and highlight further, emerging priorities for conservation action. Here we present the first trait-based global climate change vulnerability assessment for reptiles to estimate the climate change vulnerability of a random representative sample of 1498 species of reptiles. We collected species-specific traits relating to three dimensions of climate change, sensitivity, low adaptability, and exposure, which we combined to assess overall vulnerability. We found 80.5% of species highly sensitive to climate change, primarily due to habitat specialisation, while 48% had low adaptability and 58% had high exposure. Overall, 22% of species assessed were highly vulnerable to climate change. Hotspots of climate change vulnerability did not always overlap with hotspots of threatened species richness, with most of the vulnerable species found in northwestern South America, southwestern USA, Sri Lanka, the Himalayan Arc, Central Asia and southern India. Most families were found to be significantly more vulnerable to climate change than expected by chance. Our findings build on previous work on reptile extinction risk to provide an overview of the risk posed to reptiles by climate change. Despite significant data gaps for a number of traits, we recommend that these findings are integrated into reassessments of species' extinction risk, to monitor both immediate and slow-acting threats to reptiles.
One-fifth of the world's reptiles are currently estimated as threatened with extinction, primarily due to the immediate threats of habitat loss and overexploitation. Climate change presents an emerging slow-acting threat. However, few IUCN Red List assessments for reptiles explicitly consider the potential role of climate change as a threat. Thus, climate change vulnerability assessments can complement existing Red List assessments and highlight further, emerging priorities for conservation action. Here we present the first trait-based global climate change vulnerability assessment for reptiles to estimate the climate change vulnerability of a random representative sample of 1498 species of reptiles. We collected species-specific traits relating to three dimensions of climate change, sensitivity, low adaptability, and exposure, which we combined to assess overall vulnerability. We found 80.5% of species highly sensitive to climate change, primarily due to habitat specialisation, while 48% had low adaptability and 58% had high exposure. Overall, 22% of species assessed were highly vulnerable to climate change. Hotspots of climate change vulnerability did not always overlap with hotspots of threatened species richness, with most of the vulnerable species found in northwestern South America, southwestern USA, Sri Lanka, the Himalayan Arc, Central Asia and southern India. Most families were found to be significantly more vulnerable to climate change than expected by chance. Our findings build on previous work on reptile extinction risk to provide an overview of the risk posed to reptiles by climate change. Despite significant data gaps for a number of traits, we recommend that these findings are integrated into reassessments of species' extinction risk, to monitor both immediate and slow-acting threats to reptiles. •The first ever global trait-based analysis of climate change vulnerability in reptiles•Data were collected for a random sample of 1498 reptiles.•80.5% of species were highly sensitive to climate change.•Overall, 22% of species were found to be highly vulnerable to climate change.•Climate change vulnerable species do not spatially overlap species listed as threatened on the IUCN Red List.
Author Cook, Daniel
Ma, Heidi
Davidson, Ana D.
Tapley, Benjamin
Pearce-Kelly, Paul
Böhm, Monika
Carr, Jamie
García, Andrés
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: Monika
  surname: Böhm
  fullname: Böhm, Monika
  email: monika.bohm@ioz.ac.uk
  organization: Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, Regent's Park, London NW1 4RY, United Kingdom
– sequence: 2
  givenname: Daniel
  orcidid: 0000-0001-9885-8141
  surname: Cook
  fullname: Cook, Daniel
  email: daniel.cook@ioz.ac.uk
  organization: Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, Regent's Park, London NW1 4RY, United Kingdom
– sequence: 3
  givenname: Heidi
  surname: Ma
  fullname: Ma, Heidi
  organization: Institute of Zoology, Zoological Society of London, Regent's Park, London NW1 4RY, United Kingdom
– sequence: 4
  givenname: Ana D.
  surname: Davidson
  fullname: Davidson, Ana D.
  email: davidson610@gmail.com
  organization: Department of Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, USA
– sequence: 5
  givenname: Andrés
  orcidid: 0000-0002-5537-0004
  surname: García
  fullname: García, Andrés
  email: chanoc@ib.unam.mx
  organization: Estacion de Biologia Chamela, Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Mexico
– sequence: 6
  givenname: Benjamin
  surname: Tapley
  fullname: Tapley, Benjamin
  email: ben.tapley@zsl.org
  organization: Zoological Society of London, Regent's Park, London NW1 4RY, United Kingdom
– sequence: 7
  givenname: Paul
  surname: Pearce-Kelly
  fullname: Pearce-Kelly, Paul
  email: paul.pearce-kelly@zsl.org
  organization: Zoological Society of London, Regent's Park, London NW1 4RY, United Kingdom
– sequence: 8
  givenname: Jamie
  surname: Carr
  fullname: Carr, Jamie
  email: Jamie.Carr@iucn.org
  organization: Global Species Programme, International Union for Conservation of Nature, Cambridge, United Kingdom
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Keywords Climate change
Sensitivity
Exposure
IUCN Red List
Herpetology
Adaptability
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Snippet One-fifth of the world's reptiles are currently estimated as threatened with extinction, primarily due to the immediate threats of habitat loss and...
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SubjectTerms Adaptability
Central Asia
Climate change
Exposure
extinction
habitat destruction
habitats
Herpetology
India
IUCN Red List
natural resources conservation
reptiles
risk
Sensitivity
South America
Southwestern United States
species diversity
Sri Lanka
vulnerable species
Title Hot and bothered: Using trait-based approaches to assess climate change vulnerability in reptiles
URI https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2016.06.002
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1868339593
https://www.proquest.com/docview/2000409867
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