Abstract

Increasing forest wildfires in Portugal remain a growing concern since forests in the Mediterranean region are vulnerable to recent global warming and reduction of precipitation. Therefore, a long-term negative effect is expected on the vegetation, with increasing drought and areas burnt by fires. The strawberry tree (Arbutus unedo L.) is particularly used in Portugal to produce a spirit by processing its fruits and is the main income for forestry owners. Other applications are possible due to the fruit and leaves’ anti-oxidant properties and bioactive compounds production, with a potential for clinical and food uses. It is a sclerophyllous plant, dry-adapted and fire resistant, enduring the Mediterranean climate, and recently considered as a possibility for afforestation, to intensify forest discontinuity where pines and eucalypts monoculture dominate the region. To improve our knowledge about the species’ spatial distribution we used 318 plots (the centroid of a 1 km2 square grid) measuring the species presence and nine environmental attributes. The seven bioclimatic variables most impacting on the species distribution and two topographic features, slope and altitude, were used. The past, current and future climate data were obtained through WorldClim. Finally, the vulnerability of the strawberry tree to the effects of global climate change was examined in the face of two emission scenarios (RCP 4.5 and 8.5), to predict distribution changes in the years 2050 and 2070, using a species distribution models (MaxEnt). The reduction of suitable habitat for this species is significant in the southern regions, considering the future scenarios of global warming. Central and northern mountainous regions are putative predicted refuges for this species. Forest policy and management should reflect the impact of climate change on the usable areas for forestry, particularly considering species adapted to the Mediterranean regions and wildfires, such as the strawberry tree. The distribution of the species in the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and Mid-Holocene (MH) agrees with previous genetic and paleontological studies in the region, which support putative refuges for the species. Two in the southern and coastal-central regions, since the LGM, and one in the east-central mountainous region, considered as cryptic refugia.

Highlights

  • The Mediterranean region suffers from a high increase in temperature are ca. 1.5-fold than during 1880–1920, compared to the other regions in the world

  • We investigated whether the climate, during the Last Glacial Maximum (~ 22 000 BP) and the Mid-Holocene (~ 6 000 BP) supports the strawberry tree refugia, identified by Bioclimatic modeling in strawberry tree paleontological and phylogeographical data ([6] and references therein)

  • We have considered two Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) scenarios, RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5, where the numbers refer to the radiative forcing measured in watts per square meter (Wm-2) [29], fitted for two future time slices (2050 and 2070)

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Summary

Introduction

The Mediterranean region suffers from a high increase in temperature are ca. 1.5-fold than during 1880–1920, compared to the other regions in the world. The impact of climate change in this region should be taken into consideration the design of land-use policies and, the conservation of genetic resources (>2 ̊C above preindustrial levels) [1]. The prediction of the main impacts on the forest in Portugal, due to climate change, suggest a trend on species migration, from south to north and from the inner lands to the coastal areas. Under this scenario, forests may even disappear from what are the drier areas (e.g. southern interior region). The impact on forest economics can be extremely severe: decreased productivity, increased fire risk, pests and diseases’ risk can turn forest investment unattractive, resulting in increasing forest abandonment [2, 3]

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