Abstract

Climate change will affect the composition of plant and animal communities in many habitats and geographic settings. This presents a dilemma for conservation programs – will the portfolio of protected lands we now have achieve a goal of conserving biodiversity in the future when the ecological communities occurring within them change? Climate change will significantly alter many plant communities, but the geophysical underpinnings of these landscapes, such as landform, elevation, soil, and geological properties, will largely remain the same. Studies show that extant landscapes with a diversity of geophysical characteristics support diverse plant and animal communities. Therefore, geophysically diverse landscapes will likely support diverse species assemblages in the future, although which species and communities will be present is not altogether clear. Following protocols advanced in studies spanning large regions, we developed a down-scaled, high spatial resolution measure of geophysical complexity based on Ecological Land Units (ELUs) and examined the relationship between plant species richness, ecological community richness, and ELU richness (number of different ELU types). We found that extant landscapes with high ELU richness had a greater variety of ecological community types and high species richness of trees, shrubs, and herbaceous plants. We developed a spatial representation of diverse ELU landscapes to inform local conservation practitioners, such as land trusts, of potential conservation targets that will likely support diverse faunas and floras despite the impact of climate change.

Highlights

  • Climate change will alter the composition of the plant and animal communities [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]

  • The simplification of the Ecological Land Units (ELUs) richness map into three discrete planning categories based on standard deviation (SD) units above the statewide mean resulted in clear patterns of ELU richness hotspots (Figure 3)

  • Biodiversity and ELU Richness We hypothesize that landscapes with high ELU richness will support many different kinds of plant community types and result in high species richness of plants

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change will alter the composition of the plant and animal communities [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Depending on which climate change model is used, the climate of the state of Rhode Island USA in 2100 will be similar to the current climate of the mid-Atlantic or southeast United States [10]. This presents a challenge for conservationists working to protect biodiversity: will the current portfolio of conserved lands in a region be effective in protecting biodiversity when the composition of plant and animal communities has profoundly changed [5,11]? Similar relationships between geophysical diversity and biodiversity have been observed at finer scales [17,18]

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