Abstract

Climate change has modified the structure and functions of ecosystems, affecting human well-being. Evergreen plants in the warm-temperate ecosystems will lose climatically suitable habitats under climate change but have not drawn much scholarly interest. Therefore, the present research aimed to predict the future climatic niches of eight coastal warm-adapted evergreen trees under climate change to provide information for an effective management practice. For this purpose, we used the ensemble species distribution models (SDMs) weighted by the TSS value in modelling the climatic niches of those evergreen trees and then ensembled their future distributions predicted under 20 future climate scenarios. Except for Neolitsea sericea (True Skill Statistic (TSS) = 0.79), all projections for the current climatic niches of evergreens showed excellent predictive powers (TSS > 0.85). The results showed that the climatic niches of the four evergreens—Castanopsis cuspidata, Pittosporum tobira, Raphiolepis indica var. umbellate, and Eurya emarginata—would expand to the northern part of the Korean Peninsula (KP) under climate change, but the ones of the remaining four—Kadsura japonica, Neolitsea sericea, Ilex integra, and Dendropanax morbiferus—would shrink. While the climatic niches of Pittosporum tobira showed the rapidest and greatest expansion under climate change, Dendropanax morbiferus was predicted to experience the greatest loss of habitat. On the other hand, regardless of whether the future distributions of climatically suitable habitats would expand or contract, the highly suitable habitats of all species were predicted to decline under climate change. This may indicate that further climate change will degrade habitat suitability for all species within the distribution boundary and restrict continuous habitat expansions of expanding species or accelerate habitat loss of shrinking species. In addition, the future distributions of most coastal evergreens were found to be confined to coastal areas; therefore, sea-level rise would accelerate their habitat loss under climate change. The present study provides primary and practical knowledge for understanding climate-related coastal vegetation changes for future conservation planning, particularly on the Korean Peninsula.

Highlights

  • Climate change has degraded habitat suitability for species, which causes range shifts of plants and species extinction in diverse ecosystems [1,2]

  • The climate-related range expansion or decline of warm-adapted plants depends on individual species; in particular, previous research reported that some warm-adapted lowland plants experienced habitat loss and that their extinction risk increased under climate change [1,4,5,6,9,10,11,12,13]

  • The consensus projections showed that the climatically suitable habitats of most evergreens were mainly distributed in the coastal areas and on the islands of the southern and southwestern parts of the Korean Peninsula (KP) under current climate conditions (Figure 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change has degraded habitat suitability for species, which causes range shifts of plants and species extinction in diverse ecosystems [1,2]. Warm-adapted plants have not drawn much scholarly interest [3,4], as it has been expected that those species will expand or shift their range according to climate warming [5,6,7,8]. The climate-related range expansion or decline of warm-adapted plants depends on individual species; in particular, previous research reported that some warm-adapted lowland plants experienced habitat loss and that their extinction risk increased under climate change [1,4,5,6,9,10,11,12,13]. Species-specific research on climate-related range shifts is essential for the effective conservation planning of warm-adapted plants under climate change It was predicted that the range of warm-adapted plants would expand under climate warming, their habitat suitability decreased within the range [12,14].

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