Abstract

Many species have already experienced distributional shifts due to changing environmental conditions, and analyzing past shifts can help us to understand the influence of environmental stressors on a species as well as to analyze the effectiveness of conservation strategies. We aimed to (1) quantify regional habitat associations of the California gnatcatcher (Polioptila californica); (2) describe changes in environmental variables and gnatcatcher distributions through time; (3) identify environmental drivers associated with habitat suitability changes; and (4) relate habitat suitability changes through time to habitat conservation plans. Southern California's Western Riverside County (WRC), an approximately 4,675 km2 conservation planning area. We assessed environmental correlates of distributional shifts of the federally threatened California gnatcatcher (hereafter, gnatcatcher) using partitioned Mahalanobis D 2 niche modeling for three time periods: 1980–1997, 1998–2003, and 2004–2012, corresponding to distinct periods in habitat conservation planning. Highly suitable gnatcatcher habitat was consistently warmer and drier and occurred at a lower elevation than less suitable habitat and consistently had more CSS, less agriculture, and less chaparral. However, its relationship to development changed among periods, mainly due to the rapid change in this variable. Likewise, other aspects of highly suitable habitat changed among time periods, which became cooler and higher in elevation. The gnatcatcher lost 11.7% and 40.6% of highly suitable habitat within WRC between 1980–1997 to 1998–2003, and 1998–2003 to 2004–2012, respectively. Unprotected landscapes lost relatively more suitable habitat (−64.3%) than protected landscapes (30.5%). Over the past four decades, suitable habitat loss within WRC, especially between the second and third time periods, was associated with temperature‐related factors coupled with landscape development across coastal sage scrub habitat; however, development appears to be driving change more rapidly than climate change. Our study demonstrates the importance of providing protected lands for potential suitable habitat in future scenarios.

Highlights

  • Anthropogenic climate change is known to significantly impact biodiversity (Dukes & Mooney, 1999; Sala et al, 2000; Vitousek, DAntonio, Loope, Rejmanek, & Westbrooks, 1997) by fragmenting, shifting, increasing, and/or decreasing geographic distributions of many species (Pearson & Dawson, 2003; Peterson, Schreiner, & Buckingham, 1997)

  • Results from niche models can be used to plan for priority area selection for conservation purposes, and many habitat conservation plans created to mitigate climate and environmental change are based on future geographic ranges

  • Rapid urban development beginning in the 1970s, overlaid on extensive agricultural development that started in the late 1800s, led WRC to develop one of the first multiple species habitat conservation plans in the state in 2004 to protect a growing number of species, including the gnatcatcher, listed as rare, threatened, endangered, or sensitive by both the state and federal governments (Preston & Rotenberry, 2007; Preston, Rotenberry, Redak, & Allen, 2008; Western Riverside County 1997)

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Summary

Introduction

Anthropogenic climate change is known to significantly impact biodiversity (Dukes & Mooney, 1999; Sala et al, 2000; Vitousek, DAntonio, Loope, Rejmanek, & Westbrooks, 1997) by fragmenting, shifting, increasing, and/or decreasing geographic distributions of many species (Pearson & Dawson, 2003; Peterson, Schreiner, & Buckingham, 1997). Together, these changes in geographic distributions can lead to the local or regional extinction of species (Thomas et al, 2004) or the generation of novel communities (Hobbs et al, 2006; Ohlemüller, Walker, & Wilson, 2006; Williams & Jackson, 2007). Analyzing past shifts may provide us with the ability to evaluate the effectiveness of existing conservation protections

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