Abstract

National parks often serve as a cornerstone for a country’s species and ecosystem conservation efforts. However, despite the protection these sites afford, climate change is expected to drive a substantial change in their bird assemblages. We used species distribution models to predict the change in environmental suitability (i.e., how well environmental conditions explain the presence of a species) of 49 Canadian national parks during summer and winter for 434 bird species under a 2°C warming scenario, anticipated to occur in Canada around the mid-21st century. We compared these to existing species distributions in the 2010s, and classified suitability projections for each species at each park as potential extirpation, worsening, stable, improving, or potential colonisation. Across all parks, and both seasons, 70% of the projections indicate change, including a 25% turnover in summer assemblages and 30% turnover in winter assemblages. The majority of parks are projected to have increases in species richness and functional traits in winter, compared to a mix of increases and decreases in both in summer. However, some changes are expected to vary by region, such as Arctic region parks being likely to experience the most potential colonisation, while some of the Mixedwood Plains and Atlantic Maritime region parks may experience the greatest turnover and potential extirpation in summer if management actions are not taken to mitigate some of these losses. Although uncertainty exists around the precise rate and impacts of climate change, our results indicate that conservation practices that assume stationarity of environmental conditions will become untenable. We propose general guidance to help managers adapt their conservation actions to consider the potentially substantive changes in bird assemblages that are projected, including managing for persistence and change.

Highlights

  • The on-going and projected impacts of climate change to the survival and distribution of biodiversity is global in scale [1,2,3] and is even felt within protected areas that have been established to safeguard and conserve species [4,5,6,7,8]

  • Parks, and both seasons, 70% of projections of suitability are expected to change

  • Canada’s national parks, national marine conservation areas, and national urban park are vulnerable to the impacts of a rapidly changing climate [114]

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Summary

Introduction

The on-going and projected impacts of climate change to the survival and distribution of biodiversity is global in scale [1,2,3] and is even felt within protected areas that have been established to safeguard and conserve species [4,5,6,7,8]. Since 1948, when nation-wide records have been available, Canada has experienced an increase in mean annual temperature and a general increase in total annual precipitation, and these changes are expected to continue or even accelerate because of climate change [16]. These changes have triggered habitat alteration through shifts in factors such as snow and ice cover, wildfire regimes, sea level, hydrology, vegetation composition and structure, and growing season phenology [17,18,19], all of which influence the distribution and extent of suitable environmental conditions for species. Some species may be unaffected or find a means to adapt to local conditions, such as by advancing the timing of nesting [24], while others are more sensitive and less adaptable and will need to either shift their range or face extirpation or extinction [25, 26]

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