A tree species range in the face of climate change: cork oak as a study case for the Mediterranean biome
Author
Vessella, Federico
López-Tirado, Javier
Simeone, Marco Cosimo
Schirone, Bartolomeo
Hidalgo, Pablo J.
Date
2017Subject
Quercus suberEcological niche modelling
Forecasting
Climate change
Potential distribution
Mediterranean biome
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Show full item recordAbstract
Species distribution models are feasible methods
for projecting theoretical responses of living organisms’
occurrence under several future climate change scenarios.
The major interest is focused on trees, which regulate the
equilibrium within ecosystems and guarantee the survival
of many life forms on the Earth. The repercussions of
climatic drivers are expected to pose the strongest threats
for the Mediterranean biome, an acknowledged hotspot of
biodiversity. Here, we focused on cork oak (Quercus suber
L.), a keystone species of many landscapes, sustaining a
rich biodiversity, ecological processes and economic
incomes. Results of 8 combined ecological modelling
techniques and two Global Circulation Models highlight a
broad contraction of the species potential range over the
twenty-first century, both under intermediate and high
emissions scenarios. Coupled northward and upward shifts
are predicted, mostly pertaining Iberia and North Africa.
The potential areas detected at Levantine will likely
undergo disappearance. To exacerbate the impacts of climate
change, the future of the ecosystems linked to cork
oak remains uncertain, because of the expected implications
on the phenotypic plasticity or evolutionary responses.
A synergy among niche-based, physiological and ecogenetic
investigations is strongly needed in the field of
applied research, to improve the assessment of conservation
and reforestation actions.