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The future distribution of wetland birds breeding in Europe validated against observed changes in distribution
Author(s) -
Alaaeldin Soultan,
Diego PavónJordán,
Ute Bradter,
Brett K. Sandercock,
Wesley M. Hochachka,
Alison Johnston,
Jon E. Brommer,
Élie Gaget,
Véréna Keller,
Peter Knaus,
Karen Aghababyan,
Qenan Maxhuni,
Alexandre Vintchevski,
Károly Nagy,
Liutauras Raudonikis,
Dawn E. Balmer,
David G. Noble,
Domingos Leitão,
Ingar Jostein Øien,
Paul Shimmings,
Elchin Sultanov,
Brian J. Caffrey,
Kerem Boyla,
Dimitrije Radišić,
Åke Lindström,
Metodija Velevski,
Clara Pladevall,
Lluı́s Brotons,
Karel Šťastný,
Draženko Z. Rajković,
Tomasz Chodkiewicz,
Tomasz Wilk,
Tibor Szép,
Chris van Turnhout,
Ruud Foppen,
Ian J. Burfield,
Thomas Vikstrøm,
Vlatka Dumbović Mazal,
Mark A. Eaton,
Petr Voříšek,
Aleksi Lehikoinen,
Sergi Herrando,
Tatiana Kuzmenko,
HansGünther Bauer,
Mikhail Kalyakin,
Olga Voltzit,
Jovica Sjeničić,
Tomas Pärt
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
environmental research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.37
H-Index - 124
ISSN - 1748-9326
DOI - 10.1088/1748-9326/ac4ebe
Subject(s) - range (aeronautics) , passerine , breeding bird survey , climate change , ecology , species distribution , wetland , habitat , population , geography , global warming , physical geography , environmental science , biology , demography , materials science , sociology , composite material
Wetland bird species have been declining in population size worldwide as climate warming and land-use change affect their suitable habitats. We used species distribution models (SDMs) to predict changes in range dynamics for 64 non-passerine wetland birds breeding in Europe, including range size, position of centroid, and margins. We fitted the SDMs with data collected for the first European Breeding Bird Atlas and climate and land-use data to predict distributional changes over a century (the 1970s–2070s). The predicted annual changes were then compared to observed annual changes in range size and range centroid over a time period of 30 years using data from the second European Breeding Bird Atlas. Our models successfully predicted ca. 75% of the 64 bird species to contract their breeding range in the future, while the remaining species (mostly southerly breeding species) were predicted to expand their breeding ranges northward. The northern margins of southerly species and southern margins of northerly species, both, predicted to shift northward. Predicted changes in range size and shifts in range centroids were broadly positively associated with the observed changes, although some species deviated markedly from the predictions. The predicted average shift in core distributions was ca. 5 km yr −1 towards the north (5% northeast, 45% north, and 40% northwest), compared to a slower observed average shift of ca. 3.9 km yr −1 . Predicted changes in range centroids were generally larger than observed changes, which suggests that bird distribution changes may lag behind environmental changes leading to ‘climate debt’. We suggest that predictions of SDMs should be viewed as qualitative rather than quantitative outcomes, indicating that care should be taken concerning single species. Still, our results highlight the urgent need for management actions such as wetland creation and restoration to improve wetland birds’ resilience to the expected environmental changes in the future.

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