Geography, taxonomy, extinction risk and exposure of fully migratory birds to droughts and cyclones

Author:

Preston‐Allen Rhys G. G.12,Häkkinen Henry1ORCID,Cañellas‐Dols Laura12,Ameca y Juarez Eric I.34,Orme C. David L.2,Pettorelli Nathalie1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Zoology Zoological Society of London London UK

2. Georgina Mace Centre for the Living Planet Imperial College London London UK

3. MOE Key Laboratory of Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering Beijing Normal University Beijing China

4. Climate Change Specialist Group, Species Survival Commission International Union for Conservation of Nature Gland Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractAimAnthropogenic climate change is predicted to drive unprecedented increases in the frequency and intensity of extreme climatic events, such as drought and cyclones. The impacts of these events on fully migratory species could be particularly severe and have cascading effects on the functioning of many ecosystems. We explore the relationships between geography, taxonomy, extinction risk and the exposure of fully migratory birds to drought and cyclones.LocationGlobal.Time Period1985–2014.Major Taxa Studied383 fully migratory bird species.MethodsWe assessed the exposure of fully migratory birds to cyclones and droughts, quantifying exposure by calculating the percentage of spatial overlap between a species' range and the extent of an extreme event within a given time series. We compared the level of cumulative exposure sustained by species among different taxonomic groups and within their breeding and wintering ranges; we also assessed whether species currently classed as ‘threatened’ are more cumulatively exposed than ‘non‐threatened’ species.ResultsWe identified fully migratory bird species highly exposed to extreme climatic events and global geographic hotspots of species exposure. 4% of species were found to be highly exposed to cyclones and droughts in both their wintering and breeding ranges. Wintering ranges were, on average, more cumulatively exposed to cyclones than breeding ranges; there was no discernible difference in drought exposure between ranges. Species currently classed as threatened were shown to experience higher exposure to droughts than non‐threatened ones in both ranges.Main ConclusionsThis exposure analysis provides the first step to a full global assessment of fully migratory bird species' vulnerability to extreme climatic events. Many species are at least as exposed to extreme events within their wintering ranges as in their breeding ranges, supporting calls for ‘full cycle’ assessment of migratory species' vulnerability to climate change. Our identification of hotspots of exposure may help to guide further monitoring, research and management.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Global and Planetary Change

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