Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 3 — Observational / field trialPeer-reviewed

High Abundances of Species in Protected Areas in Parts of their Geographic Distributions Colonized during a Recent Period of Climatic Change

Gillingham, P

Lett. 8, 97-106 (2015) · 2015

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Summary

Abstract It is uncertain whether Protected Areas (PAs) will conserve high abundances of species as their distributions and abundances shift in response to climate change. We analyzed large datasets for 57 butterfly and 42 odonate species (including four that have recently colonized Britain). We found that 73 of 94 species with sufficient data for analysis were more abundant inside than outside PAs in the historical parts of their British distributions, showing that PAs have retained high conservation value. A significant majority (61 of 99 species) was also more abundant inside PAs in regions they have colonized during the last 30–40 years of climate warming. Species with relatively high abundances inside PAs in long‐established parts of their distributions were also disproportionately associated with PAs in recently colonized regions, revealing a set of relatively PA‐reliant species. Pas, therefore, play a vital role in the conservation of biodiversity as species’ ranges become more dynamic.

Outcomes reported

Referenced by Nature Communications British biodiversity scenarios as citation 55; likely supports topic area: biodiversity / conservation. Topics: biodiversity / conservation Evidence type: Research article / other Source report: Nature Communications British biodiversity scenarios Ref#: Nature Communications British biodiversity scenarios #55 Original: Gillingham, P. K., Alison, J., Roy, D. B., Fox, R. & Thomas, C. D. High abundances of species in protected areas in parts of their geographic distributions colonized during a recent period of climatic change. Conserv. Lett. 8, 97-106 (2015).

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Study type
Research
Source type
Peer-reviewed research
Status
Published
Geography
United Kingdom
System type
Food supply chain
DOI
10.1111/conl.12118
Catalogue ID
IRmoq83umm-a5e0e5
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