Projected Impact of Climate Change on Habitat Suitability of a Vulnerable Endemic Vachellia negrii (pic.serm.) kyal. & Boatwr (Fabaceae) in Ethiopia
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Abebe Semu, Arayaselassie; Bekele, Tamrat; Lulekal, Ermias; Cariñanos González, Paloma; Nemomissa, SileshiEditorial
MDPI
Materia
climate change endemic Maxent
Date
2021-10-13Referencia bibliográfica
Abebe Semu, A. t. al. Sustainability 2021, 13, 11275. [https://doi.org/10.3390/su132011275]
Abstract
Species tend to shift their suitable habitat both altitudinally and latitudinally under climate
change. Range shift in plants brings about habitat contraction at rear edges, forcing leading edge
populations to explore newly available suitable habitats. In order to detect these scenarios, modeling
of the future geographical distribution of the species is widely used. Vachellia negrii (Pic.-Serm.)
Kyal. & Boatwr. is endemic to Ethiopia and was assessed as vulnerable due to changes to its
habitat by anthropogenic impacts. It occurs in upland wooded grassland from 2000–3100 m.a.s.l.
The main objective of this study is to model the distribution of Vachellia negrii in Ethiopia by using
Maxent under climate change. Nineteen bioclimatic variables were downloaded from an open source.
Furthermore, topographic position index (tpi), solar radiation index (sri) and elevation were used.
Two representative concentration pathways were selected (RCP 4.5 and RC P8.5) for the years 2050
and 2070 using the Community Climate System Model (CCSM 5). A correlation analysis of the
bioclimatic variables has resulted in the retention of 10 bioclimatic variables for modeling. Fortyeight
occurrence points were collected from herbarium specimens. The area under curve (AUC) is
0.94, indicating a high-performance level of the model. The distribution of the species is affected
by elevation (26.4%), precipitation of the driest month (Bio 14, 21.7%), solar radiation (12.9%) and
precipitation seasonality (Bio15, 12.2%). Whereas the RCP 8.5 has resulted in decrease of suitable
areas of the species from the current 4,314,153.94 ha (3.80%) to 4,059,150.90 ha (3.58%) in 2050, this
area will shrink to 3,555,828.71 ha in 2070 under the same scenario. As climate change severely affects
the environment, highly suitable areas for the growth of the study subject will decrease by 758,325 ha.
The study’s results shows that this vulnerable, endemic species is facing habitat contraction and
requires interventions to ensure its long-term persistence.