A resilient and connected network of sites to sustain biodiversity under a changing climate

Published Article

United States

Publication date: February 6, 2023

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A 12-year study by 289 scientists mapped resilient U.S. habitats across 68 ecoregions to support biodiversity amid climate change. The resulting network spans 35% of CONUS, linking diverse, connected sites to guide conservation at all scales.

Subject Tags

  • Conservation Planning
  • Climate resilience
  • Biodiversity

Abstract

Motivated by declines in biodiversity exacerbated by climate change, we identified a network of conservation sites designed to provide resilient habitat for species, while supporting dynamic shifts in ranges and changes in ecosystem composition. Our 12-y study involved 289 scientists in 14 study regions across the conterminous United States (CONUS), and our intent was to support local-, regional-, and national-scale conservation decisions. To ensure that the network represented all species and ecosystems, we stratified CONUS into 68 ecoregions, and, within each, we comprehensively mapped the geophysical settings associated with current ecosystem and species distributions. To identify sites most resilient to climate change, we identified the portion of each geophysical setting with the most topoclimate variability (high landscape diversity) likely to be accessible to dispersers (high local connectedness). These “resilient sites” were overlaid with conservation priority maps from 104 independent assessments to indicate current value in supporting recognized biodiversity. To identify key connectivity areas for sustaining species movement in response to climate change, we codeveloped a fine-scale representation of human modification and ran a circuit-theory-based analysis that emphasized movement potential along geographic climate gradients. Integrating areas with high values for two or more factors, we identified a representative, resilient, and connected network of biodiverse lands covering 35% of CONUS. Because the network connects climatic gradients across 250,000 biodiversity elements and multiple resilient examples of all geophysical settings in every ecoregion, it could form the spatial foundation for targeted land protection and other conservation strategies to sustain a diverse, dynamic, and adaptive world.

Citation

Anderson, M.G., Clark, M., Olivero, A.P., Barnett, A.R., Hall, K.R., Cornett, M.W., Ahlering, M., Schindel, M., Unnasch, B., Schloss, C. and Cameron, D.R., 2023. A resilient and connected network of sites to sustain biodiversity under a changing climate. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences120(7), p.e2204434119.

https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2204434119

Media Contacts

  • Mark G. Anderson
    Director of Conservation Science, North America
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: manderson@tnc.org

  • Melissa Clark
    Spatial Ecology Lead
    The Nature Conservancy
    Email: melissa_clark@tnc.org