NatureServe Creates Climate Vulnerability Index for Plants, Animals

The conservation group NatureServe has developed a new tool to assess the vulnerability to climate change of a given species of plant or animal.

The NatureServe Climate Change Vulnerability Index allows scientists, natural resource managers, planners, and conservation practitioners to perform a rapid assessment of the relative vulnerability of species to the effects of predicted climate change in a defined geographic area.

"This tool brings together in one place all that scientists have learned about the characteristics of plants and animals that render them vulnerable to climate change," said Bruce E. Young, Ph.D., director of Species Science for NatureServe, who led the team that developed the Vulnerability Index. "For the first time, we can compare the relative vulnerability of organisms as different as orchids and orcas," said Young, a zoologist based in Costa Rica.

Applications of the index include:

  • assessing the relative risk of any species or set of species to climate change, such as species targeted in State Wildlife Action Plans or other conservation planning efforts;
  • identifying the common factors that are most responsible for causing a group of species, such as amphibians, to be at risk from climate change;
  • identifying geographic areas with high concentrations of climate-vulnerable species;
  • setting priorities for conservation action in a given region, state, or country.

The methodology for the Vulnerability Index was developed by a team of scientists from NatureServe in collaboration with colleagues from state natural heritage programs and other experts. The Excel-based tool uses a scoring system that considers two main components of vulnerability: a species' predicted exposure to climate change within a defined geographic area, and its sensitivity to climate change, each supported by published studies.

Each species is scored on a detailed set of factors, such as dispersal ability, natural and man-made barriers to dispersal, sensitivity to changes in temperature and precipitation, physical habitat requirements, and genetic variation. Scores on these factors are combined to yield an overall prediction of whether the species will likely suffer a contraction in range, reduction in population, or both during coming decades (the standard time scale used is through 2050). The overall rating is given according to the following scale: Extremely Vulnerable / Highly Vulnerable / Moderately Vulnerable / Not Vulnerable—Presumed Stable / Not Vulnerable—Increase Likely / Insufficient Evidence.

The Vulnerability Index is currently applicable to geographic areas of North America north of Mexico, with a new version under development to assess tropical species.

As a component of updating Nevada's State Wildlife Action Plan to incorporate the effects of climate change, Nevada Natural Heritage Program (NHP) scientists have assessed about 250 priority plants and animals. Their preliminary results will be reviewed at an experts workshop scheduled for mid-December. The Lahontan cutthroat trout, American pika, and mountain beaver are examples of animals assessed as vulnerable to climate change, while the great-tailed grackle could see its range increase.

"We plan to use the Vulnerability Index to eventually assess all the species in the state, including the common ones, some of which could actually be the most susceptible to climate change," said biologist Jennifer Newmark, administrator of the Nevada NHP.

The ability of the index to assess individual species is intended to complement, not substitute for, assessments of the vulnerability of habitat types, which are also critical to conservation planning. By integrating these two types of assessments, scientists can get a more complete picture of the potential effects of climate change.

Initial development of the index was supported by a grant from the Faucett Family Foundation. Incorporation of climate change assessments into wildlife action plans is funded in part by a grant to NatureServe from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation.

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