Identifying the World's Most Climate Change Vulnerable Species: A Systematic Trait-Based Assessment of all Birds, Amphibians and Corals
International Union for Conservation of Nature (United Kingdom) · University of the Witwatersrand · +17 more institutions
Abstract
Climate change will have far-reaching impacts on biodiversity, including increasing extinction rates. Current approaches to quantifying such impacts focus on measuring exposure to climatic change and largely ignore the biological differences between species that may significantly increase or reduce their vulnerability. To address this, we present a framework for assessing three dimensions of climate change vulnerability, namely sensitivity, exposure and adaptive capacity; this draws on species' biological traits and their modeled exposure to projected climatic changes. In the largest such assessment to date, we applied this approach to each of the world's birds, amphibians and corals (16,857 species). The…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 83.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
19- WFWendy FodenCorresponding
International Union for Conservation of Nature (United Kingdom), University of the Witwatersrand
- SHStuart H. M. Butchart
BirdLife international
- SNSimon N. Stuart
University of Bath, International Union for Conservation of Nature, UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre, Al Ain Hospital
- JVJean‐Christophe Vié
International Union for Conservation of Nature
- HRH. Reşi̇t Akçakaya
Stony Brook University
Topics & keywords
- Climate change
- Ecology
- Biology
- Trait
- Geography
- Climate action