Salta al contenuto principale
Passa alla visualizzazione normale.

SONIA RAVERA

Climate change fosters the decline of epiphytic Lobaria species in Italy

  • Autori: Nascimbene J.; Casazza G.; Benesperi R.; Catalano I.; Cataldo D.; Grillo M.; Isocrono D.; Matteucci E.; Ongaro S.; Potenza G.; Puntillo D.; Ravera S.; Zedda L.; Giordani P.
  • Anno di pubblicazione: 2016
  • Tipologia: Articolo in rivista
  • Parole Chiave: Climatic niche; Epiphytic lichens; Global change; Habitat suitability; Niche modelling; Range loss
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/413169

Abstract

Similarly to other Mediterranean regions, Italy is expected to experience dramatic climatic changes in the coming decades. Do to their poikilohydric nature, lichens are among the most sensitive organisms to climate change and species requiring temperate-humid conditions may rapidly decline in Italy, such in the case of the epiphytic Lobaria species that are confined to humid forests. Our study, based on ecological niche modelling of occurrence data of three Lobaria species, revealed that in the next decades climate change will impact their distribution range across Italy, predicting a steep gradient of increasing range loss across time slices. Lobaria species are therefore facing a high extinction risk associated with reduction of their range. The current patterns indicate that only L. pulmonaria still has a continuous distribution across Italy, with potential contact between Apennine and Alpine populations. This situation is consistent with the wider climatic niche of this species, still offering a major opportunity for its successful long-term conservation. Results (a) support the inclusion of the three Lobaria species in European conservation policies, such as the Habitat Directive, and (b) warn against an over-estimation of the indicator power of single flagship species to establish conservation priorities for lichens, indicating that even lichens with peculiar and similar climatic envelopes may fail to co-occur within a given forest stand. A multiple indicator approach could provide more useful tools for a community-based conservation strategy for epiphytes.