Projected Effects of Climate Change on Birds in Parks Canada Protected Areas

Projected Effects of Climate Change on Birds in Parks Canada Protected Areas In 2022, scientists from Parks Canada, Audubon, the Canadian Wildlife Service and Birds Canada published an analysis of projected changes in bird assemblages due to climate change within the Canadian National Park System (Gahbauer et al. 2022, Projected changes in birds assemblages due to climate change in a Canadian system of protected areas; https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262116). This brief summarizes projected changes in climate and vegetation biome suitability by mid-century for 434 native bird species across 49 national parks, national marine conversation areas, and a national urban park in Canada under IPCC’s high emissions trajectory (RCP8.5) to mid-century (2050s), representing a 2°C mean rise in temperatures worldwide. 2023-05-04 Parks Canada changementclimatique-climatechange@pc.gc.ca Nature and EnvironmentSociety and CultureScience and Technologybirdsclimate changevulnerabilityvegetationbiomenational parknational marine conservation areanational urban parkprotected areasclimate refugiaextirpation Projected Effects of Climate Change on Birds in Parks Canada Protected AreasPDF https://open.canada.ca/data/dataset/a5a9c23e-d8ee-4fe2-9872-8fd12297482a/resource/cc4ce025-4503-4779-9a26-a1ba10b4e53f/download/projected-effects-of-climate-change-on-birds-in-parks-canada-protected-areas.pdf Projected Effects of Climate Change on Birds in Parks Canada Protected AreasPDF https://open.canada.ca/data/dataset/a5a9c23e-d8ee-4fe2-9872-8fd12297482a/resource/e9e0d841-18a8-4e13-b2cc-914e1828884e/download/effets-prevus-des-changements-climatiques-sur-les-oiseaux-dans-les-aires-protegees-de-parcs-cana.pdf

In 2022, scientists from Parks Canada, Audubon, the Canadian Wildlife Service and Birds Canada published an analysis of projected changes in bird assemblages due to climate change within the Canadian National Park System (Gahbauer et al. 2022, Projected changes in birds assemblages due to climate change in a Canadian system of protected areas; https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262116). This brief summarizes projected changes in climate and vegetation biome suitability by mid-century for 434 native bird species across 49 national parks, national marine conversation areas, and a national urban park in Canada under IPCC’s high emissions trajectory (RCP8.5) to mid-century (2050s), representing a 2°C mean rise in temperatures worldwide.

  • Publisher - Current Organization Name: Parks Canada
  • Contributor: Scott R. Parker, Darroch M. Whitaker, Cavan Harpur, Birds Canada, Canadian Wildlife Service, National Audubon Society (publication support and modelling)
  • Licence: Open Government Licence - Canada

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