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Applying a framework for landscape planning under climate change for the conservation of biodiversity in the Finnish boreal forest
Authors:Adriano Mazziotta  Maria Triviño  Olli‐Pekka Tikkanen  Jari Kouki  Harri Strandman  Mikko Mönkkönen
Affiliation:1. Department of Biological and Environmental Science, University of Jyv?skyl?, P.O. Box 35, Jyv?skyl?, 40014 Finland;2. Joensuu Unit, Finnish Forest Research Institute, P.O. Box 68, Joensuu, FI‐80101 Finland;3. School of Forest Sciences, University of Eastern Finland, P.O. Box 111, Joensuu, FI‐80101 Finland
Abstract:Conservation strategies are often established without consideration of the impact of climate change. However, this impact is expected to threaten species and ecosystem persistence and to have dramatic effects towards the end of the 21st century. Landscape suitability for species under climate change is determined by several interacting factors including dispersal and human land use. Designing effective conservation strategies at regional scales to improve landscape suitability requires measuring the vulnerabilities of specific regions to climate change and determining their conservation capacities. Although methods for defining vulnerability categories are available, methods for doing this in a systematic, cost‐effective way have not been identified. Here, we use an ecosystem model to define the potential resilience of the Finnish forest landscape by relating its current conservation capacity to its vulnerability to climate change. In applying this framework, we take into account the responses to climate change of a broad range of red‐listed species with different niche requirements. This framework allowed us to identify four categories in which representation in the landscape varies among three IPCC emission scenarios (B1, low; A1B, intermediate; A2, high emissions): (i) susceptible (B1 = 24.7%, A1B = 26.4%, A2 = 26.2%), the most intact forest landscapes vulnerable to climate change, requiring management for heterogeneity and resilience; (ii) resilient (B1 = 2.2%, A1B = 0.5%, A2 = 0.6%), intact areas with low vulnerability that represent potential climate refugia and require conservation capacity maintenance; (iii) resistant (B1 = 6.7%, A1B = 0.8%, A2 = 1.1%), landscapes with low current conservation capacity and low vulnerability that are suitable for restoration projects; (iv) sensitive (B1 = 66.4%, A1B = 72.3%, A2 = 72.0%), low conservation capacity landscapes that are vulnerable and for which alternative conservation measures are required depending on the intensity of climate change. Our results indicate that the Finnish landscape is likely to be dominated by a very high proportion of sensitive and susceptible forest patches, thereby increasing uncertainty for landscape managers in the choice of conservation strategies.
Keywords:climate change adaptation  climate vulnerability  conservation strategy  emission scenarios  forest ecosystem model  forest gap model  forest management  landscape conservation capacity  systematic conservation planning  woody debris
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