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Journal article

Hydrologically driven ecosystem processes determine the distribution and persistence of ecosystem-specialist predators under climate change

This article describes a peatland process model developed to show the processes and food chains that combine to influence the population performance of species in British blanket bogs.

Andreas Heinemeyer, Chris West / Published on 2 August 2015

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Citation

Carroll, M.J., A. Heinemeyer, J.W. Pearce-Higgins, P. Dennis, C. West, J. Holden, Z.E. Wallage and C.D. Thomas (2015). Hydrologically driven ecosystem processes determine the distribution and persistence of ecosystem-specialist predators under climate change. Nature Communications, 6, Art. 7851.

Climate change has the capacity to alter physical and biological ecosystem processes, jeopardizing the survival of associated species. This is a particular concern in cool, wet northern peatlands that could experience warmer, drier conditions.

Here the authors show that climate, ecosystem processes and food chains combine to influence the population performance of species in British blanket bogs. Their peatland process model accurately predicts water-table depth, which predicts abundance of craneflies (keystone invertebrates), which in turn predicts observed abundances and population persistence of three ecosystem-specialist bird species that feed on craneflies during the breeding season.

Climate change projections suggest that falling water tables could cause 56–81% declines in cranefly abundance and, hence, 15–51% reductions in the abundances of these birds by 2051–2080.

The authors conclude that physical (precipitation, temperature and topography), biophysical (evapotranspiration and desiccation of invertebrates) and ecological (food chains) processes combine to determine the distributions and survival of ecosystem-specialist predators.

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SEI authors

Andreas Heinemeyer

Senior Research Fellow

SEI York

Chris West

Deputy Centre Director (Research)

SEI York

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10.1038/ncomms8851 Open access
Topics and subtopics
Land : Ecosystems
Related centres
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