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      Predicting the impacts of climate change on the distribution of threatened forest-restricted birds in Madagascar

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          Abstract

          The greatest common threat to birds in Madagascar has historically been from anthropogenic deforestation. During recent decades, global climate change is now also regarded as a significant threat to biodiversity. This study uses Maximum Entropy species distribution modeling to explore how potential climate change could affect the distribution of 17 threatened forest endemic bird species, using a range of climate variables from the Hadley Center's HadCM3 climate change model, for IPCC scenario B2a, for 2050. We explore the importance of forest cover as a modeling variable and we test the use of pseudo-presences drawn from extent of occurrence distributions. Inclusion of the forest cover variable improves the models and models derived from real-presence data with forest layer are better predictors than those from pseudo-presence data. Using real-presence data, we analyzed the impacts of climate change on the distribution of nine species. We could not predict the impact of climate change on eight species because of low numbers of occurrences. All nine species were predicted to experience reductions in their total range areas, and their maximum modeled probabilities of occurrence. In general, species range and altitudinal contractions follow the reductive trend of the Maximum presence probability. Only two species ( Tyto soumagnei and Newtonia fanovanae) are expected to expand their altitude range. These results indicate that future availability of suitable habitat at different elevations is likely to be critical for species persistence through climate change. Five species ( Eutriorchis astur, Neodrepanis hypoxantha, Mesitornis unicolor, Euryceros prevostii, and Oriola bernieri) are probably the most vulnerable to climate change. Four of them ( E. astur, M. unicolor, E. prevostii, and O. bernieri) were found vulnerable to the forest fragmentation during previous research. Combination of these two threats in the future could negatively affect these species in a drastic way. Climate change is expected to act differently on each species and it is important to incorporate complex ecological variables into species distribution models.

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          Aligning conservation priorities across taxa in Madagascar with high-resolution planning tools.

          Globally, priority areas for biodiversity are relatively well known, yet few detailed plans exist to direct conservation action within them, despite urgent need. Madagascar, like other globally recognized biodiversity hot spots, has complex spatial patterns of endemism that differ among taxonomic groups, creating challenges for the selection of within-country priorities. We show, in an analysis of wide taxonomic and geographic breadth and high spatial resolution, that multitaxonomic rather than single-taxon approaches are critical for identifying areas likely to promote the persistence of most species. Our conservation prioritization, facilitated by newly available techniques, identifies optimal expansion sites for the Madagascar government's current goal of tripling the land area under protection. Our findings further suggest that high-resolution multitaxonomic approaches to prioritization may be necessary to ensure protection for biodiversity in other global hot spots.
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            A review of methods for the assessment of prediction errors in conservation presence/absence models.

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              Threatened birds of the world

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Ecol Evol
                Ecol Evol
                ece3
                Ecology and Evolution
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd
                2045-7758
                2045-7758
                April 2013
                15 February 2013
                : 3
                : 4
                : 763-769
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Asity Madagascar P.O. Box 1074, Antananarivo, Madagascar
                [2 ]School of Biological Sciences, Medical Biology Centre, Queen's University Belfast 97 Lisburn Road, BT9 7BL, Belfast, United Kingdom
                Author notes
                Rado H. Andriamasimanana, Asity Madagascar, P.O. Box 1074, Antananarivo, Madagascar, Tel: +261(0)202253607; E-mails: rd.andriamasimanana@ 123456birdlife-mada.org , a.cameron@ 123456qub.ac.uk

                Funding Information We thank the following people and organizations for their support. Asity Madagascar and Bird Life International for providing species locality data of occurrence, and for providing financial support to R. Andriamasimanana. The Systéme des Aires Protégées de Madagascar Taxonomic working group in Madagascar for refining and providing the refined extent of occurrence data.

                Article
                10.1002/ece3.497
                3631392
                23610622
                306587dc-553f-46a7-a754-78accb43684e
                © 2013 Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.

                History
                : 09 October 2012
                : 03 January 2013
                : 08 January 2013
                Categories
                Original Research

                Evolutionary Biology
                climate change,extent of occurrence,forest-restricted birds,habitat suitability,madagascar,maximum entropy,niche modeling,threatened species

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