The Welland Tribune

Study finds refuge areas crucial to saving bird species as world warms

- BOB WEBER

With more depressing results that suggest climate change threatens half of Canada’s songbirds with significan­t habitat loss, you might expect one of the new study’s authors to be downcast. But Jeff Wells isn’t.

“We need to get out of that pessimisti­c, completely gloomy view of all the bad things that are happening and start thinking about solutions,” said Wells, chief scientist and lead author of the study released Monday by the Boreal Songbird Initiative.

“There really are some positive solutions to some of this.”

First, the bad news. The report combines extensive surveys of bird numbers with sophistica­ted models showing the probable impact of climate change on specific areas of the boreal forest, the vast ribbon of green that stretches across the northern reaches of almost every province.

It says that of the 53 species of songbirds tightly bound to the forest — including favourites such as the Canada warbler and evening grosbeak — 21 of them will experience “unequivoca­l declines” in habitat in a couple of decades. By the end of the century, that’s expected to rise to 29 species.

For some species, that habitat loss is a real threat to their existence. The rusty blackbird, for example, has already lost about 90 per cent of its numbers and there are a billion fewer blackpoll warblers than in the ’70s.

“There’s an increasing number of birds that are seeing serious declines,” said Wells.

Other studies are in line with those findings. The Audubon Society found in 2014 that climate change could cost 126 species more than half their current range by 2050.

The losses don’t include human disturbanc­e from forestry or energy developmen­t.

But the study went on to look for areas where changes won’t be as dramatic, where nearness to water or increasing elevation will moderate the warming climate and preserve older habitats. It found those, too.

Overlay those areas with data on what birds prefer which conditions, and “climate refugia” result — regions that will hang on to the climatic conditions preferred by the greatest number of birds. The largest refuges are found in northern Quebec, but they can be found across the country. Ontario has major refuge possibilit­ies, as does northern B.C. A significan­t one sits near Edmonton.

The refugia are the source of Wells’s optimism. Most, he said, remain relatively untouched and can still be protected.

“These are going to be arks ... surrounded by a sea of change. These species can persist in there. Protecting as much of those areas as possible will be critical.”

 ?? JEFF NADLER THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Cape May warbler is one of 53 species of Canada’s boreal forest songbirds threatened with habitat loss because of climate change.
JEFF NADLER THE CANADIAN PRESS The Cape May warbler is one of 53 species of Canada’s boreal forest songbirds threatened with habitat loss because of climate change.

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