National Post

Creatures on the move

- Kendra Pierre-louis

Peregrine falcons perched atop towering skyscraper­s. Coyotes caught on camera playing in someone’s backyard. The pale green wings of a cabbage white butterfly perched on a flower blossom.

Urban areas are awash in wildlife that faces growing pressures due to climate change, according to a recent study published in PLOS ONE.

The research, which looked at how climate affects everything from mammals to insects in 60 of the most populous cities across North America, found that a warming world is moving many animals out of their historical geographic ranges and into new ones.

“Within a few years, the animals that you feed at your bird feeder might look very different,” said Alessandro Filazzola, the study’s lead author, who completed the research while he was a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Toronto Mississaug­a’s Centre for Urban Environmen­ts.

Filazzola and his team leveraged data from the Global Biodiversi­ty Informatio­n Facility, which pulls data from community science apps such as inaturalis­t and ebird, to estimate roughly how many species are currently present in urban areas. They then paired that informatio­n with United Nations climate projection­s known as shared socioecono­mic pathways, or SSPS. The researcher­s looked at what happened to wildlife under three different scenarios, from moderate warming of 1.4C over pre-industrial levels by 2100 — in line with the Paris Climate Agreement — to a mid-range warming of 3.6C to the most extreme possible warming of 4.4C with continued developmen­t of fossil fuels. So far the planet has warmed by 1.3C over pre-industrial levels.

“We saw that a lot of cities are seeing large changes,” said Filazzola. “Many species are moving in and many species are moving out.”

Among the broad trends identified in the study: Most vertebrate­s, including loons, canids (which includes coyotes) and amphibians will become less common across the cities studied. So too will the seemingly ubiquitous earthworm, though only one species of earthworm showed up in the data. The prevalence of turtles, scorpions and (in an exception to the vertebrate­s decline) mice, meanwhile, is broadly expected to increase.

“Ecologists are already very aware that species ranges are shifting with a changing climate, so it’s not surprising that this is also happening to a significan­t extent in cities,” said Carly Ziter, an assistant professor of biology at Concordia University, who was not involved in the study. “But it’s not something that I’ve seen as much attention paid to.”

Even under the lowest warming scenario, researcher­s found that the cities studied can expect at least 50 new species to move in and 40 to move out, though the turnover isn’t evenly distribute­d. Toronto, for example, is expected to lose between 40 and 195 of its estimated 888 species, but could gain between 159 and 360 new species by 2100 (where higher rates of warming are associated with both increased species loss and gains). Quebec City and Omaha, Neb., are also among the cities predicted to have the largest increase in new species while experienci­ng the least amount of loss. In contrast, places like Atlanta, San Antonio and Austin are expected to lose more species than they gain.

It’s not just wildlife in jeopardy: Atlanta, for example, is on track to lose 13.5 per cent of tree species by

the end of this century, the study notes.

Filazzola cautions that his study is a model study and, as such, has limitation­s. While the researcher­s only looked at climate as a factor, other factors such as species interactio­n are not captured by the model and could impact outcomes. But he hopes that the findings will encourage other researcher­s to follow this line of inquiry.

 ?? SEAN PROCTOR / BLOOMBERG ?? A recent study discovered a warming world is moving many types of creatures — including mammals, amphibians and insects — out of their historical
geographic ranges into new ones.
SEAN PROCTOR / BLOOMBERG A recent study discovered a warming world is moving many types of creatures — including mammals, amphibians and insects — out of their historical geographic ranges into new ones.

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