Times Colonist

Shifts in urban birds, animals, bugs expected amid climate change

- BOB WEBER

The mix of urban birds, bugs and other critters that humans have grown familiar with is due for a big shift because of climate change, a new study says.

“The nature that people interact with isn’t what’s in Banff or some provincial park,” said Alessandro Filazzola, lead author of a paper published Wednesday in the journal PLOS One. “It’s in their backyard.

“Cities don’t move. If you’re staying still while the world is moving around you, what’s going to happen to all the wildlife that you’re familiar with?”

To answer that, Filazzola, from the University of Toronto’s Centre for Urban Environmen­ts, conducted a simulation combining eight different climate models with an enormous data set that detailed sightings of 2,019 species from 60 cities around North America.

That combinatio­n allowed him and his colleagues to estimate how common each animal is in its current environmen­t, how widely it’s distribute­d and how climate changes such as temperatur­e and precipitat­ion could affect its future.

On the one hand, cities with temperate climates such as those in Canada could welcome new animals.

By the end of the century, cities such as Ottawa and Edmonton could become hospitable for hundreds of new species while losing habitat for a couple of dozen.

Quebec City is the champion. Filazzola’s simulation suggests the Quebec capital could support more than 500 new species.

“When we get these slightly warmer temperatur­es and changes in precipitat­ion patterns, a lot more species are coming in than they are leaving,” he said.

On the other hand, the animals most likely to take advantage are the ones already widespread. Local specialist­s are likely to lose out.

“If a species is widely distribute­d, like raccoons, the likelihood of climate change making them leave a city is really low. It’s in the localized species — the ones you only see in a couple of cities — that you see the change.”

And many of those new arrivals are likely to be insects. Varieties of centipedes, butterflie­s, spiders and cockroache­s are all likely to pop up in places they’ve never been before, Filazzola suggests.

Songbird distributi­on is likely to drop. Foxes, too. But if you like pelicans, you might be in for a treat. The same with various kinds of lizards.

The cities most likely to be net losers of species, the study suggests, tend to be in the southeast United States. Atlanta is set to suffer the most.

Filazzola cautions that the projection­s in his study won’t necessaril­y come to pass. Climate isn’t the only factor that influences where a species is able to live.

“There’s lots of reasons why or why not a species would live in a city. There could be no food when it gets there, there could be a predator that eats it.”

But change is coming, he says, and not just to the large landscapes we tend to think of when we talk about nature.

The wholesale shift that could be on its way has implicatio­ns for pest control and other services that rely on the environmen­t. And it could change how we feel about our own habitat.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD, CP ?? A bee is seen on a flower in downtown Ottawa in September 2023. A study suggests climate change will drive a massive shift in the birds, bugs and other critters that live alongside humans in 60 cities across North America.
ADRIAN WYLD, CP A bee is seen on a flower in downtown Ottawa in September 2023. A study suggests climate change will drive a massive shift in the birds, bugs and other critters that live alongside humans in 60 cities across North America.

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