About
CBI
investigated the effects of climate and vegetation on the distribution of
martens (Martes caurina) and fishers
(Martes pennanti) in the Sierra
Nevada in California under current and projected future conditions to inform
conservation efforts for these species and to investigate how different
modeling methods and resolutions may affect predictions about species’
responses to climate change. Martens and
fishers are closely related forest carnivores of conservation concern in
California, where both reach their southernmost distributions. The species have contiguous elevation ranges,
with the smaller marten occupying high subalpine forests that experience deep
and persistent snows, and the larger fisher occupying mid-elevation forests that
experience less snow and warmer temperatures.
The
goals of this project were (1) to add robust, downscaled, climate-change
effects assessments to CBI’S Sierra Nevada Carnivores project, which is a
comprehensive, science-based effort to map areas important to sustaining rare
carnivore populations and improving forest management; and (2) to compare
alternative analytical approaches and resolutions for assessing climate impacts
on vegetation and sensitive species. Because
martens and fishers require similar forest structural conditions (dense forests
with large trees and abundant dead wood) but different climate regimes (cooler,
moister, and snowier conditions for martens; warmer, drier and less snowy
conditions for fishers) they offer a unique opportunity to investigate how our
changing climate may affect the species directly as well as via changes in
vegetation. Also, because they compete
with one another for food and fishers will kill martens when they meet this
system offers an opportunity to investigate how species interactions may also
affect future populations.
Specific study tasks:
1. Examine how the current distributions of
martens and fishers are influenced by vegetation characteristics (e.g., forest
composition and structure), climate (e.g., temperature, precipitation, snow
depth and duration), physical variables (e.g., elevation, % slope) and presence
or absence of the other species.
2. Project the potential future distribution of
both species under climate change based on results of Task 1 and using
alternative emissions scenarios and global circulation models at several
different resolutions.
3. Use the results to support conservation and
forest management plans to ensure long-term sustainability of marten and fisher
populations in the face of climate change and increasingly severe fire regimes.
The extensive spatially explicit results from this study are provided in this gallery.