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Published March 27, 2018 | Version v1
Conference paper Open

Threats of Climate Change to Single-Island Endemic Species in Protected Areas

Description

The Island of La Palma (Canary Islands, Spain) is protected as a whole (La Palma World Biosphere Reserve) and
within this frame in parts as a national park (Caldera de Taburiente) and additionally through sites of special
conservation status, and Natura 2000 sites. The island hosts a large number of archipelago endemic (AE) plant
species and also single-island endemic (SIE) plants. These species even contribute substantially to local species
richness, biomass and functioning of ecosystems, and they cannot be replaced through species from other regions.
In consequence, there is an urgent need to detect spatial patterns and changes in the distribution and
performance of these species in order to adapt the management of Protected Areas to the increasing pressures.
Here, we present together with local administrative management a detailed analysis of the contribution of
endemic species and of the respective threats that need to be addressed in adaptation strategies. Also we show
how monitoring and the control of success can be implemented with the support of Earth Observation. The study
is part of the H2020 Project ECOPOTENTIAL.

Files

Beierkuhnlein, Irl 2018_6th Symposium for Research in Protected Areas.pdf

Additional details

Funding

ECOPOTENTIAL – ECOPOTENTIAL: IMPROVING FUTURE ECOSYSTEM BENEFITS THROUGH EARTH OBSERVATIONS 641762
European Commission