China’s endangered wild pandas may need new dinner
reservations--and quickly, based on models that indicate climate change
may kill off swaths of bamboo that pandas need to survive
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In this week's Nature Climate Change, an international
journal, scientists from Michigan State University (MSU) and the Chinese
Academy of Sciences provide comprehensive forecasts of how changing
climate may affect the most common species of bamboo that carpet the
forest floors of prime panda habitat in northwestern China. Even the
most optimistic scenarios show that bamboo die-offs would effectively
cause prime panda habitat to become inhospitable by the end of the 21st
century.
The scientists studied possible scenarios of climate
change in the Qinling Mountains in Shaanxi Province. At the northern
boundary of China's panda distributional range, the Qinling Mountains
are home to about 275 wild pandas, which account for about 17 percent of
the remaining wild population. The Qinling pandas, which have been
isolated because of thousands of years of human habitation around the
mountain range, vary genetically from other giant pandas. The geographic
isolation of these pandas makes them particularly valuable for conservation, but vulnerable to climate change.
"Understanding
impacts of climate change is an important way for science to assist in
making good decisions," said Jianguo "Jack" Liu, director of MSU's
Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability (CSIS) and a study
co-author. "Looking at the climate impact on the bamboo can help us
prepare for the challenges that the panda will likely face in the
future."
Bamboo is a vital part of forest ecosystems, being not
only the sole menu item for giant pandas, but also providing essential
food and shelter for other wildlife, including other endangered species
like the ploughshare tortoise and purple-winged ground-dove.
Bamboo
can be a risky crop to stake survival on because it has an unusual
reproductive cycle. The studied species only flower and reproduce every
30 to 35 years, which limits the plants' ability to adapt to changing
climate and can spell disaster for a food supply.
Mao-Ning
Tuanmu, who recently finished his Ph.D. studies at CSIS, and his
colleagues constructed unique models, using field data on bamboo
locality, multiple climate projections and historic data of
precipitation, temperature ranges and greenhouse gas emission scenarios
to evaluate how three dominant bamboo species would fare in the Qinling
Mountains of China.
Not many scientists to date have studied
understory bamboo, Tuanmu said. But evidence found in fossil and pollen
records does indicate that bamboo distribution has followed the
benefits--and devastation--of climate change over time.
The fate
of pandas will not only be determined by nature, but by humans as well.
If, as the study's models predict, large swaths of bamboo become
unavailable because of human-caused land use changes, pandas will be
deprived of clear, accessible paths between meal sources.
"The
giant panda population also is threatened by other human disturbances,"
Tuanmu said. "Climate change is only one challenge for the giant pandas.
But on the other hand, the giant panda is a special species. People put
a lot of conservation resources into them compared to other species. We
want to provide data to guide that wisely."
The models can point
the way for proactive planning to protect areas where the climate
increases their potential for providing adequate food sources or to
begin creating natural "bridges" to allow pandas an escape hatch from
bamboo famine.
"We will need proactive actions to protect the
current giant panda habitats," Tuanmu said. "We need time to look at
areas that might become panda habitat in the future, and to think now
about maintaining connectivity of areas of good panda habitat and
habitat for other species. What will be needed is speed."
In
addition to Tuanmu, who now is a postdoctoral researcher at the
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Yale University, the
paper, "Climate change impacts on understory bamboo species and giant pandas in China's Qinling Mountains"
was authored by Andrés Viña, assistant professor of fisheries and
wildlife and a CSIS member; Julie Winkler, MSU geography professor; Yu
Li, a research assistant and CSIS alumnus, and Zhiyun Ouyang and Weihua
Xu, director and associate professor of the State Key Laboratory of
Urban and Regional Ecology, Research Center for Eco-Environmental
Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and NASA as well as supported by MSU AgBioResearch.
-NSF-
Media Contacts
Whiteman Lily, National Science Foundation (703) 292-8310 lwhitema@nsf.gov
Sue Nichols, Michigan State University (517) 432-0206 nichols@msu.edu
Sue Nichols, Michigan State University (517) 432-0206 nichols@msu.edu
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