[PCA] ARTICLE: The impact of climate change on endangered plants and lichen

Krone, Elizabeth C elizabeth_krone at fws.gov
Mon Aug 7 10:33:43 CDT 2023


The impact of climate change on endangered plants and lichen

Amy Wrobleski 1,2*, Sydney Ernst, Theodore Weber 3, Aimee Delach 3

1 Department of Anthropology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, United
States of America, 2 Intercollege Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, The Pennsylvania State University,
University Park, Pennsylvania, United States of America, 3 Defenders of Wildlife, Washington, DC, United
States of America
* acw208 at psu.edu

Abstract

The Endangered Species Act (ESA) was a landmark protection for rare organisms in the United States. Although the ESA is known for its protection of wildlife, a majority of listed species are actually plants and lichen. Climate change will impact species populations globally. Already-rare species, like those listed in the ESA, are at an even higher risk due to climate change. Despite this, the risk climate change poses to endangered plants has not been systematically evaluated in over a decade. To address this gap, we modified previously existing qualitative assessment toolkits used to examine the threat of climate change in federal documentation on listed wildlife. These modified toolkits were then applied to the 771 ESA listed plants. First, we evaluated how sensitive ESA listed plants and lichens were to climate change based on nine quantitative sensitivity factors. Then, we evaluated if climate change was recognized as a threat for a species, and if actions were being taken to address the threats of climate change. We found that all ESA listed plant and lichen species are at least slightly (score of 1) sensitive to climate change, and therefore all listed plants and lichens are threatened by climate change. While a majority of ESA listing and recovery documents recognized climate change as a threat, very few had actions being taken in their recovery plans to address climate change directly. While acknowledging the threat that climate change poses to rare plants is an important first step, direct action will need to be taken to ensure the recovery of many of these species.

Link to article: https://journals.plos.org/climate/articleid=10.1371/journal.pclm.0000225



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