DALLAS 鈥 Today, the 约炮视频 published its , a comprehensive analysis of climate change vulnerabilities and land-use threats facing grassland bird species dependent on the tallgrass, mixed grass, and shortgrass prairies in the United States and Canada as well as the Chihuahuan grasslands in Mexico.
Under the current carbon emissions scenario, nearly half (42 percent) of grassland bird species will become highly vulnerable by the end of this century. That number drops to one in twelve (8 percent) grassland bird species, if the emissions reductions surpass targets set by the Paris Climate Agreement.[1]
To help prioritize conservation action across this imperiled ecosystem, the report identifies 鈥渃limate strongholds鈥 in North America that will provide the best habitat for declining grassland birds under all climate change scenarios and ongoing land conversion.
鈥淓ach year more and more of North America鈥檚 grasslands and prairies disappear under the plow while our changing climate will only further squeeze the birds of this misunderstood landscape,鈥 said Brian Trusty, vice president of the Central Flyway for 约炮视频.
鈥淭he good news is that we know exactly where we need to focus, who we need to work with, and how we can save this irreplaceable and quickly vanishing ecosystem.鈥
The North American Grasslands & Birds Report begins with a peer-reviewed assessment of the vulnerability of 38 grassland bird species under three different climate change scenarios representing a 1.5掳C, 2.0掳C and 3.0掳C increase in global mean temperature. Each species was given a vulnerability score: neutral, low, moderate and high, based on how much habitat the species was projected to lose vs. its adaptive capacity to make up for those losses. Underscoring the urgent need to reduce emissions and protect existing habitat, three species are considered highly vulnerable under any scenario: Henslow鈥檚 Sparrow, McCown鈥檚 Longspur and Baird鈥檚 Sparrow.
鈥淔or grassland birds to have the best shot at survival, we need to get serious about climate change and immediately reduce carbon pollution. At the same time we can protect and restore grassland habitat in climate strongholds, which are places we know birds will need in the future,鈥 said Dr. Chad Wilsey, vice president of conservation science for 约炮视频 and lead author of the North American Grasslands & Birds Report. 鈥We have to act now because the fates of grassland birds will ultimately foreshadow the fate of the grasslands themselves and the people and other wildlife who depend on them,鈥 said Wilsey.
Furthermore, the report identifies Grassland Climate and Land-use Strongholds (GCLUs), key regions within North American grasslands that would retain climate suitability in all three climate scenarios as well as high land use suitability for grassland birds, based on 21st-century land-use change projections.[2] The report also identified Vulnerable Grassland Climate Strongholds (VGCSs) as areas with high climate suitability but high risk of conversion to unsuitable land uses (e.g. croplands, urban areas, bare ground or forests). These categorizations can be used to inform and guide conservation efforts.
For example, 约炮视频鈥檚 own high-priority regions for continued and expanded efforts in grassland bird conservation will include:
- Prairie Potholes Region and surrounding grasslands of Northern Great Plains (Dakotas, Montana, and southern Canada) are breeding grounds for grassland birds, including Bobolink, Western Meadowlark, and Chestnut-collared Longspur.
- Shortgrass prairie corridor forming the western half of the Southern Great Plains region (New Mexico, Texas, Colorado), including grassland birds such as Lark Bunting, Horned Lark, Loggerhead Shrike, Chestnut-collared Longspur, McCown鈥檚 Longspur, Mountain Plover, Western Meadowlark.
- Gulf Coast Prairie (Texas), vulnerable grasslands home to birds like Sprague鈥檚 Pipit, Dickcissel, and the endangered Attwater鈥檚 Prairie-Chicken, a subspecies of Greater Prairie-Chicken found only on the Gulf Coast Prairie.
- Chihuahuan grasslands (northeastern Mexico), wintering grounds for 85 percent of grassland birds found in Northern Great Plains, including Chestnut-collared Longspur, McCown鈥檚 Longspur, Baird鈥檚 Sparrow, Sprague鈥檚 Pipit, Horned Lark, Savannah Sparrow, Grasshopper Sparrow and Mountain Plover.
鈥淕rassland birds are down but they鈥檙e not out, and by working together with the American rancher we鈥檙e going to give them the best possible chance to succeed,鈥 said Trusty.
Since 84 percent of the remaining grasslands are privately owned, 约炮视频鈥檚 grasslands conservation strategy will focus on four key approaches:
- Technical support from 约炮视频 staff to private landowners and ranchers to assist their transition to bird-friendly management practices via Habitat Management Plans (HMPs), which are tailored to improve property-specific bird and grassland conservation.
- Enhancement and protection of critical grassland bird habitat through financial incentives and acquisition of voluntary term or permanent conservation easements.
- Catalyzing market-based incentives for grassland conservation by empowering consumers to invest in healthy grasslands through 约炮视频鈥檚 Conservation Ranching Initiative certification and promote emerging markets that invest in natural climate solutions, like soil sequestration. Currently, 约炮视频鈥檚 Conservation Ranching Initiative includes 68 ranches totaling nearly 2 million acres across 12 states.
- Supporting incentives for grassland bird habitat protection and reduction of land use conversion through conservation-minded federal and state policies like the Farm Bill and adequately funded State Wildlife Action Plans.
By the Numbers
- Only 11 percent of tallgrass prairie, 24 percent of mixed grass and 54 percent of shortgrass prairie that once covered North America remain.
- Less than nine percent of remaining grasslands have any form of protection鈥攐nly five percent of it by the federal government.
- Eighty-four percent of remaining grasslands are on private lands.
- Eighty-five percent of grassland bird species that breed on Northern Great Plains spend their winters in Chihuahuan grasslands, but only five percent of Chihuahuan desert remains suitable wintering habitat.
To learn more about the findings and recommendations in 约炮视频's North American Grasslands & Birds Report, please read the executive summary here.
About 约炮视频
The 约炮视频 protects birds and the places they need, today and tomorrow, throughout the Americas using science, advocacy, education and on-the-ground conservation. 约炮视频's state programs, nature centers, chapters and partners have an unparalleled wingspan that reaches millions of people each year to inform, inspire and unite diverse communities in conservation action. Since 1905, 约炮视频's vision has been a world in which people and wildlife thrive. 约炮视频 is a nonprofit conservation organization. Learn more how to help at and follow us on and at @audubonsociety.
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Contact: Nicolas Gonzalez, ngonzalez@audubon.org, (212) 979-3068.