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				 By mid- to late century, Illinois summer temperatures are 
				expected to mimic those of a present-day summer in Texas and 
				intense droughts and floods will become more common. A group of 
				scientists at the Illinois Natural History Survey (INHS) 
				evaluated the climate change vulnerability for all 331 of 
				Illinois’ threatened and endangered plant species, making 
				Illinois the first state to review every listed plant. 
 Findings showed that 88 percent of threatened and endangered 
				plants are vulnerable to climate change, and 6 percent are 
				extremely vulnerable. Habitat loss, barriers from land use 
				change, seed dispersal ability, and sensitivity to changing 
				temperatures and precipitation are the leading factors.
 
 “A critical component is the barriers that prevent plant species 
				from migrating to better adapt to changed climate,” said INHS 
				botanist Greg Spyreas. “Far more habitats have been destroyed in 
				Illinois than in other states, which makes more man-made 
				barriers—cornfields, roads, and urban areas—in addition to 
				natural barriers, such as the Illinois River, that constrain 
				plants to isolated natural areas.”
 
 Unlike animals, most plants cannot migrate long distances to 
				offset the effects of climate change. In mountainous states, 
				such as Colorado, plants need only move a short distance via 
				seed dispersion to higher elevations to survive. In Illinois, 
				however, seeds in Champaign may have to disperse to Chicago, for 
				example, to find suitable habitat, Spyreas said.
 
 Plants that thrive in particular conditions, known as habitat 
				specialists, are most at risk. Many rare, endangered species 
				fall into this category. These plants have very little to no 
				chance of adapting to or surviving in a changing climate.
 
              
                Assisted migration, or physically moving plants 
				further north to where they are better suited to the 
				environment, might be the only way to overcome the dispersal 
				barriers. This science is still in its infancy, as researchers 
				must take numerous factors into account to try to predict where 
				or if assisted migration will be useful.
 Perhaps the best approach, the scientists say, is not to target 
				the most vulnerable of the 331 plants in the state, but instead 
				to attempt to save those for whom Illinois constitutes the main 
				portion of their total range—where Illinois has most of their 
				populations in the world. Another priority are those plants for 
				which the northern or central part of their range is Illinois.
 
              
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			“We are now in a crisis, and maybe this is the point 
			when we need to do triage and prioritize the urgency of threatened 
			and endangered plant species,” Spyreas said. “Instead of targeting 
			our resources on trying to save the most vulnerable plants that have 
			no chance of survival in Illinois because of climate change, we 
			could focus on the ones that could survive.”
 This controversial idea doesn’t mean that plant enthusiasts and 
			environmentalists shouldn’t keep trying to restore all endangered 
			plants, but that many factors should be considered when allocating 
			limited financial resources to protect the large number of plants 
			that can’t adapt to a warmer climate here.
 
			 
			
 “Although we want to protect as many organisms as we can, the 
			reality is that with limited resources we cannot save everything,” 
			said INHS plant ecologist Brenda Molano-Flores. “At some point we 
			need to start making the difficult choices.”
 
 Efforts must be directed to assist with preventing more plant 
			species from reaching a similar fate by protecting and restoring 
			more natural areas. Financial support is also needed to fill the 
			knowledge gaps about rare plants’ natural history, ecology, and 
			genetics to develop conservation and reintroduction programs.
 
 In the short-term, Molano-Flores said she hopes that resource 
			managers and conservation agencies will consider this prioritization 
			method as part of their toolbox when making decisions regarding 
			Illinois endangered plants.
 
 This study was published in the journal Castanea with partial 
			funding from the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
 
			[Lisa Sheppard] |