California’s Native Plant Species in Peril from Global Warming
Researchers predict California's flora will collapse over next century due to climate change.
Written by John Davis

The imposing Coast Redwood tree is one of California’s more than 5,000 plant species researchers believe could be threatened with extinction due to climate change.
Oases for Refugees
Because endemic species – native species not found outside the state – make up nearly half of all California’s native plants, a changing climate will have a major impact on the state’s unparalleled plant diversity, the researchers warn. “Our study projects that climate change will profoundly impact the future of the native flora in California,” said David Ackerly, a professor of integrative biology at University of California, Berkeley. “The magnitude and speed of climate change today is greater than during past glacial periods, and plants are in danger of getting killed off before they can adjust their distributions to keep pace.” The researchers caution that their study can’t reliably predict the fate of specific species. However, the trend is clear: the researchers believe that in response to rising temperatures and altered rainfall, many plants could move northward and toward the coast, following the shifts in their preferred climate, while others, primarily in the southern part of the state and in Baja California, may move up mountains into cool but highly vulnerable refugia – places where large numbers of plants hit hardest by climate change are projected to survive. Coast Redwoods may range farther north, for example, while California oaks could disappear from central California in favor of cooler weather in the Klamath Mountains along the California-Oregon border.
Nearly half of California’s native plant species are found nowhere else in the world. Researchers warn that up to 66 percent of those species could experience drastic reduction over the next century. Click to Enlarge.
Planning Ahead
The authors identified several “climate-change refugia” scattered around the state. Many are in the foothills of coastal mountains such as the Santa Lucia Mountains along California’s Central Coast, the Transverse Ranges separating the Central Valley from Los Angeles and the San Gabriel Mountains east of Los Angeles. Many face pressure from encroaching development. “There’s a real potential for sheltering a large portion of the flora in these refugia if they are kept wild and if plants can reach them in time,” Loarie said. The authors argue that it’s not too early to prepare for this eventuality by protecting corridors through which plants can move to such refugia, and maybe even assisting plants in reestablishing themselves in new regions. “Part of me can’t believe that California’s flora will collapse over a period of 100 years,” Ackerly said. “It’s hard to comprehend the potential impacts of climate change. We haven’t seen such drastic changes in the last 200 years of human history, since we have been cataloguing species.” Story produced by the Office of Communications and Marketing, (806) 742-2136. Katharine Hayhoe photo courtesy Artie Limmer. Web layout by Kristina Woods Butler.Featured Expert
Katharine Hayhoe will serve as lead author of the report projecting future impacts of climate change on water resources, energy, agriculture and other aspects of life in the U.S.
Hayhoe is a Research Associate Professor of Atmospheric Sciences in the Department of Geosciences in the College of Arts & Sciences.
She also is a member of the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which earned the Nobel Prize.
About the Research
Read the article in PLoS ONE journal.
View Maps of California showing the range change of several species.
