Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Section 1 Introduction
- Section 2 Adaptation, speciation and extinction
- Section 3 Biogeography, migration and ecological niche modelling
- Section 4 Conservation
- 16 Assessing the effectiveness of a protected area network in the face of climatic change
- 17 Documenting plant species in a changing climate: a case study from Arabia
- 18 A critical appraisal of the meaning and diagnosability of cryptic evolutionary diversity, and its implications for conservation in the face of climate change
- 19 Climate change and Cyperaceae
- 20 An interdisciplinary review of climate change trends and uncertainties: lichen biodiversity, arctic–alpine ecosystems and habitat loss
- 21 Climate change and oceanic mountain vegetation: a case study of the montane heath and associated plant communities in western Irish mountains
- Index
- Systematics Association Publications
- Plate section
- References
17 - Documenting plant species in a changing climate: a case study from Arabia
from Section 4 - Conservation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 May 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Section 1 Introduction
- Section 2 Adaptation, speciation and extinction
- Section 3 Biogeography, migration and ecological niche modelling
- Section 4 Conservation
- 16 Assessing the effectiveness of a protected area network in the face of climatic change
- 17 Documenting plant species in a changing climate: a case study from Arabia
- 18 A critical appraisal of the meaning and diagnosability of cryptic evolutionary diversity, and its implications for conservation in the face of climate change
- 19 Climate change and Cyperaceae
- 20 An interdisciplinary review of climate change trends and uncertainties: lichen biodiversity, arctic–alpine ecosystems and habitat loss
- 21 Climate change and oceanic mountain vegetation: a case study of the montane heath and associated plant communities in western Irish mountains
- Index
- Systematics Association Publications
- Plate section
- References
Summary
Abstract
Plant taxonomy must re-evaluate its outputs in order to be part of an effective response to climate change. Traditional taxonomic works, such as floras and monographs, are not appropriate tools for plant conservation and monitoring programmes. Such outputs need to be more widely supplemented with practical, field-based publications (field guides), which are more suited to providing rapid species identifications in the field. This chapter argues that to be as effective and as inclusive as possible, plant field guides need to be based on images rather than text. Using recent case studies from the Arabian Peninsula, we present a series of practical methods for documenting plant species using digital photography and assess the advantages and disadvantages of digital image-based identification.
Introduction: current Arabian climate
The latest climate projections for the Arabian region predict significant change by the end of the twenty-first century. According to Dawson (2007), under a low-emissions scenario (B2a), across much of the region, the mean winter temperature is predicted to have increased by 3 °C and the mean summer temperature by up to 4 °C in 2070–99. In the same period, under a high-emissions scenario (A1f), predictions suggest that the mean winter temperature will have increased by 5 °C across much of the region. The mean summer temperature is likely to increase by up to 6 °C in the south and 7 °C in the north of Arabia.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Climate Change, Ecology and Systematics , pp. 365 - 379Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
References
- 3
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