Events: detail

Can Birds Fly from Climate Change?

Hosted by:
Birkbeck University of London
Speaker:
Dr Humphrey Crick, British Trust for Ornithology
Starts:
November 02, 2007 at 06:30 pm
Ends:
November 02, 2007 at 08:30 pm
Location:
Birkbeck College, University of London, , Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HX United Kingdom
Maps:

Description

Free Public Lecture Series, Autumn 2007: “British Wildlife and Climate Change”

What is happening? Can we do anything?

Birkbeck, University of London in conjunction with the Ecology and Conservation Studies Society

Climate change is causing a significant and increasing impact on UK wildlife. Some species are under stress, while others are expanding their range. What new species will arrive in Britain? This must have profound consequences for conservation and management. Appropriate actions need to be discussed and developed now.

This lecture series will inform this debate. Knowledgeable national experts will discuss topics such as phenology – the timing of natural events, and will examine the way that climate change is currently impacting on British plants and animals, and on terrestrial and aquatic habitats. Actions for future management of open spaces and the environment will be debated.

Dr Humphrey Crick is a Senior Ecologist at the British Trust for Ornithology who has studied the impacts of climate change on birds over the past 10 years. He has promoted the use of the extensive, nation-wide datasets held by the BTO which, by the long-term nature, provide fascinating insights into current changes in the light of past events. He was invited to help review the 3rd and 4th reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and has helped brief incoming Government Ministers on the effects of climate change on biodiversity.

His lecture will cover the following themes:
Climate change is already affecting our wildlife, leading to extinctions and changes in population size, distributional range, breeding performance, survival rates and phenology. Birds have been particularly well studied and we can benefit from the wealth of previous studies and analyses of existing long-term datasets to help understand the implications of climate change on wildlife. He will review studies of changes in phenology, breeding performance, population size, distributions and migratory behaviour on birds. The weakest form of evidence is in the form of anecdote (i.e. observations of distributional change without statistical correlations to climate change). Next there are studies of relationships between an aspect of biology and weather, with the inference that future changes in climate will cause long-term changes in the performance of an organism. Then there are observations of long-term changes that can be related to long-term changes in climate. The ideal, where we know the short-term mechanisms underlying observed long-term changes, is extremely rare, as are confident predictions of the consequences of long-term changes for aspects such as life-time reproductive success, fitness, population trajectories and distributional change. Birds, through flight, should be rather immune to the impacts of climate change because theoretically they should be able to fly from their current habitat to occupy new ones as conditions change. However, there is evidence building that not all birds may be able to fly from the impacts of climate change.

Registration required:
Yes
Free:
Yes

Additional information

Join the debate. All welcome. Free ticket admission. The lectures will be held in Birkbeck, University of London, WC1. For free tickets and venue details, contact tel: 020 7679 1069, or e-mail: environment@fce.bbk.ac.uk. For queries on lecture content, contact tel: 020 7485 7903, or e-mail: jeremy.wright@walkern.org.uk. All lectures are from 6.30 to 8.30 pm on the following Fridays. Doors open at 6.00pm.

For more information

Website:
Can Birds Fly from Climate Change?
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