Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- I Introductory Chapters
- II Ecophysiology
- III Aquatic Bryophytes
- IV Desert and Tropical Ecosystems
- V Alpine, Arctic, and Antarctic Ecosystems
- VI Sphagnum and Peatlands
- VII Changes in Bryophyte Distribution with Climate Change: Data and Models
- 17 The Role of Bryophyte Paleoecology in Quaternary Climate Reconstructions
- 18 Signs of Climate Change in the Bryoflora of Hungary
- 19 Can the Effects of Climate Change on British Bryophytes be Distinguished from those Resulting from Other Environmental Changes?
- 20 Climate Change and Protected Areas: How well do British Rare Bryophytes Fare?
- 21 Modeling the Distribution of Sematophyllum substrumulosum (Hampe) E. Britton as a Signal of Climatic Changes in Europe
- 22 Modeling Bryophyte Productivity Across Gradients of Water Availability Using Canopy Form–Function Relationships
- VIII Conclusions
- Index
- References
19 - Can the Effects of Climate Change on British Bryophytes be Distinguished from those Resulting from Other Environmental Changes?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- I Introductory Chapters
- II Ecophysiology
- III Aquatic Bryophytes
- IV Desert and Tropical Ecosystems
- V Alpine, Arctic, and Antarctic Ecosystems
- VI Sphagnum and Peatlands
- VII Changes in Bryophyte Distribution with Climate Change: Data and Models
- 17 The Role of Bryophyte Paleoecology in Quaternary Climate Reconstructions
- 18 Signs of Climate Change in the Bryoflora of Hungary
- 19 Can the Effects of Climate Change on British Bryophytes be Distinguished from those Resulting from Other Environmental Changes?
- 20 Climate Change and Protected Areas: How well do British Rare Bryophytes Fare?
- 21 Modeling the Distribution of Sematophyllum substrumulosum (Hampe) E. Britton as a Signal of Climatic Changes in Europe
- 22 Modeling Bryophyte Productivity Across Gradients of Water Availability Using Canopy Form–Function Relationships
- VIII Conclusions
- Index
- References
Summary
Introduction
The old adage that an Englishman's favorite topic of conversation is the weather is surely true, but why bother to consider the flora of Great Britain in an international summary of the effects of climate change on bryophytes? We can offer five main justifications. The first two are the relative thoroughness of Britain's bryological exploration and the long period over which the flora has been repeatedly examined. Third is the high quality of the general recording effort and its documentation in written and computerized records, and in refereed herbarium specimens. Fourth is the exceptional species-richness of the British flora in a regional (European) context.
Our fifth justification concerns the long run of systematic climatic measurements for England which, like the bryophyte records, extends back into the seventeenth century. More recent records are available for a wide range of localities across the whole of the UK. Today, the UK Meteorological Office is one of the world's leading weather forecasters and through its Hadley Centre carries out research into climatic change and publishes regular reports, updating recent weather trends and making available the latest predictions for the future climate of Britain.
Despite the advantages listed above, the task of locating unequivocal examples of recent climate change impacting the British bryophyte flora has not proven to be straightforward. Many areas of Britain are densely populated and almost all its vegetation is managed, often intensively, so that human impacts are all-pervasive; there are no wilderness areas.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Bryophyte Ecology and Climate Change , pp. 371 - 408Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011
References
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