Transcript Document
Practical Adaptations
to
Climate Change
David Sheppard
Is Climate Change Real?
• 1. Some animals are appearing earlier in
the spring and some plants are coming
into leaf or flowering earlier in the spring.
• 2. Some animals and plants are extending
their distribution northwards in areas
previously considered too cold for them.
• Animals that emerge from hibernation or
some kind of winter torpor need food.
• The food source has to respond to
increased spring temperature in the same
way and at the same rate as the animal
needing to eat it.
• There is an asynchrony between
responses to temperature and responses
to day-length.
bird/insect
insect/plants
• Earlier activity in spring
• Extra generations during the summer
• Activity later into the autumn
• Population spread
• Latitude
• Altitude
• How much can we change the landscape
to accommodate these new requirements?
• The solution could start in parks, gardens
and other places held as less valuable to
our native fauna and flora.
• Places such as gardens, parks and zoos.
• What if zoos would plant those early-flowering
plants that local native species need in order to
survive?
• What if zoos planted the right combination of
plants to allow animals to complete their lifecycles?
• What if zoos planted those plants which the
rapidly dispersing species require as food?
• What if zoos planted those plants which enabled
animals to complete that extra generation in the
autumn or encourage those insects that
pollinated those late-flowering plants?
• Zoos can set the example to that group of the
public who are interested in our natural
environment. All 26 million of them every year.
• Zoos can show that climate change is having
impacts all over the world, not just here.
• Zoos can demonstrate how they are working
with the effects of climate change not trying to
stop it or pretending that nothing is happening.
• And if Climate Change turns out to be that
much wished for blip in the weather
patterns, zoos will have shown that they
recognised the plight of native species in
this impoverished landscape and took it on
themselves to make sure that their local
fauna could survive within their zoo
estates, even if the rest of the country did
not care.