Plants (Mar 2021)

An Orchid in Retrograde: Climate-Driven Range Shift Patterns of <i>Ophrys helenae</i> in Greece

  • Martha Charitonidou,
  • Konstantinos Kougioumoutzis,
  • John M. Halley

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10030470
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 3
p. 470

Abstract

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Climate change is regarded as one of the most important threats to plants. Already species around the globe are showing considerable latitudinal and altitudinal shifts. Helen’s bee orchid (Ophrys helenae), a Balkan endemic with a distribution center in northwestern Greece, is reported to be expanding east and southwards. Since this southeastern movement goes against the usual expectations, we investigated via Species Distribution Modelling, whether this pattern is consistent with projections based on the species’ response to climate change. We predicted the species’ future distribution based on three different climate models in two climate scenarios. We also explored the species’ potential distribution during the Last Interglacial and the Last Glacial Maximum. O. helenae is projected to shift mainly southeast and experience considerable area changes. The species is expected to become extinct in the core of its current distribution, but to establish a strong presence in the mid- and high-altitude areas of the Central Peloponnese, a region that could have provided shelter in previous climatic extremes.

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