These Amazing Maps Show How Wildlife Will Migrate to Survive Climate Change

Not only do they highlight the major routes species will take to stay cool, but they are also guides for how we should approach future conservation.

For most animals, adapting to climate change won鈥檛 mean evolving new ways to stay cool鈥. It鈥檚 how the world鈥檚 fauna听survived climatic changes in the past, but this time the journey will听be more difficult thanks to a relatively听new challenge: a continent-wide obstacle course of roads, cities, farms, and other man-made barriers. To get around these obstructions, animals听will need natural pathways, known as wildlife corridors, that people create by connecting isolated habitats. But before we can identify and plan听these pathways, we first need to know听what routes听the animals will take.

A mezmerizing听animated map 听attempts to show where exactly these听corridors听might be as animals weave their way to cooler climates.听By combining the projected movements of nearly 3,000 species of birds, mammals,听and amphibians (represented by blue, pink and yellow lines, respectively, and shown in full听below), the map highlights the major migratory routes wildlife听will take鈥攁long with the lands that need preservation鈥攖o make these journeys possible. (Check out for more than 300 bird species.)

The basis for the map is a data听set听put together in 2013 by听a group of climate scientists. Their听goal was to听 (more than half of which are birds) and then predict听where each will听end up if they want to stay cool 70 years from now. But predicting听migration routes听is more complicated than just drawing a straight line between two points; the animals will听want to avoid all those previously mentioned听obstacles while also听spending听as much time in undeveloped land as possible. So the researchers听overlaid a听land-use map to show human development and predict the听routes animals would most likely take听if forced from听their current habitats. All this data was then used to create the听final animation. Each swirly line represents a common pathway that many animals will need by the end of the century to reach the cooler听climates听

鈥淲e traced the little routes that would best avoid human impacts on the landscape to get to suitable climates,鈥 says , a University of Washington ecologist who led the research illustrated by the map. 鈥淏y overlaying all those routes, we were able to get an idea of how species might move from one place to another.鈥

A quick glance at the map reveals an obvious鈥攁nd somewhat听expected鈥攑attern: Animals will听travel north to cooler areas by largely听sticking to听mountain chains. The most prominent route funnels animals from the Eastern half of the country along the Appalachian Mountains and north into Canada. Low-lying areas in the Great Plains, Deep South, Rust Belt, and all along the Eastern Seaboard are expected to undergo significant warming. They're听also highly developed. As a result,听animals will have few options but to flee into cooler areas along mountaintops, where they鈥檙e less likely to run into farms, towns, and cities.

The western U.S. features more escape routes, although most also track cool, high mountain peaks. In a few spots, the routes form small spirals. 鈥淚t looks like they鈥檙e going down the drain听almost,鈥 Lawler says. These spirals point to high-elevation spots that could serve as refuges for species over the next century鈥攐r possibly turn into traps. 鈥淚f the temperatures keep going up and the climate keeps changing, those species will no longer be able to survive there, so they鈥檙e kind of dead ends,鈥 he says.

While the听map shows projections for听birds, amphibians, and mammals,听birds have a big听advantage: wings. Unlike earth-bound fauna, most birds can fly over obstacles to reach cooler areas鈥攁 fact the map does not take into account. Migratory birds in particular are unlikely to rely on natural corridors, as they鈥檙e used to scanning the landscape for suitable habitat and adjusting their routes as needed.听

However, some bird species are unwilling or unlikely to risk crossing open spaces to find better habitat. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the resident birds that particularly avoid edges and use interiors that will have more trouble moving and for which these pathways will be more important,鈥 Lawler says. If non-migratory birds need to move north, they鈥檒l need a well-connected landscape to do so.

An example of one such bird is the , a federally endangered species that rarely leaves the protected canopy of longleaf pine forests in the southeastern U.S. When the woodpeckers are ready to start their own family clusters, they typically carve out new nest cavities within a mile听of their听birthplace鈥攁 preference that could听slow their adaptation to climate change. , a North Carolina State University ecologist, is currently studying whether the Red-cockaded Woodpecker will听use wildlife corridors to travel north if ousted by warm temperatures. 鈥淭he question is: Can they get there?鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 when the corridors,听the actual structure of landscapes,听become absolutely essential.鈥

As it stands, the woodpecker could be in trouble if it does have to move.听Forest patches in the southeastern U.S. are deeply fragmented. A found that plants and animals living in just 2 percent of Eastern natural areas will be able to easily move听through connected lands to escape warming temperatures,听compared with 41 percent of natural areas out West. And that鈥檚 likely to get worse: Urban areas such as听Charlotte, Atlanta, and Raleigh are developing quickly. 鈥淥nce highways go in, once cities are built, then that鈥檚 a permanent block to migration," Haddad听says.

With more and more people moving back to urban areas, it will be important to responsibly听manage听sprawl with the future migratory routes of animals in mind.听Maps such as this one are but听it鈥檚 not just urban planners and land managers who can create wildlife corridors鈥anyone with a backyard can cultivate habitat welcoming to birds听and other wildlife. Of course, greater proactive听efforts to reduce the contributing factors to听climate change are听also听necessary.听鈥淚t鈥檚 also critical that we also reduce emissions to give those species that will have a harder time keeping up a chance,鈥 Lawler says.