Climate Change

The climate change chapter in the State Wildlife Action Plan for New Mexico (SWAP) describes both historic and future potential patterns of climate change in New Mexico and the associated impacts on terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and on SGCN. Climate change is a pervasive factor that has the potential to affect nearly every wildlife species and habitat. Climate change was not addressed in the original 2006 Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation Strategy but both its wide-ranging effects and interactions with other stressors were considered in the 2017-approved SWAP and again in the current 2025 SWAP.

The SWAP, while it recognizes the importance of efforts to address and mitigate the drivers of climate change and the role that all of us play, including natural-resource managers, it does not in any way create or direct policy with respect to these efforts. Rather, the SWAP focuses on reviewing the current state of knowledge with respect to New Mexico’s climate and climate-related impacts and on outlining the types of resource-management practices that can improve the resistance, resilience, and adaptability of wildlife populations and their habitats to climate change.

The SWAP includes information on a climate change vulnerability assessment conducted for all 295 vertebrate Species of Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN) and information on climate refugia, including an analysis that identifies watershed most likely to provide climatic buffers for a diversity of vertebrate species, including SGCN.