“…In particular, forests in temperate regions will be increasingly exposed to drought in the 21st century (Müller-Haubold, Hertel, Seidel, Knutzen, & Leuschner, 2013), which may accelerate rates of tree decline and mortality in Europe (Bréda, Huc, Granier, & Dreyer, 2006;Müller-Haubold et al, 2013). Plant range shifts may determine whether those animal species that rely on plant availability for both food and shelter will be affected by new patterns of plant occupancy/abundance (Cianfrani, Broennimann, Loy, & Guisan, 2018;Nielsen, McDermid, Stenhouse, & Boyce, 2010;Shen et al, 2015;Simons-Legaard, Harrison, & Legaard, 2016;Zang et al, 2017) and/or by plant population declines or extinction cascades via bottom-up effects (Roberts, Nielsen, & Stenhouse, 2014). In the case of small, isolated and/or endangered animal populations, the effects of climate change on their trophic resources may considerably override conservation and management efforts performed at other levels, for example, reduction of humanwildlife conflicts, threat of anthropogenic footprints and activities.…”