A multi-model analysis of risk of ecosystem shifts under climate

Climate change may pose a high risk of change to Earth’s ecosystems: shifting climatic boundaries may induce changes in the biogeochemical functioning and structures of ecosystems that render it difficult for endemic plant and animal species to survive in their current habitats. Here we aggregate ch...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental Research Letters
Main Authors: Warszawski, L., Friend, A., Ostberg, S., Frieler, K., Lucht, W., Schaphoff, S., Beerling, D., Cadule, P., Ciais, P., Clark, D., Kahana, R., Ito, A., Keribin, R., Kleidon, A., Lomas, M., Nishina, K., Pavlick, R., Rademacher, T., Buechner, M., Piontek, F., Schewe, J., Serdeczny, O., Schellnhuber, H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0014-9A7C-F
http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0014-9A7E-B
Description
Summary:Climate change may pose a high risk of change to Earth’s ecosystems: shifting climatic boundaries may induce changes in the biogeochemical functioning and structures of ecosystems that render it difficult for endemic plant and animal species to survive in their current habitats. Here we aggregate changes in the biogeochemical ecosystem state as a proxy for the risk of these shifts at different levels of global warming. Estimates are based on simulations from seven global vegetation models (GVMs) driven by future climate scenarios, allowing for a quantification of the related uncertainties. 5–19% of the naturally vegetated land surface is projected to be at risk of severe ecosystem change at 2 C of global warming (1GMT) above 1980–2010 levels. However, there is limited agreement across the models about which geographical regions face the highest risk of change. The extent of regions at risk of severe ecosystem change is projected to rise with 1GMT, approximately doubling between 1GMT D 2 and 3 C, and reaching a median value of 35% of the naturally vegetated land surface for 1GMT D 4 C. The regions projected to face the highest risk of severe ecosystem changes above 1GMT D 4 C or earlier include the tundra and shrublands of the Tibetan Plateau, grasslands of eastern India, the boreal forests of northern Canada and Russia, the savanna region in the Horn of Africa, and the Amazon rainforest.