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Cayenne Engel, UNLV Public Lands Institute

Global climate change and implications for ecological restoration. Cayenne Engel, UNLV Public Lands Institute. Outline. Global climate change: how it works (the science behind it) How it is projected to affect Earth’s ecosystems and what changes do we observe?

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Cayenne Engel, UNLV Public Lands Institute

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  1. Global climate change and implications for ecological restoration Cayenne Engel, UNLV Public Lands Institute

  2. Outline • Global climate change: how it works (the science behind it) • How it is projected to affect Earth’s ecosystems and what changes do we observe? • How should these changes influence decisions about ecological restoration?

  3. Vocabulary • Global change • Environmental and ecological changes, climate change, extinction, changes in land use, etc. • Climatic and atmospheric change • Climate: “average weather” (>30 yrs), most often variables such as temperature, precipitation, and wind. • Atmosphere: Changes in chemical composition • Global warming • Response to the above

  4. IPCC • ‘Provide world with clear, balanced view of present state of understanding of climate change’. • Does not conduct research. • Reviews and assesses information relevant to the understanding of climate change. • High scientific and technical standards, and aim to reflect a range of views, expertise and wide geographical coverage • Shared Nobel Prize in 2007 with Al Gore. Mr. Rajendra K. Pachauri Chairman, IPCC

  5. Warming of the climate system is unequivocal, as is now evident from observations of increases in global average air and ocean temperatures, widespread melting of snow and ice, and rising global mean sea level. R.K. Pachauri, IPCC ChairBubu Jallow, Working Group 1 Vice ChairNairobi, 6 February 2007

  6. Infrared heat Molecule absorbs infrared energy Then distributes it in any direction C C O O O O C

  7. Radiative Forcing • An externally imposed perturbation in theradiative energy budget of the Earth’s climate system, which may lead to changes in climate parameters • Responsible parties: Particulates, gasses, etc. in the atmosphere • Segregate the human impact by estimating natural levels of radiative forcing from increased solar energy and particulates from volcanic events

  8. GHG are a small proportion of the atmosphere

  9. These gases have a large global warming potential

  10. Level of scientific understanding

  11. Human driven and natural drivers of climate change 10000 5000 0 Time (before 2005)

  12. Long-term records indicate CO2 is higher than in the past 600,000 years. http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/science/pastcc_fig1.html

  13. All forcing variables Radiative forcing Observed changes are consistent with expected responses to forcings and inconsistent with alternative explanations Solar & volcanic IPCC 2007

  14. Observations of recent climate change Global average air temperature (IPCC 2007) • 100-year linear trend of 0.74oC for 1906-2005 • Larger than the predicted trend of 0.6oC for 1901-2000 given in 2001 IPCC report Ocean temperature • Average ocean temperature increased to depths of at least 3000 m – ocean has absorbed 80% of heat added • Direct results: seawater expansion and sea level rise

  15. Period Rate 50 0.1280.026 100 0.0740.018 Global mean temperatures are rising faster

  16. A paleoclimatic perspective “Paleoclimate information supports the interpretation that the warmth of the last half century is unusual in at least the previous 1300 years. The last time the polar regions were significantly warmer than present for an extended period (about 125,000 years ago), reductions in polar ice volume led to 4 to 6 meters of sea level rise.” R.K. Pachauri, IPCC ChairBubu Jallow, Working Group 1 Vice ChairNairobi, 6 February 2007

  17. IPCC 2007

  18. Uneven distribution of heat

  19. Warming predictions • For the next two decades a warming of about 0.2°C per decade is projected for a range of emission scenarios. • Even if the concentrations of all greenhouse gases and aerosols had been kept constant at year 2000 levels, a further warming of about 0.1°C per decade would be expected. • Earlier IPCC projections of 0.15 to 0.3 oC per decade can now be compared with observed values of 0.2 oC

  20. As GHGs are released, surface of planet expected to warm at least 2°C

  21. Environmental impacts of rising temperatures • Higher low temperatures • Less frequent cold days, cold nights and frost • More frequent hot days, hot nights, and heat waves • Changes in snow cover • Rising sea levels (due to formerly landbound ice) • Drier or wetter (geographically dependant) • More “extreme” weather events • There is observational evidence for an increase of intense tropical cyclone activity in the North Atlantic since about 1970, correlated with increases of tropical sea surface temperatures

  22. Dec - Feb Jun - Aug Precipitation increases very likely in high latitudes Decreases likely in most subtropical land regions

  23. Increased precipitation intensity expected IPCC, 2007

  24. And drought intensity… IPCC, 2007

  25. Biological impacts of rising temperatures • Shifts in species range due to temperature tolerances • Changes in phenology (biological timing) • Birds • Insects • Leaf-out • Flowering • Genetic shifts (adaptation, evolution, selection) • May be most influential • Genetic shifts due to phenology shown

  26. Examples of North Sea fish distributions that have shifted north with climatic warming. Relationships between mean latitude and 5-year running mean winter bottom temperature for (A) cod, (B) anglerfish, and (C) snake blenny are shown. In (D), ranges of shifts in mean latitude are shown within the North Sea. Climate Change and Distribution Shifts in Marine Fishes: Perry, Allison L.; Science, 2005, vol. 308, p 1912-1915

  27. Predicted shifts in dominant forest types in Eastern US

  28. Bird Phenology Cotton, PNAS 2003

  29. Changes observed over the last 100 years Root T.L., et al, Fingerprints of global warming on wild animals and plants, Nature, 2003

  30. Change in niche in response to climate change Impact of normal climatic shifts “locked” assemblages unable to change in response to changing climate Impacts of climatic shifts – some populations left behind, new niches open up Harris et al. 2006, Ecological Restoration

  31. Invasion meets climate change Annual biomass growth (invasive grass) (invasive honeysuckle) Belote, et al, New Phytologist, 2004

  32. Addressing climate change impacts in restoration: • Consider likely changes in species ranges that may occur due to climate change • Reintroduced species may not be adapted to new climate • Build resilience to future change into restoration • Species with wide ranges? • Incorporate genetic diversity

  33. Reference conditions and restoration targets • “Because of climate change, historic conditions are likely to be very different from present and are poor models for restoration.” (Millar and Brubaker) • Should we manage for continuance of threatened species now, or for what communities we predict would be the “natural progression” with such rapid climate change? Climate Change and Paleoecology: New Contexts for Restoration Ecology Constance I. Millar and Linda B. Brubaker

  34. Should we forget about reference conditions? • Restoration should focus on sustaining future options for flexibility and adaptation to changing conditions, rather than attempting to recreate stable conditions that resist change. • Sustainability might instead embrace landscape macrodynamics • Ability to shift locations significantly • Fragment into refugia • Coalesce with formerly disjunct populations • Foster non-equilibrium genetic diversities • Accommodate population extirpations and colonizations • Sustainability in this context implies encouraging successful adaptation to conditions that cannot be turned back Millar and Brubaker

  35. Keep using local material? • Could the use of local material for restoration be limiting? • “By insisting on the exclusive use of local material, we may be consigning restoration projects to a genetic dead end that does not allow for the rapid adaptation to change…” “Ecological Restoration and Global Climate Change”: Harris et al., Restoration Ecology, 2006

  36. Restoration in the context of global change • Rethink our concepts about what and where native habitat is • What are “healthy” population sizes, what are causes of changes in population size, and when is change acceptable and appropriate. • “Society may choose not to accept such consequences and manage instead for other desired conditions. In such cases we will benefit by knowing that our management and conservation efforts may run counter to natural process, and thus restoration efforts may require continuing manipulative input to maintain the desired conditions.” Millar and Brubaker

  37. Positive feedback loops: • Restoration could actually help mitigate some of the effects of climate change • “Agricultural and forestry -- afforestation, reforestation, slowing deforestation, improved forest, cropland and rangeland management, including restoration of degraded agricultural lands and rangelands, promoting agroforestry, and improving the quality of the diet of ruminants” Robert T. WatsonChair Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change November 13, 2000

  38. Multiple-use restoration • In eastern Britain, some areas have been realigned and the seawall breached to recreate areas of salt marsh and intertidal habitat. • This strategy is expected to assist in the restoration of natural balance in estuaries and to provide flood alleviation benefits.

  39. Restoration considerations • Ecosystems are complex, and our understanding of their function is already rudimentary and we often have to learn as we go. • “The past should serve as a guide, not a straightjacket” (Harris et al., Ecol. Rest.) • What is the proper balance between building past systems and attempting to build resilient systems?

  40. Natural buffers exist “Species ranges have, and will—even in the absence of human influence—shift naturally and individualistically over small to large distances as species follow, and attempt to equilibrate with, changes in climate. In the course of adjustment, plant demography, dominance and abundance levels change, as do vegetation associates and wildlife habitat relations.” Climate Change and Paleoecology: New Contexts for Restoration Ecology Constance I. Millar and Linda B. Brubaker

  41. OCCAM Experimental designOld-field Community Climatic and Atmospheric Manipulation • Elevated [CO2] (+300 ppm) • Warming (+3 °C) • Wet and Dry ↑CO2 ↑ Temp ↑ CO2 ↓ Temp ↓ CO2 ↑ Temp ↓ CO2 ↑ Temp ↓ CO2 ↓ Temp ↓ CO2 ↓ Temp • Elevated [CO2] (+300 ppm) • Warming (+3 °C) • Wet and Dry Dry Wet

  42. Expectations for plant community responses to warming Ambient temperature Warmed ← NDVI → ← Time → ← Time → ← Time → Advanced green-up Delayed senescence Extended growing season

  43. Amb. Temp Dry plots Warmed Warming extends the growing season in dry plots 0.9 0.8 COMPLICATED 0.7 Canopy greenness 0.6 Amb. Temp Wet 0.5 Warmed Wet Ambient Temp Dry Warmed Dry 0.4 Sep Oct Nov Dec 2005

  44. Within a site, driest sites were most sensitive to annual variation

  45. In the year 2100, Nevada could be 8°F warmer in the summer.

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