Increasing impacts of climate change upon ecosystems with increasing global mean temperature rise

被引:0
|
作者
Rachel Warren
Jeff Price
Andreas Fischlin
Santiago de la Nava Santos
Guy Midgley
机构
[1] University of East Anglia,Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, School of Environmental Sciences
[2] WorldWildlife Fund U.S.,Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences
[3] California State University,Systems Ecology, Institute of Integrative Biology: Ecology, Evolution, and Disease, Department of Environmental Sciences
[4] ETH Zurich,Global Change and Biodiversity Program
[5] South African National Biodiversity Institute,undefined
来源
Climatic Change | 2011年 / 106卷
关键词
Climate Change; General Circulation Model; Climate Change Impact; Upscaling; Ocean Acidification;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In a meta-analysis we integrate peer-reviewed studies that provide quantified estimates of future projected ecosystem changes related to quantified projected local or global climate changes. In an advance on previous analyses, we reference all studies to a common pre-industrial base-line for temperature, employing up-scaling techniques where necessary, detailing how impacts have been projected on every continent, in the oceans, and for the globe, for a wide range of ecosystem types and taxa. Dramatic and substantive projected increases of climate change impacts upon ecosystems are revealed with increasing annual global mean temperature rise above the pre-industrial mean (ΔTg). Substantial negative impacts are commonly projected as ΔTg reaches and exceeds 2°C, especially in biodiversity hotspots. Compliance with the ultimate objective of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (Article 2) requires that greenhouse gas concentrations be stabilized within a time frame “sufficient to allow ecosystems to adapt naturally to climate change”. Unless ΔTg is constrained to below 2°C at most, results here imply that it will be difficult to achieve compliance. This underscores the need to limit greenhouse gas emissions by accelerating mitigation efforts and by protecting existing ecosystems from greenhouse-gas producing land use change processes such as deforestation.
引用
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页码:141 / 177
页数:36
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