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A climate-change risk analysis for world ecosystems

Scholze, Marko LU ; Knorr, Wolfgang LU ; Arnell, Nigel W. and Prentice, I. Colin LU (2006) In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103(35). p.13116-13120
Abstract

We quantify the risks of climate-induced changes in key ecosystem processes during the 21st century by forcing a dynamic global vegetation model with multiple scenarios from 16 climate models and mapping the proportions of model runs showing forest/nonforest shifts or exceedance of natural variability in wildfire frequency and freshwater supply. Our analysis does not assign probabilities to scenarios or weights to models. Instead, we consider distribution of outcomes within three sets of model runs grouped by the amount of global warming they simulate: <2°C (including simulations in which atmospheric composition is held constant, i.e., in which the only climate change is due to greenhouse gases already emitted), 2-3°C, and >3°C.... (More)

We quantify the risks of climate-induced changes in key ecosystem processes during the 21st century by forcing a dynamic global vegetation model with multiple scenarios from 16 climate models and mapping the proportions of model runs showing forest/nonforest shifts or exceedance of natural variability in wildfire frequency and freshwater supply. Our analysis does not assign probabilities to scenarios or weights to models. Instead, we consider distribution of outcomes within three sets of model runs grouped by the amount of global warming they simulate: <2°C (including simulations in which atmospheric composition is held constant, i.e., in which the only climate change is due to greenhouse gases already emitted), 2-3°C, and >3°C. High risk of forest loss is shown for Eurasia, eastern China, Canada, Central America, and Amazonia, with forest extensions into the Arctic and semiarid savannas; more frequent wildfire in Amazonia, the far north, and many semiarid regions; more runoff north of 50°N and in tropical Africa and northwestern South America; and less runoff in West Africa, Central America, southern Europe, and the eastern U.S. Substantially larger areas are affected for global warming >3°C than for <2°C; some features appear only at higher warming levels. A land carbon sink of ≈ 1 Pg of C per yr is simulated for the late 20th century, but for >3°C this sink converts to a carbon source during the 21st century (implying a positive climate feedback) in 44% of cases. The risks continue increasing over the following 200 years, even with atmospheric composition held constant.

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author
; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Climate change impacts, Dangerous climate change, Ecosystem modeling, Ecosystem vulnerability
in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
volume
103
issue
35
pages
5 pages
publisher
National Academy of Sciences
external identifiers
  • scopus:33748358356
  • pmid:16924112
ISSN
0027-8424
DOI
10.1073/pnas.0601816103
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
d014fce1-cd06-4bec-8677-7d8373ad1593
date added to LUP
2019-03-14 21:27:47
date last changed
2024-06-26 11:01:27
@article{d014fce1-cd06-4bec-8677-7d8373ad1593,
  abstract     = {{<p>We quantify the risks of climate-induced changes in key ecosystem processes during the 21st century by forcing a dynamic global vegetation model with multiple scenarios from 16 climate models and mapping the proportions of model runs showing forest/nonforest shifts or exceedance of natural variability in wildfire frequency and freshwater supply. Our analysis does not assign probabilities to scenarios or weights to models. Instead, we consider distribution of outcomes within three sets of model runs grouped by the amount of global warming they simulate: &lt;2°C (including simulations in which atmospheric composition is held constant, i.e., in which the only climate change is due to greenhouse gases already emitted), 2-3°C, and &gt;3°C. High risk of forest loss is shown for Eurasia, eastern China, Canada, Central America, and Amazonia, with forest extensions into the Arctic and semiarid savannas; more frequent wildfire in Amazonia, the far north, and many semiarid regions; more runoff north of 50°N and in tropical Africa and northwestern South America; and less runoff in West Africa, Central America, southern Europe, and the eastern U.S. Substantially larger areas are affected for global warming &gt;3°C than for &lt;2°C; some features appear only at higher warming levels. A land carbon sink of ≈ 1 Pg of C per yr is simulated for the late 20th century, but for &gt;3°C this sink converts to a carbon source during the 21st century (implying a positive climate feedback) in 44% of cases. The risks continue increasing over the following 200 years, even with atmospheric composition held constant.</p>}},
  author       = {{Scholze, Marko and Knorr, Wolfgang and Arnell, Nigel W. and Prentice, I. Colin}},
  issn         = {{0027-8424}},
  keywords     = {{Climate change impacts; Dangerous climate change; Ecosystem modeling; Ecosystem vulnerability}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{08}},
  number       = {{35}},
  pages        = {{13116--13120}},
  publisher    = {{National Academy of Sciences}},
  series       = {{Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}},
  title        = {{A climate-change risk analysis for world ecosystems}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0601816103}},
  doi          = {{10.1073/pnas.0601816103}},
  volume       = {{103}},
  year         = {{2006}},
}