Download - Chapter 10 Global Climate Change

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Page 1: Chapter 10 Global Climate Change

Chapter 10

Global Climate Change

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1. Global Temperature Record

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Regional Temperature Patterns

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Predicting Climate Change

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Forecasting Global Warming• 100s to 1000s of assumptions• Geophysical approach

– Fluid dynamic models

• Statistical approach– Time-series analysis

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2. Global Environmental Changes

• Climate change: warmer, wetter, drier

• Increasing atmospheric CO2

• Habitat fragmentation and loss

• Biotic insertions (invasive species), deletions (local extinction)

• Pollution (mainly reactive nitrogen)

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2a. Ecological Impacts• Focus on Species

– Fundamental biological unit– Global warming? Adapt; Migrate poleward

or higher elevation

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Physiological Responses

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Photosynthesis & Respiration

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Rosenzweig, C, et al., 2008, Attributing physical and biological impacts to anthropogenic climate change, Nature, 453, 353.

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2b. Ecological Impacts• Species interactions lead

to a Community• Communities are complex• Complexity leads to

confusion– What is biodiversity?– Why is species richness

important?– Is functional diversity more

important than species diversity?

– Should we worry about rare species?

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Tylianakis, JM, 2008, Global change and species interactions in terrestrial ecosystems, Ecology Letters, 11, 1351.

Climate Change

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Climate change vs Biotic invasion

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2c. Ecological Impacts

• Focus on Ecosystems• Ecosystem function

– Productivity– Nutrient cycling– Water cycling

• Ecosystem functions become ecosystems services, depending on social template

• What if: biodiversity = ecosystem services

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4. Adapting to Climate Change

• Develop Predictions of the future to guide current and future actions (versus old management: return to pre-existing conditions)

• Downscale predictions to the regional, local scale

• Recognize that Disturbances (fire,flooding,diseases, hurricanes, etc.) shape ecosystems

• Drought & Sea Level Rise are central to the global change scene.

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Adaptive Management

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How to Cope with Climate Change & Biodiversity

• Develop refuges, parks reserves that provide habitat for many species

• Connect reserves to allow migration

• Flexible management as conditions change - constant monitoring and modeling outcomes

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1. Continuing Group Presentation

2. Final Course Assessment (oral/papery)

3. Final Course Article

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Final Course ArticleTitle:

International Water Resource Management: Issues and Strategies

Due Date:

Before December 22, 2009

Requirement:

1) No less than 3,000 words either in English or in Chinese

2) Submission both in paper and by email. Please submit paper to Room 226, Key Laboratory of the Eco-Environment of the Three Gorges Reservoir, Teaching Building No. 29.

Email: [email protected] or call 68253795 or 13883380115 if necessary.

Grades: 1 project report 15%

1 group class presentation 25%

1 final course article 50%

Attendance, participation in class 10%

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More Information • A study group of 20-30 participants will

be organized.

• Each participant is required to have good English and strong interest in INRM.

• The activities will be supported by SWU and Cornell mainly through the Global Seminars.

• Please send an email to me if you want to join.