Impacts of climate change on Terrestrial, Coastal zones, freshwater and marine ecosystems
Unchecked global warming could affect
most terrestrial ecoregions. Increasing global temperature means that
ecosystems will change; some species are being forced out of their
habitats (possibly to extinction) because of changing conditions, while others
are flourishing. Secondary effects of global warming, such as lessened snow
cover, rising sea levels, and weather changes, may influence not only human
activities but also the ecosystem.
Terrestrial
ecosystems and biodiversity: With a warming of 3 °C, relative to 1990
levels, it is likely that global terrestrial vegetation would become a net
source of carbon. a global mean temperature increase of around 4 °C (above
the 1990-2000 level) by 2100 would lead to major extinctions around the globe.
·
Marine ecosystems and biodiversity: A warming of 2 °C above
1990 levels would result in mass mortality of coral reefs globally. In
addition, several studies dealing with planktonic organisms and modelling have
shown that temperature plays a transcendental role in marine microbial food
webs, which may have a deep influence on the biological carbon pump of marine
planktonic pelagic and mesopelagic ecosystems.
·
Freshwater ecosystems: Above about a 4 °C
increase in global mean temperature by 2100 (relative to 1990-2000), Many
freshwater species would become extinct.
Impacts
Studying the association between Earth climate and
extinctions over the past 520 million years, scientists from the University
of York write, "The global temperatures predicted for the coming
centuries may trigger a new ‘mass extinction event’, where over 50 per cent of
animal and plant species would be wiped out."
Many of the species at risk are Arctic and
Antarctic fauna such as polar bears and emperor
penguins. In the Arctic, the waters of Hudson Bay are ice-free
for three weeks longer than they were thirty years ago, affecting polar
bears, which prefer to hunt on sea ice. Species that rely on cold weather
conditions such as gyrfalcons, and snowy owls that prey on
lemmings that use the cold winter to their advantage may be hit
hard. Marine invertebrates enjoy peak growth at the temperatures they have
adapted to, regardless of how cold these may be, and cold-blooded animals
found at greater latitudes and altitudes generally grow faster
to compensate for the short growing season. Warmer-than-ideal conditions
result in higher metabolism and consequent reductions in body size
despite increased foraging, which in turn elevates the risk of predation.
Indeed, even a slight increase in temperature during development impairs growth
efficiency and survival rate in rainbow trout.
Rising temperatures are beginning to have a
noticeable impact on birds, and butterflies have shifted their
ranges northward by 200 km in Europe and North America. Plants lag behind,
and larger animals' migration is slowed down by cities and roads. In Britain,
spring butterflies are appearing an average of 6 days earlier than two decades
ago.
Of species
showing recent change, 4 out of 5 shifted their ranges towards the poles or
higher altitudes, creating "refugee species". Frogs were breeding,
flowers blossoming and birds migrating an average 2.3 days earlier each decade;
butterflies, birds and plants moving towards the poles by 6.1 km per
decade. Human activity is the cause of the temperature rise and resultant
changing species behaviour, and links these effects with the predictions
of climate models to provide validation for them. Scientists have
observed that Antarctic hair grass is colonizing areas of Antarctica
where previously their survival range was limited.
Extinctions due to recent climate change: two
populations of Bay checker spot butterfly being threatened by
precipitation change. Parmesan states, "Few studies have been
conducted at a scale that encompasses an entire species" and
"few mechanistic studies have linked extinctions to recent climate
change." Daniel Botkin and other authors in one study believe that
projected rates of extinction are overestimated. or "recent"
extinctions, see Holocene extinction.
Many species of freshwater and saltwater plants and
animals are dependent on glacier-fed waters to ensure a cold water habitat that
they have adapted to. Some species of freshwater fish need cold water to
survive and to reproduce, and this is especially true
with salmon and cutthroat trout. Reduced glacier runoff can lead
to insufficient stream flow to allow these species to thrive. Ocean krill,
a cornerstone species, prefer cold water and are the primary food source for
aquatic mammals such as the blue whale. Alterations to the ocean
currents, due to increased freshwater inputs from glacier melt, and the
potential alterations to thermohaline circulation of the worlds
oceans, may affect existing fisheries upon which humans depend as well.
The white
lemuroid possum, only found in the Daintree mountain forests of northern
Queensland, may be the first mammal species to be driven extinct by global
warming in Australia. In 2008, the white possum has not been seen in over three
years. The possums cannot survive extended temperatures over 30 °C
(86 °F), which occurred in 2005.
A 27-year study of the largest colony
of Magellanic penguins in the world, published in 2014, found that
extreme weather caused by climate change is responsible for killing 7% of
penguin chicks per year on average, and in some years studied climate change
accounted for up to 50% of all chick deaths. Since 1987, the number of
breeding pairs in the colony has reduced by 24%.
Climate change is leading to a mismatch between
the snow camouflage of arctic animals such as snowshoe
hares with the increasingly snow-free landscape.
Forests
Pine forests in British Columbia have
been devastated by a pine beetle infestation, which has expanded
unhindered since 1998 at least in part due to the lack of severe winters since
that time; a few days of extreme cold kill most mountain pine beetles and have
kept outbreaks in the past naturally contained. The infestation, which (by
November 2008) has killed about half of the province's lodgepole pines (33
million acres or 135,000 km²) is an order of magnitude larger than
any previously recorded outbreak. One reason for unprecedented host tree
mortality may be due to that the mountain pine beetles have higher reproductive
success in lodgepole pine trees growing in areas where the trees have not
experienced frequent beetle epidemics, which includes much of the current
outbreak area. In 2007 the outbreak spread, via unusually strong winds,
over the continental divide to Alberta. An epidemic also started, be it at
a lower rate, in 1999 in Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana. The
United States forest service predicts that between 2011 and 2013 virtually all
5 million acres (20,000 km2) of Colorado’s lodgepole pine
trees over five inches (127 mm) in diameter will be lost.
As the northern forests are a carbon sink,
while dead forests are a major carbon source, the loss of such large areas of
forest has a positive feedback on global warming. In the worst years, the carbon
emission due to beetle infestation of forests in British Columbia alone
approaches that of an average year of forest fires in all
of Canada or five years worth of emissions from that country's
transportation sources.
Besides the immediate ecological and economic
impact, the huge dead forests provide a fire risk. Even many healthy forests
appear to face an increased risk of forest fires because of warming
climates. The 10-year average of boreal forest burned in North America, after
several decades of around 10,000 km² (2.5 million acres), has increased
steadily since 1970 to more than 28,000 km² (7 million acres) annually. Though
this change may be due in part to changes in forest management practices, in
the western U.S., since 1986, longer, warmer summers have resulted in a
fourfold increase of major wildfires and a sixfold increase in the area of
forest burned, compared to the period from 1970 to 1986. A similar increase in
wildfire activity has been reported in Canada from 1920 to 1999.
Forest fires in Indonesia have
dramatically increased since 1997 as well. These fires are often actively
started to clear forest for agriculture. They can set fire to the large peat
bogs in the region and the CO₂ released
by these peat bog fires has been estimated, in an average year, to be 15% of
the quantity of CO₂
produced
by fossil fuel combustion.
A 2018 study found that trees grow faster due to
increased carbon dioxide levels, however, the trees are also eight to twelve
percent lighter and denser since 1900. The authors note, "Even though a
greater volume of wood is being produced today, it now contains less material
than just a few decades ago."
Mountains
Mountains cover approximately 25 percent of
earth's surface and provide a home to more than one-tenth of global human
population. Changes in global climate pose a number of potential risks to
mountain habitats. Researchers expect that over time, climate change will
affect mountain and lowland ecosystems, the frequency and intensity
of forest fires, the diversity of wildlife, and the distribution of water.
Studies suggest that a warmer climate in the United
States would cause lower-elevation habitats to expand into the higher alpine
zone. Such a shift would encroach on the rare alpine meadows and other
high-altitude habitats. High-elevation plants and animals have limited space
available for new habitat as they move higher on the mountains in order to
adapt to long-term changes in regional climate.
Changes in climate will also affect the depth of
the mountains snowpacks and glaciers. Any changes in their seasonal melting can
have powerful impacts on areas that rely on freshwater runoff from
mountains. Rising temperature may cause snow to melt earlier and faster in the
spring and shift the timing and distribution of runoff. These changes could
affect the availability of freshwater for natural systems and human uses.
Ecological productivity
·
According
to a paper by Smith and Hitz (2003), it is reasonable to assume that the
relationship between increased global mean temperature and ecosystem
productivity is parabolic. Higher carbon dioxide concentrations will
favourably affect plant growth and demand for water. Higher temperatures could
initially be favourable for plant growth. Eventually, increased growth would
peak then decline.
·
According
to IPCC (2007:11), a global average temperature increase exceeding
1.5–2.5 °C (relative to the period 1980–99), would likely have a
predominantly negative impact on ecosystem goods and services, e.g., water and
food supply.
·
Research
done by the Swiss Canopy Crane Project suggests that slow-growing trees
only are stimulated in growth for a short period under higher CO2 levels,
while faster growing plants like liana benefit in the long term. In
general, but especially in rainforests, this means that liana become the
prevalent species; and because they decompose much faster than trees their
carbon content is more quickly returned to the atmosphere. Slow growing trees
incorporate atmospheric carbon for decades.
Species migration
In 2010, a gray
whale was found in the Mediterranean Sea, even though the species had not
been seen in the North Atlantic Ocean since the 18th century. The whale is
thought to have migrated from the Pacific Ocean via the Arctic. Climate Change
& European Marine Ecosystem Research (CLAMER) has also reported that
the Neodenticula seminae alga has been found in the North Atlantic,
where it had gone extinct nearly 800,000 years ago. The alga has drifted from
the Pacific Ocean through the Arctic, following the reduction in polar ice.
In the Siberian subarctic, species migration
is contributing to another warming albedo-feedback, as needle-shedding larch
trees are being replaced with dark-foliage evergreen conifers which can absorb
some of the solar radiation that previously reflected off the snowpack beneath
the forest canopy. It has been projected many fish species will migrate
towards the North and South poles as a result of climate change, and that many
species of fish near the Equator will go extinct as a result of global warming.
Migratory birds are especially at risk for
endangerment due to the extreme dependability on temperature and air pressure
for migration, foraging, growth, and reproduction. Much research has been done
on the effects of climate change on birds, both for future predictions and for
conservation. The species said to be most at risk for endangerment or
extinction are populations that are not of conservation concern. It is
predicted that a 3.5 degree increase in surface temperature will occur by year
2100, which could result in between 600 and 900 extinctions, which mainly will
occur in the tropical environments
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