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Impact of climate change on Himalayan Forest Ecosystems. Prof. Ravindranath Indian Institute of Science Bangalore. Forests and climate change. Deforestation and land use change contribute to CO 2 emissions – IPCC; 20% of CO 2 emissions
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Impact of climate change on Himalayan Forest Ecosystems Prof. Ravindranath Indian Institute of Science Bangalore
Forests and climate change • Deforestation and land use change contribute to CO2 emissions – IPCC; 20% of CO2 emissions • Forests provide a large potential to mitigate climate change - IPCC; 15 – 20% of CO2 emissions • Forests will be impacted by climate change and are highly vulnerable to climate impacts • Need for adaptation to enable forests to cope with climate change ------------------------------------------------------------- Forest sector is critical in addressing climate change Forest sector is very contentious in global negotiations
Climate Change projected for 2071-2100 (A2) Source: Rupa Kumar et. al. (2006)
Assessment of Impact of climate change on forests BIOME4: Equilibrium model • Climate, vegetation, soil and water data IBIS (Integrated Biosphere Simulator):dynamic global Vegetation Model • Climate, vegetation, soil and water data Climate Model: GCM and RCM data from • Hadley Had RM3 data (50x50 km2) Climate Change Scenarios: • A2, B2 and A1B • 2030s and 2070s
Impact on Forest and Other Vegetation Types (1975 - 2085) – IBIS Model outputs 1: tropical evergreen forest / woodland, 2: tropical deciduous forest / woodland, 3. temperate evergreen broadleaf forest / woodland, 4: temperate evergreen conifer forest / woodland, 5: temperate deciduous forest / woodland, 6: boreal evergreen forest / woodland, 7: boreal deciduous forest / woodland, 8: mixed forest / woodland, 9: savanna, 10: grassland / steppe, 11: dense shrubland, 12: open shrubland, 13: tundra, 14: desert, 15. polar desert / rock / ice
IBIS predictions – Baseline, A2 1: tropical evergreen forest / woodland, 2: tropical deciduous forest / woodland, 3. temperate evergreen broadleaf forest / woodland, 4: temperate evergreen conifer forest / woodland, 5: temperate deciduous forest / woodland, 6: boreal evergreen forest / woodland, 7: boreal deciduous forest / woodland, 8: mixed forest / woodland, 9: savanna, 10: grassland / steppe, 11: dense shrubland, 12: open shrubland, 13: tundra, 14: desert, 15. polar desert / rock / ice
Impact of A1B Scenario climate change: Baseline and 2035 (middle panel) scenarios. The grids where a change in vegetation is projected is shown in red in the rightmost panel 1.Tropical wet evergreen forests,2.Tropical semi evergreen forests, 3.Tropical moist deciduous forest, 4.Tropical dry decidious forest, 5.Tropical thorny/scrub forests, 6.Tropical dry evergreen forest,7.Littoral and swampy forest, 8.Subtropical broad -leaved hill forests, 9.Subtropical pine forests, 10.Sub-tropical dry evergreen forests, 11.Montane wet temperate forests, 12.Himalayan wet/ moist temperate forests, 13.Himalayan dry temperate forests, 14.Sub-alpine forests, 15.Moist alpine,
Key Issues • Himalayan ecosystems are subjected to degradation & Envi. stresses • Disturbed Himalayan Ecosystems are vulnerable to climate variability and climate change • Many uncertainties exist with respect to • Regional climate projections • Dynamic vegetation models • Socio-economic and policy impacts • Need for research on CC modeling & develop Adaptation measures
Why Adaptation? When uncertainty in Impact Assessment • Impacts will be irreversible; e.g., • loss of biodiversity • Inertia in response to changing climate • Long gestation period in developing & implementation of adaptation practices • Waiting for full knowledge – high risk • Large ecological, economic and social implications Focus on “win – win” adaptation options
Potential win-win Adaptation practices • Anticipatory planting of species • along latitude and altitude • promote assisted natural regeneration • Promote mixed species forestry - species differ in temperature tolerance. • Rationalize Protected Area boundaries • linking of PAs as corridors for migration • Develop and implement fire protection and management practices. • Adopt thinning, sanitation and other silvi practices. • Promote in situ and ex situ conservation of genetic diversity. • Develop drought and pest resistance in commercial tree species. • Adopt sustainable forest management practices.