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Human impacts on biodiversity depend in part on population size. Today’s estimate: 6,663,153,207. http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/popclockworld.html. Human population impacts via:. Food production Water use Energy Urbanization Disease emergence. Human Effects: Climate Change.
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Human impacts on biodiversity depend in part on population size Today’s estimate: 6,663,153,207 http://www.census.gov/ipc/www/popclockworld.html
Human population impacts via: • Food production • Water use • Energy • Urbanization • Disease emergence
Human Effects: Climate Change • If the climate is changing, why aren’t we seeing the effects? • 12 years ago: ‘The effects are just starting, but tough to see within natural variance.’ • Now: The effects are seen everywhere. • Does it matter to biodiversity?
“Biodiversity” includes a lot: Species (richness) Genetic variability within species Population structure across space Communities – species across space Ecological processes (competition, predation, symbiosis) Abiotic processes that maintain the first 5 Biological phenomena – large migrations, species aggregations
Biomes = largest spatial scale ecologically recognized • Driven by climate -15 -10 -5 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 Mean Annual Temperature (ºC) 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 Mean Annual Precipitation (cm)
Note: effects are not uniformly distributed; some places are cooling
Evidence of climate change • Surface temperature • Melting glaciers & permafrost • Mountain peak air temperature records • Sea level rise • atolls disappearing under water • Freezing elevations in the tropics have risen • Crop production • growing season 11 days longer in Europe, 1959-93
Even if temperatures increase a few degrees, what’s the big deal?
Last time Earth 3oC warmer peccary [peccary] SW U.S. manatee
Effects on Wildlife • Frogs & toads on tropical mountain tops in cloud forest (Monteverdi, Costa Rica) • 20/50 species went extinct • Due to global warming, cloud elevation = decreasing habitat • Also allowed fungal pathogen to invade Pounds et al. 1999
Coral reef bleaching = expelling algal symbiont • low or high sea temperatures can induce bleaching • Occurs naturally – occurrence rate • leads to photosynthesis, failure to grow, death • seaweed overgrowth due to inability to compete
Range & Phenology Shifts (Parmesan & Yohe, 2003, Nature) • Range = where species live; phenology = timing of events (return of birds in spring, flowers emerging) • Reviewed literature on effects of climate change on biodiversity • >1700 species • woody plants, herbaceous plants, birds, amphibians, fish, invertebrates • Looked for: • range shifts • advancement of spring events
range shifts averaging 6.1 km / decade towards the poles • mean spring advancement by 2.3 days / decade
Speckled wood 1915–1939 1940–1969 1970–1997 Range shift towards poles in many butterflies
Exotic species invasion Number of exotic species
Disrupting Ecological Processes Beetle damage to white spruce in Alaska – warmer winters kill fewer beetles http://www.worldviewofglobalwarming.org/
Disrupting Food Chains pied flycatcher caterpillars plants
pied flycatcher (Both & Visser, Nature 2001) National Geographic 9/04
Disrupting Ecological Processes • Disaster At Sea As Global Warming Hits Seabirds • The Independent – UK 7/04 • Hundreds of thousands of Scottish seabirds have failed to breed this summer in a wildlife catastrophe which is being linked by scientists directly to global warming. • a rise in sea temperature is believed to have led to the mysterious disappearance of a key part of the marine food chain - the sandeel, the small fish whose great teeming shoals have hitherto sustained larger fish, marine mammals and seabirds in their millions. • the sandeel stocks have been shrinking for several years, and this summer they have disappeared: the result for seabirds has been mass starvation.
Black-billed magpie Egg laying date USFWS 1971 1995 a=corn bunting b=chiffchaff c=black-billed magpie earlier egg laying in temperate birds • 20 species, avg. 8.9 days (range = 4-17 days) Tree Swallow Crick, et al. 1997. Nature 388:526.
For doubters that humans are the primary cause of global climate change, given observed climate change & its effects, if human-caused emissions are not the primarycause of climate change, should our response be different than if human-caused emissions are the primary cause? "I hate to say we told you so, but we told you so." J. Cosimo, NASA researcher, Goddard Space Flight Center 9/06