Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Indicators of climate change and climate impact on the biophysical environment 4 August 2014 Scott Large OUTLINE • Chemical and physical climate change • How will these changes influence marine ecosystems? • Data considerations • What are indicators of this change? Changes in the physical and chemical conditions of global oceans CO2 Temperature Acidity Sea Ice Ocean Heat Sea level Stratification Doney et al 2012 Annual Review of Marine Science Biological and ecological response to changes in physical and chemical conditions CO2 Temperature Acidity Sea Ice Ocean Heat Sea level Stratification Bindoff et al 2007 IPCC Report Biological and ecological response to changes in physical and chemical conditions CO2 Temperature Acidity Sea Ice Ocean Heat Sea level Stratification • Direct effects of changing ocean temperature and chemistry • Physiological functioning (e.g., productivity, behavior, etc) • Population and community-level changes Biological and ecological response to changes in physical and chemical conditions CO2 Temperature Acidity Sea Ice Ocean Heat Sea level Stratification Marine species shift at different rates and directions because they closely track local climate velocities (rate and direction that climate shifts) Pinsky et al 2013 Science Biological and ecological response to changes in physical and chemical conditions CO2 Temperature Acidity Sea Ice Ocean Heat Sea level Stratification 1995-2017 2080-2099 • + 30% in subtropical gyre biome area • - 34% temperate biome area • - 28% upwelling biome area Polovina et al 2011 ICES Journal of Marine Science Biological and ecological response to changes in physical and chemical conditions Temperature •Extent of winter ice cover controls summer cold bottom water •Creates boundary between arctic and subarctic demersal communities •Decreasing sea ice results in changing community composition and structure Mueter and Litzow 2008 Ecological Applications Biological and ecological response to changes in physical and chemical conditions CO2 Temperature Acidity Sea Ice Ocean Heat Sea level Stratification • Upwelling brings CO2-rich waters from the ocean interior to the shelf, adding to the anthropogenic CO2 • Enhances dissolution of calcium carbonite • Some calcifying groups may be vulnerable Bednaršek et al. 2014 Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences Biological and ecological response to changes in physical and chemical conditions CO2 Temperature Acidity Sea Ice Ocean Heat Sea level Stratification Fay et al In review Summary of predicted changes Physical/Chemical – – – – – – Temperature Circulation Stratification Nutrient input Oxygen content Ocean acidification Biological – New environments – Altered dispersal patterns – Changes in species interactions – Invasion – Extinction Community – Altered structure – Altered diversity – Novel ecosystems Data considerations What makes high quality data? • Internally consistent • Range spans natural variability (spatial & temporal) • Precision and variance estimable & reasonable What makes useful data • Directional • Sensitive to change • Represents the phenomenon of interest • Unambiguous How climate change indicators are measured Bindoff and Willebrand 2007 IPCC Dierrsen 2010 PNAS How climate change indicators are measured- Remote Sensing • Remote Sensing – Detection of electromagnetic energy from aircraft or satellites • Spectra range from optical to microwave – Physical properties must be inferred from intensity and frequency distribution of received radiation • Measure probable limiting factors – Temperature, sea ice extent, salinity, etc • Measure biotic processes – Primary production estimates (Chlorophyll a) Turner et al. 2003 Trends in Ecology and Evolution How climate change indicators are measured- Remote Sensing Advantages • Vast spatial coverage – Practical for remote locations • “Rapid” temporal resolution • “Big picture” observations • Compatible with GIS Disadvantages • Temporal coverage – Limited to past few decades – “Fly-over” limitations • Require clear-sky conditions (some) • Requires validation • Multiple explanations for changes in ocean color • Depth limitations – Visible depth averaged: 10100m – Infrared: top few µm How climate change indicators are measured – In situ • Reconstructed data – ERSST v3b (extended reconstructed Sea Surface Temperature) • Global monthly SST from many national and international databases • 1850s to present (gridded, monthly data) www.ncdc.noaa.gov How climate change indicators are measured – In situ • Continuous plankton recorder planetearth.nerc.ac.uk http://www.coastalwiki.org/wiki Edwards et al. 2006 Limnology and Oceanography How climate change indicators are measured – Fishery independent • Scientific survey – – – – Size Production Diversity “Canary” species Henry B. Bigelow- NOAA.gov How climate change indicators are measured – Fishery independent Shin et al 2010 ICES Journal of Marine Science How climate change indicators are measured – Fishery dependent • Log books, weigh-outs, observer records, etc – – – – Size Exploitation Species composition Etc… NOAA picture archives Polovina et al 2009 Fishery Bulletin Summary Physical/Chemical – – – – – – Temperature Circulation Stratification Nutrient input Oxygen content Ocean acidification Biological – New environments – Altered dispersal patterns – Changes in species interactions – Invasion – Extinction Community – Altered structure – Altered diversity – Novel ecosystems Questions / Discussion? Selected References Dierssen, H. M. 2010. Perspectives on empirical approaches for ocean color remote sensing of chlorophyll in a changing climate. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 107:17073-17078. Doney, S. C., M. Ruckelshaus, J. E. Duffy, J. P. Barry, F. Chan, C. A. English, H. M. Galindo, J. M. Grebmeier, A. B. Hollowed, and N. Knowlton. 2012. Climate change impacts on marine ecosystems. Annual Review of Marine Science 4. Edwards, M., D. Johns, S. Leterme, E. Svendsen, and A. Richardson. 2006. Regional climate change and harmful algal blooms in the northeast Atlantic. Limnology and Oceanography 51:820-829. Fay, G., J.S. Link, J. Hare. Assessing the effects of ocean acidification in the Northeast US using an end-to-end marine ecosystem model. In Review at Global Change Biology. Pinsky, M. L., B. Worm, M. J. Fogarty, J. L. Sarmiento, and S. A. Levin. 2013. Marine Taxa Track Local Climate Velocities. Science 341:1239-1242. Polovina, J. J., J. P. Dunne, P. A. Woodworth, and E. A. Howell. 2011. Projected expansion of the subtropical biome and contraction of the temperate and equatorial upwelling biomes in the North Pacific under global warming. ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil 68:986-995. Polovina, J. J., et al. (2009). "Increases in the relative abundance of mid-trophic level fishes concurrent with declines in apex predators in the subtropical North Pacific, 1996–2006." Fishery Bulletin 107(4): 523-531. Turner, W., S. Spector, N. Gardiner, M. Fladeland, E. Sterling, and M. Steininger. 2003. Remote sensing for biodiversity science and conservation. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 18:306-314. Shin, Y.-J., et al. (2010). "Using indicators for evaluating, comparing, and communicating the ecological status of exploited marine ecosystems. 2. Setting the scene." ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil 67(4): 692-716.