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Human Impacts on Ecosystems • 1. If you missed Friday’s test, see me about a makeup time, and put your poster on the table by the window. • 2. Pick up the handout. • 3. For a sticker: • • • • What gas do producers mostly output? What gas do producers mostly take in? What gas do consumers output? What gas do consumers take in? IPCC - WGI Homework • Ecosystem threat research due Tuesday June 2. IPCC - WGI Objectives • Be able to analyze changes in population size and biodiversity resulting from pressures including: • Climate change • Human activity • Introduction of non-native species IPCC - WGI Climate Change • To understand the impact of climate change on a population or ecosystem, of course, we first need to understand climate change. • Lots of hilarious misconceptions out there about what it is. Exhibit A to the right. IPCC - WGI QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. The World Has Warmed Globally averaged, the planet is about 0.75°C warmer than it was in 1860, based upon dozens of high-quality long records using thermometers worldwide, including land and ocean. Eleven of the last 12 years are among 12 warmest since 1850 in the global average. How did it happen? IPCC - WGI GHGs • Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are gases that absorb and emit thermal infrared radiation. • How many GHGs do you know of already? QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI GHGs • • Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are gases that absorb and emit thermal infrared radiation. Main GHGs: water vapor, CO2, methane (CH4), nitrous oxide (N2O), ozone (O3), and chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). • QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. The order I just listed them in is their order of how abundant they are under natural circumstances. IPCC - WGI GHGs • The greenhouse effect is critical to the planet. Water vapor especially is the reason why the planet’s surface and ocean temperatures permit life. • Without the greenhouse effect, the planet would be extremely cold, uninhabitable. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI GHGs • But this is not to say that the warmer a planet gets, the more habitable it is. • Just look at poor Venus and Mercury. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. • At the moment, extra greenhouse gases especially carbon dioxide - are being very rapidly added to the atmosphere, accelerating the system outside of normal ranges. IPCC - WGI GHGs • On this graph from NOAA, look at three things in particular: • 1) The ranges of CO2 • 2) The differences in CO2 and temperature between glacial and interglacial periods • 3) Are we in a glacial or interglacial period? QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI Industrial revolution and the atmosphere The current concentrations of key greenhouse gases, and their rates of change, are unprecedented. Carbon dioxide Methane Nitrous Oxide Notice rates of change, and how CO2 goes higher than anything on the previous graph. IPCC - WGI (ppmv) 350 Last Interglacial Last Ice Age Carbon Dioxide 300 250 200 [Adapted from Figure 6.3, ©IPCC 2007: WG1-AR4] 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 Thousands of Years Before Present Humans are ‘forcing’ the system in a new way. CO2 increases are mainly due to fossil fuel burning. CO2 has not been this high in more than half a million years. IPCC - WGI Ice ages are not random. They are 'forced' (by earth’s orbital clock…. changes in the sunlight received). Effects of Additional GHGs • Grey zone: Normal temperature fluctuations due to natural sources of GHGs only. • Red line: Actual temperature data. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI Effects of Additional GHGs • Grey zone: Temperature fluctuations due to human (anthropogenic) sources of GHGs only. • Red line: Actual temperature data. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI Effects of Additional GHGs • Grey zone: Temperature fluctuations due to natural sources of GHGs and anthropogenic GHG output. • Red line: Actual temperature data. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI Effects of Additional GHGs QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. • What do you notice about the three graphs? • Climate change is occurring due to the additive effects of natural and humanattributed GHGs. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI Human and Natural Drivers of Climate Change Carbon dioxide is causing the bulk of the forcing. On average, CO2 remains more than a hundred years in the atmosphere and therefore affects climate over long time scales. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI Human and Natural Drivers of Climate Change Carbon dioxide is causing the bulk of the forcing. On average, it lives more than a hundred years in the atmosphere and therefore affects climate over long time scales. IPCC - WGI Various Warmings Rising atmospheric temperature Rising sea level Reductions in NH snow cover And oceans.. And upper atmosphere…. IPCC - WGI Paleoclimate Lines of Evidence •Classic demonstration of how science demands creative minds! •How do we figure out what the temperatures on Earth were in the past? IPCC - WGI Paleoclimate Lines of Evidence •Changes in glaciers, indicating a global average temperature change in the 20th century consistent with the thermometers. And the corals. And the tree rings. And the boreholes. And the ice cores. IPCC - WGI Global distribution of temperature change for June/July/Aug since 1880 http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/gcag/gcag.html •Notice: “global warming” does not equal “everywhere’s warmer,” it equals “most places are warmer so the whole thing is warmer on average.” This is one reason why it’s more properly termed “climate change” than “global warming.” IPCC - WGI Land Precipitation is changing significantly over broad areas Smoothed annual anomalies for precipitation (%) over land from 1900 to 2005; other regions are dominated by variability. IPCC - WGI Effects on Matter Cycles, Too Many dry areas are getting drier as soils dry out. Observed sea surface temperature (SST) and links to the pattern of rain in Africa. Sahara getting very large very fast: gaining 1.5 million hectares in the Southward direction every year. The matter cycles are intertwined; changing one easily changes another. IPCC - WGI Sahelian rainfall decline Anthropogenic warming affects some locations more than others, but overall trend? Observed Expected for all forcings Natural forcing only IPCC - WGI Changing winds, temperatures and storm tracks • Anthropogenic forcing contributes to circulation changes (storm tracks, winds and temperature patterns) • Warmer, wetter winters in Norway; drier in Spain (and North Africa) IPCC - WGI Effects of Climate Change • Effects depend on latitude and longitude, but also on elevation. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI Effects on Ecosystems • Ecosystems fluctuate along with their environments, so why can’t ecosystems just adapt to global climate change? • 1) Their ability to adapt to anything, anthropogenic or natural, is severely hampered now by novel destructions: mining, dams, pollution, habitat destruction, poaching, overfishing, dragging, etc. • 2) Rate of change. Species are always in the process of shifting, but there’s a limit on how quickly they can do it. Some are faster than others, so to determine the survival of a system, you need to look at the slowest members. These are usually, as it turns out, the essential producers. • Plants can migrate .4-2 km/yr. Surface temperature changes are causing shifts at 1.5-5 km/yr. IPCC - WGI Effects on Ecosystems • What could be the effects on ecosystems of • Changes in temperature, including longer or shorter warm/cold seasons • Change in precipitation • Change in groundwater available • Change in sea level • Change in sea acidity • Change in winds and storms IPCC - WGI IPCC - WGI No names on: Madagascar Mangrove, Intertidal Zone Global Climate Change • For a sticker: • 1. What is the most common GHG found naturally, and which is the primary GHG being rapidly added to the atmosphere? • 2. What is the difference between these three graphs? • 3. What is one change or effect of an increase in average temperature? QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. IPCC - WGI QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Homework • 1. Ecosystem Threat research due Tuesday • 2. Test+ due Thursday IPCC - WGI Global Climate Change • Inconvenient Truth: We’re not going to watch the whole thing, no time. Picking out the parts with especially nice graphs, and impacts on ecology. • As you watch, keep in mind the various impacts on an ecosystem we brainstormed a moment ago, and consider which of them links to whichever part of the system is onscreen at the moment. • Ch. 3, 6-9, 11-12, 16-17, 19-21 IPCC - WGI IPCC - WGI Global Climate Change IPCC - WGI Homework IPCC - WGI Objectives • Be able to analyze changes in population size and biodiversity resulting from pressures including: • Climate change • Human activity • Introduction of non-native species IPCC - WGI Impact on Ecosystems • Packet contains information about some ecology studies in the last couple of years. Here is what I want you to do: • You’ll get into a group of 5-6. • You don’t have to read all of the articles, pick 3 that you’d like to have a closer look at. • Read each one together, discuss to make sure everyone in the group understands the study, then make a food web of the ecosystem in question. • Use your knowledge, the articles far from discuss each organism in the web. • Use another color to predict what changes are occurring to the web. You will turn your three predictive webs in. IPCC - WGI IPCC - WGI IPCC - WGI What’s in the pipeline and what could come Warming will increase if GHG increase. If GHG were kept fixed at current levels, a committed 0.6°C of further warming would be expected by 2100. More warming would accompany more emission. CO2 Eq 3.4oC = 6.1oF 850 2.8oC = 5.0oF 600 1.8oC = 3.2oF 0.6oC = 1.0oF IPCC - WGI 400 A1B is a typical “business as usual” (2090-2099) scenario: Global mean warming 2.8oC; Much of land area warms by ~3.5oC Arctic warms by ~7oC; would be less for less emission IPCC - WGI Projections of Future Changes in Climate New in AR4: Drying in much of the subtropics, more rain in higher latitudes, continuing the broad pattern of rainfall changes already observed. IPCC - WGI What else happens in a hotter world? Observations of sea level rise from satellites, 1993-2003. The global average SLR for the 20th century was about 6 inches (0.17m), mostly from expansion of the hot ocean, and with contributions from glacier melt (Alaska, Patagonia, Europe….). Future changes just from these processes could be up to 1.5 feet (0.5 m) by 2100, and up to 3 feet (1 meter) within about 2-3 centuries, depending on how much GHGs are emitted. But what about other processes? Rapid ice flow? IPCC - WGI Ice shelves influence glacier flow The break up of the Larsen B ice shelf off the Antarctic Peninsula in February 2002 is illustrative of the speed up of glaciers after the blocking of the ice shelf is removed. Glaciers lost ice shelf and sped up Other examples, such as Jakobshavn Glacier (Greenland), show speed up in flow after collapse of the floating Glacier still has ice shelf and did glacier tongue. not speed up IPCC - WGI [Image courtesy of http://nsidc.org/iceshelves/larsenb2002/] Sea level rise and the ice sheets 7m of SL equivalent is on Greenland. This is expected to melt slowly, and raise sea level on a time scale of millennia, for warming >2-5°C. BUT rapid ice flow has been observed - and is not in current models. Could sea level rise be much faster than thought? Some glaciological studies suggest this is transient and will stop. Others suggest it may increase. Future? IPCC - WGI Past Change in The Greenland Ice Sheet The last time polar regions were significantly warmer (by 3-5°C) than present for an extended period (about 125,000 years ago), reductions in polar ice volume led to 4 to 6 m of sea level rise. White and black dots show drill sites where ice older than 125,000 years is and is not found. IPCC - WGI The IPCC Sequence of Key Findings…… IPCC (1990) Broad overview of climate change science, discussion of uncertainties and evidence for warming. IPCC (1995) “The balance of evidence suggests a discernible human influence on global climate.” IPCC (2001) “Most of the warming of the past 50 years is likely (>66%) to be attributable to human activities.” IPCC (2007) “Warming is unequivocal, and most of the warming of the past 50 years is very likely (90%) due to increases in greenhouse gases.” IPCC - WGI And More…. • Forcing: Greenhouse gases are at unprecedented levels, and are forcing the climate to change. • Beyond global warming: Discernible human influences on other aspects of climate including heat waves, wind patterns, drought, and more…this is the first ‘earth system’ IPCC report. • Commitment: Already committed to more warming (next few decades), with choices about emissions affecting the longer term more and more. • Expected future earth system changes: likely to virtually certain: more extremes, wet in some places, dry in others, etc... • Long term: Sea level rise is inexorable and will continue, and the face of the planet will change. By how much? How fast? IPCC - WGI IPCC - WGI Water Vapor Feedback Water vapor responds to changes in climate, but it doesn’t drive changes in climate. It’s a major feedback that amplifies global climate change. New in IPCC (2007): Observed trends that demonstrate the trend, in both the upper troposphere and at the surface. IPCC - WGI Explosive Volcanic Eruptions: Proof of Fast-Response Climate Change Due to Forcing Changing forcing changes the temperature (and water vapor, etc.). If volcanoes can cool, then GHG must warm…. IPCC - WGI Ice Age Forcing and Response Last interglacial [After Figure 6.3, ©IPCC 2007: WG1-AR4] Last Ice age A different world in the Arctic: present and future The Arctic was also warm in the period 1925-1940, but the extent of warmth was not global at that time. Large future changes in Arctic sea ice are very likely. Changes in sea ice don’t significantly affect sea level because this ice is already floating. Changes in land ice (glaciers, ice caps, and ice sheets) do affect sea level. IPCC - WGI Clear decreases in Arctic sea ice extent. Could it be changes from the sun? Afraid not. (Thankfully, actually. If it were the sun, there would be nothing we could do about it….) a) no observed trend in solar irradiance; b) spectral information c) solar magnetic flux model rather than proxy data; d) re-evaluation of variations in Sun-like stars. No observed trend in this data. Solar forcing much less than greenhouse gases. Hypothesis fell out of favor a couple decades ago. IPCC - WGI Solar Attribution studies • Separate time-space patterns of response. • Solar response has very different behavior to greenhouse gases, especially with altitude. The upper atmosphere would be expected to be much warmer than it is if solar irradiance were the cause of current surface climate change. IPCC - WGI “All” forcings