Title: Ecology: Life Interacts with the Earth
1Ecology Life Interacts with the Earth Impact of
Climate Change
2Defining Scientific Inquiry
Inquiry is a question-driven process that
scientists use to explain the world. Scientific
inquiry includes the key practices that
scientists commonly engage in including
- Pose, refine and evaluate questions that guide
scientific investigations, - Designing and conducting scientific
investigations, - Use representations, models, and mathematics to
communicate scientific phenomena and solve
scientific problems, - Formulating and revising scientific explanations
using logic and evidence, - Communicating and defending a scientific argument.
3USTemperature Anomalies
- Western mountain regions dominate recent warming
as this map of standardized temperature anomalies
of 20002005 versus 18952000 long-term averages
shows. - http//www.fs.fed.us/psw/cirmount/
4US Landforms
- http//education.usgs.gov/common/resources/mapcata
log/topography.html
5Themes of Research
- Water Supply
- Local and region-wide drought have affected
cities and agriculture repeatedly over the past
quarter century. Higher temperatures have raised
snow levels, shortened the accumulation season,
reduced the peak snowpack, and hastened spring
melt. Meanwhile, rapid population growth has
accelerated demand for assured water. Together,
these trends increase chances of significant
regional water shortages. - Forest Dieback
- Recent severe drought, superimposed on decades
of fire exclusion and livestock grazing, have
increased susceptibility of trees to insects and
disease, and are resulting in widespread and
rapid forest diebacks throughout western forests. - Urban-Wildland Issues
- Accelerating suburban development on city
fringes and exurban development of rural lands
are increasing scarcity of wildlands and
associated resources wildfire is placing homes
in these developments at risk. Poor air quality
is moving uphill from urban centers. Climate
changes are accentuating these problems.
6Themes of Research
- Wildfire
- Enormous, destructive crown fires, outside the
range of 20th-century sizes and severity, are
consuming forests stressed from drought,
extensive tree mortality, and long-term fire
exclusion. These fires burn severely, threatening
biodiversity, watershed stability, water supply,
and human lives and property. - Biodiversity and Wildlife
- Development of sparsely settled areas, massive
forest dieback, extensive high severity crown
fires, landscape fragmentation, and changes in
high-altitude ecosystems are threatening
biodiversity and wildlife habitat.
7Snow melt
- Cumulative trend in simulated timing of peak
snowpack (number of days changed from 1951 to
2000). - From Hamlet A.F., Mote P.W., Clark M.P.,
Lettnmaier, D.P., 2005 Effects of temperature
and precipitation variability on snowpack trends
in the western U.S. Journal of Climate, 18 (21)
45454561.
8Mountain Ecosystems
- Vertically stacked mountain ecosystems may be at
risk as climate changes.
9Western Mountain Warming Trends
- Warming trends of the 20th century seen in annual
temperature for 11 western United States. Blue
line is 11-year mean.
10Drought
- Percentage of western United States in severe
drought during 18952005 (Palmer Drought Severity
Index). H. Diaz, NOAA.
11Historical Photographs of Glacial Retreat
- Retreat of S. Cascade Glacier,WA 1928 (USFS)2000
(USGS).
12Tree Ring Records
13Plant Migration in the Alps
- Fig. 1. The study site map from Pirola (1959)
redrawn by using CTR, C2d3 sheet (Regional
Technical Map of Lombardy, original scale
110.000). The figure also shows the transect
along which the upward migration of plants was
studied.
Gilberto Paroloa and Graziano Rossi. 2008. Upward
migration of vascular plants following a climate
warming trend in the Alps. Basic and Applied
Ecology. 9(2) 100-107.
14Plant Migration in the Alps
- Fig. 2. Trend in mean annual air temperature
(MAAT) during 19262003, recorded at the Lanzada
meteorological station (983 m a.s.l. Sondrio).
15Plant Migration in the Alps
- Fig. 3. Increase in vascular plant species
numbers per altitudinal range of 100 m between
the periods 1959 and 2005.
16Plant Migration in the Alps
- Fig. 4. Maximum altitudes reached by the 52
migrated species in 1959 and 2005. A linear
regression was fitted and used to separate fast
migrants from slow migrants.
17Does Climate Impact People Too?
Look at the history of China.
18Environment and Human History
The Tabulation of Wars in Ancient China
(Editorial Committee of Chinas Military History
1985) is a multivolume compendium scrupulously
recording the wars that took place in China from
800 bc to ad 1911. It includes an appendix
detailing each war, including year of inception,
type of participants, location, causes, and in
most cases, the numbers of soldiers or
combatants, causalities, progress, and results.
19USGS Office of Climate Change
- http//www.usgs.gov/global_change/