Title of article
Implications of land ecosystem-atmosphere interactions for strategies for climate change adaptation and mitigation
Author/Authors
By RICHARD BETTS، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
14
From page
602
To page
615
Abstract
The standard approach to predicting climate change, assessing its impacts and planning mitigation strategies tends to
be compartmentalized, leading to inadequate or incomplete advice for climate policy. Climate models used for future
global warming predictions and attribution of past changes generally consider only global climate drivers, ignoring
local drivers, such as land use change and urban effects. Impacts studies are generally carried out in isolation from
each other and hence ignore interactions between different impacts sectors, such as hydrology, natural ecosystems and
agriculture. Feedbacks from impacts to climate change, which often involve land ecosystem-atmosphere interactions,
are often neglected. This can result in representations of global changes that are at best inconsistent and at worst
completely misleading. Moreover, a number of climate change mitigation strategies, such as carbon sequestration and
biofuels involve changes in land ecosystems. In addition to affecting climate through the exchange of carbon with the
atmosphere, these land ecosystem changes may affect climate change or its impacts through a variety of additional
processes, such as surface albedo change or changes in the surface moisture budget. Failure to account for these may
have consequences that are potentially at odds with the aims of climate change mitigation
Journal title
Tellus.Series B
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Tellus.Series B
Record number
436911
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