| Literature DB >> 22773068 |
Molly S Cross1, Erika S Zavaleta, Dominique Bachelet, Marjorie L Brooks, Carolyn A F Enquist, Erica Fleishman, Lisa J Graumlich, Craig R Groves, Lee Hannah, Lara Hansen, Greg Hayward, Marni Koopman, Joshua J Lawler, Jay Malcolm, John Nordgren, Brian Petersen, Erika L Rowland, Daniel Scott, Sarah L Shafer, M Rebecca Shaw, Gary M Tabor.
Abstract
As natural resource management agencies and conservation organizations seek guidance on responding to climate change, myriad potential actions and strategies have been proposed for increasing the long-term viability of some attributes of natural systems. Managers need practical tools for selecting among these actions and strategies to develop a tailored management approach for specific targets at a given location. We developed and present one such tool, the participatory Adaptation for Conservation Targets (ACT) framework, which considers the effects of climate change in the development of management actions for particular species, ecosystems and ecological functions. Our framework is based on the premise that effective adaptation of management to climate change can rely on local knowledge of an ecosystem and does not necessarily require detailed projections of climate change or its effects. We illustrate the ACT framework by applying it to an ecological function in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho, USA)--water flows in the upper Yellowstone River. We suggest that the ACT framework is a practical tool for initiating adaptation planning, and for generating and communicating specific management interventions given an increasingly altered, yet uncertain, climate.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22773068 PMCID: PMC3410031 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-012-9893-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Fig. 1Map showing the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and the Yellowstone River in Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho, USA. (Map created by A. Toivola, Wildlife Conservation Society)
Fig. 2The Adaptation for Conservation Targets (ACT) framework for natural resource management planning in light of climate change. Steps 1–4 represent the ACT planning phase (the focus of this paper); Steps 5–6 represent the implementation and evaluation phase
Fig. 3Conceptual model illustrating how climate and other drivers may influence water flows in the upper Yellowstone River
Fig. 4Example results chains for management options and intermediate effects to maintain Yellowstone River flows suitable for Yellowstone cutthroat trout as the climate becomes warmer and drier. Management options are then examined to determine tradeoffs and set priorities (Step 4, Fig. 2)
Costs and benefits associated with three potential actions for managing Yellowstone River water flows given a warmer and drier climate
| Management actions | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Install snow fences | Construct check dams | Increase beaver presence/abundance | ||
| Prioritization criteria | Contribution to achieving management objective | Relatively indirect positive effect on base flow | Relatively direct positive effect on flows in the upper river drainage | Relatively direct positive effect on flows in the upper river drainage |
|
| ||||
| Economic | Inexpensive | Moderately expensive, but not prohibitive | Relatively inexpensive | |
| Regulatory | Might not be allowed in portions of watershed within Yellowstone National Park | Might not be allowed in portions of watershed within Yellowstone National Park | Not prohibited in Yellowstone National Park | |
| Social | Little conflict with downstream users | May conflict with downstream users | Potential conflict with private landowners; will vary among locations | |
| Potential unintended consequences | No effects on fish passage | Can increase siltation or prevent fish passage | Populations might need to be heavily managed, might prevent fish passage, might migrate into other streams | |
| Synergies with other management objectives | Delays timing of spring peak flow while increasing summer base flows | – | May improve status of riparian systems | |
| Potential for removal or modification | High | Becomes more difficult over time, has long-term effects | Difficult, especially over time; has long-term effects | |
| Consistency with current management practice | Existing tool for other purposes | Existing tool | Existing tool | |
| Robustness to uncertainty in future climate projections | Would still increase base flow | Would still increase base flow, potentially higher risk of blowouts during high flow events | Would still increase base flow, potentially higher risk of blowouts during high flow events | |
One can compare tradeoffs across actions and prioritization criteria to determine which actions to implement