| Literature DB >> 26120250 |
Robert W Dunford1, Alison C Smith1, Paula A Harrison1, Diana Hanganu2.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Future patterns of European ecosystem services provision are likely to vary significantly as a result of climatic and socio-economic change and the implementation of adaptation strategies. However, there is little research in mapping future ecosystem services and no integrated assessment approach to map the combined impacts of these drivers.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation; Climate change impacts; Cross-sectoral interactions; Ecosystem services; Integrated assessment; Trade-offs
Year: 2015 PMID: 26120250 PMCID: PMC4479161 DOI: 10.1007/s10980-014-0148-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Landsc Ecol ISSN: 0921-2973 Impact factor: 3.848
Fig. 1Simplified schematic showing the structure of the linked models within the European CLIMSAVE IA Platform. Bullet points in italics are the ecosystem services indicators used in this paper
Overview of the combined climate and socio-economic scenarios, and the adaptation strategies
| Scenario count | Climate setting | Socio-economic settings | Adaptation settings | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | 1 | Baseline climate | Baseline socio-economics | None |
| Climate only | 2 | 1× Extreme climate scenario 1× Moderate climate scenario | Baseline socio-economics | None |
| Combined climate and socio-economic scenarios | 4 | 1× Extreme climate scenario & SoG socio-economic scenario 1× Extreme climate scenario & WRW socio-economic scenario 1× Moderate climate scenario & SoG socio-economic scenario 1× Moderate climate scenario & WRW socio-economic scenario | None | |
| Adaptation strategies | 4 × 8 | 8× adaptation strategies for each of the four combined climate and socio-economic scenarios (see Table | 8× strategies | |
| Total | 39 | |||
Adaptation strategies as applied within each combination of climate and socio-economic scenario
| Adaptation Strategies | Settings (↓ decrease to minimum ↑ increase to maximum) |
|---|---|
| 1. Food self-sufficiency: Food imports are reduced to the minimum to encourage European food self-sufficiency | [ |
| 2. Irrigation for food: This strategy is a combination of “food self-sufficiency” and “maximising water efficiency”. Water is prioritised for agricultural use | [ [ [ [ |
| 3. Maximising water efficiency: Water provision is made a top priority. Adaptation approaches include more efficient irrigation and technological and behavioural changes | [ [ [ [ |
| 4. Extensify agriculture: This strategy aims to reduce the impact of intensive farming on the environment by farming less intensively (which reduces yield) and putting more of a field into set-aside | [ [ |
| 5. Dietary change: Strategy based on “extensify agriculture” but with reduced pressure on food resulting from reduced dietary preferences for land-intensive red and white meat | As “extensify agriculture” plus: [ [ |
| 6. Maximising timber: This strategy focuses on timber production by planting species that best match the future climate and reducing agricultural demand by increasing imports | [ [ |
| 7. Forests for nature: Strategy based on “maximise timber” with additional forestry protected to increase the amount of total forest | As “maximise timber” plus: [ [ [ |
| 8. “Go nature go!”: Target overall naturalness: forest, extensive grassland, unmanaged land. Expand protected areas (PA) to equally target these land uses; deliberately target new areas rather than buffering existing PA. Plant competitive tree species; import as much food as possible; increase food yields and change dietary preferences to minimise agricultural pressures | [ [ [ [ [ [ [ |
The strategies are created by modifying IAP slider settings to the maximum/minimum scenario-consistent settings as set out in the settings column above
Fig. 2The regions considered within this analysis based on those defined by Metzger et al. (2005) and used within the IPCC AR5 Europe chapter (Kovats et al. 2014)
Baseline ecosystem service distribution across the European regions
| Food provision food production (1,000 s of KCal capita−1 day−1) | Water provision water exploitation index (no units) | Timber provision annual forest yield from managed forests (Mt) | Atmospheric regulation carbon sequestration (Mt/year) | Landscape experience land not managed for provisioning services (%) | Land use diversity Shannon index of land use | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EU | 13.2 | 0.12 | 262 | 7,453 | 32 | 0.50 |
| Northern | 22.1 | 0.03 | 80 | 2,020 | 37 | 0.42 |
| Alpine | 7.9 | 0.04 | 35 | 1,112 | 65 | 0.35 |
| Atlantic | 12.3 | 0.16 | 70 | 1,589 | 15 | 0.51 |
| Continental | 13.5 | 0.19 | 45.5 | 1,914 | 16 | 0.58 |
| Southern | 13.3 | 0.22 | 32 | 818 | 44 | 0.60 |
The biodiversity index is a change from baseline index and as such has no value at baseline
Impacts of climate change and socio-economic scenarios on ecosystem services at the European scale
| Food provision food production (1,000 s of KCal capita−1 day−1) | Water provision water Exploitation Index (no units) | Timber provision annual forest yield from managed forests (Mt) | Atmospheric regulation carbon sequestration (Mt/year) | Landscape experience land not managed for provisioning services (%) | Land use diversity Shannon index of land use | Forest biodiversity existence/bequest biodiversity vulnerability index (no units) | Arable biodiversity existence/bequest biodiversity vulnerability index (no units) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline (Europe, 1990) | 13.2 | 0.12 | 262 | 7,453 | 34 | 0.50 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| Extreme climate (2050s) | 13.0 | 0.17 | 294 | 9,246 | 46 | 0.47 | −0.40 | −0.29 |
| Extreme climate & WRW | 14.6 | 0.12 | 281 | 9,439 | 45 | 0.45 | −0.40 | −0.31 |
| Extreme climate & SoG | 15.2 | 0.21 | 167 | 5,150 | 40 | 0.51 | −0.44 | −0.16 |
| Moderate climate (2050s) | 12.9 | 0.14 | 269 | 8,719 | 46 | 0.46 | −0.23 | −0.17 |
| Moderate climate & WRW | 14.6 | 0.09 | 269 | 9,090 | 45 | 0.44 | −0.23 | −0.18 |
| Moderate climate & SoG | 15.2 | 0.17 | 198 | 5,679 | 39 | 0.51 | −0.24 | −0.09 |
Fig. 3Impacts of climate change and socio-economic scenarios on sectors. Changes are relative to the European baseline climate (1961–1990)
Fig. 4Changing land use with climate and socio-economic scenarios and adaptation strategies. Units are area (km2). Grass (I) and (E/S) are “intensive grassland” and “extensive grassland and set-aside” respectively; Forest (m) and (u) are managed and unmanaged forest
Fig. 5The influence of adaptation strategies on ecosystem services. Changes are relative to the combined climate and socio-economic scenario without adaptation