1. A change in that climate will therefore change that ecosystem
2. 'Macro-scale' effects
- Climatic ranges are moving North 50km-80km every 10 years
- Shifting climatic belts polewards (also known as the migration of climatic belts)
3. Shifting Climatic belts leads to changing biomes
- By 2100, 40% of biomes will have switched to a different state
Temperate Grasslands-Mid Latitudes
- Temperate Grasslands on the steppes of North Asia and North American prairies will have drier summers and colder winters.
- These regions are the 'bread baskets' of the world-the principle grain-growing areas
- Climate change will reduce grain yields,food production and income for farmers
- This could lead to food shortages
Tundra and Northern tree line-High Latitudes
- Melting permafrost leads to: Loss of habitats-wildlife adapted to survive tundra conditions, subsidence-damaging settlements,transport and oil pipelines in Alaska and Siberia, increased sediment in rivers- increased erosion of the banks affect wildlife including the salmon that migrate upstream to spawn.
- Release of methane and carbon dioxide previously locked up in frozen ground (positive feedback loop accelerating global warming)
Rainforest, Savanna and Desert-Low Latitudes
- Tropical biomes seem to be tied to specific climate tipping points (Gilf Kebir). When certain climatic thresholds are crossed (especially precipitation level/distribution), the one ecosystem can suddenly switch to another
- Could be beneficial to some areas-e.g. Sahel where movement of the rain belt Northwards could halt desertification
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