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Analyses of Historical and Projected Climates to Support Climate Adaptation in the Northern Rocky Mountains

Authors :
Marian Talbert
David P. Thoma
Michael T. Tercek
Jeffrey T. Morisette
John E. Gross
Patrick Jantz
Ann Rodman
Tony Chang
Kevin C. Guay
Source :
Climate Change in Wildlands ISBN: 9781610915441
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Island Press/Center for Resource Economics, 2016.

Abstract

Most of the western United States is experiencing the effects of rapid and directional climate change (Garfin et al. 2013). These effects, along with forecasts of profound changes in the future, provide strong motivation for resource managers to learn about and prepare for future changes. Climate adaptation plans are based on an understanding of historic climate variation and their effects on ecosystems and on forecasts of future climate trends. Frameworks for climate adaptation thus universally identify the importance of a summary of historical, current, and projected climates (Glick, Stein, and Edelson 2011; Cross et al. 2013; Stein et al. 2014). Trends in physical climate variables are usually the basis for evaluating the exposure component in vulnerability assessments. Thus, this chapter focuses on step 2 of the Climate-Smart Conservation framework (chap. 2): vulnerability assessment. We present analyses of historical and current observations of temperature, precipitation, and other key climate measurements to provide context and a baseline for interpreting the ecological impacts of projected climate changes.

Details

ISBN :
978-1-61091-544-1
ISBNs :
9781610915441
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Climate Change in Wildlands ISBN: 9781610915441
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e2dea4fb38ba6e129ea2148ad7fbd43e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5822/978-1-61091-713-1_4