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In: Journal transition studies review: JTSR, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 484-500
ISSN: 1614-4015
"Science has spoken. There is no ambiguity in their message. Leaders must act. Time is not on our side. There is a myth that climate action will cost heavily, but inaction will cost much more." as stressed by the United Nations Secretary- General Ban Ki-moon during the press conference to launch the last IPCC 1 Synthesis Report last November in Copenhagen. Later this year, the Paris Conference on the Parties (COP21) 2 may lead to an international agreement to avoid global warming of more than 2°C degrees on average by 2100. To prepare for this key agreement, a common roadmap for all countries in the coming year is therefore required. This was the aim of the Lima Conference (COP20), last December when 195 UN countries tried to establish government commitments before the Paris Conference.
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In: Nauchno-analiticheskii zhurnal Obozrevatel - Observer, Heft 11-12, S. 5-16
In: Community ecology: CE ; interdisciplinary journal reporting progress in community and population studies, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 83-98
ISSN: 1588-2756
In: MTZ worldwide, Band 85, Heft 2-3, S. 64-64
ISSN: 2192-9114
In: STOTEN-D-22-07494
SSRN
In: Gaget , E , Johnston , A , Pavón-Jordán , D , Lehikoinen , A , Sandercock , B K , Soultan , A , Božič , L , Clausen , P , Devos , K , Domsa , C , Encarnação , V , Faragó , S , Fitzgerald , N , Frost , T , Gaudard , C , Gosztonyi , L , Haas , F , Hornman , M , Langendoen , T , Ieronymidou , C , Luigujõe , L , Meissner , W , Mikuska , T , Molina , B , Musilová , Z , Paquet , J Y , Petkov , N , Portolou , D , Ridzoň , J , Sniauksta , L , Stīpniece , A , Teufelbauer , N , Wahl , J , Zenatello , M & Brommer , J E 2021 , ' Protected area characteristics that help waterbirds respond to climate warming ' , Conservation Biology . https://doi.org/10.1111/cobi.13877
Protected area networks facilitate community changes in responses to climate warming. However, the contribution of the site environmental and conservation-oriented characteristics to these responses to climate warming are not well understood. Here, we investigate how composition of non-breeding waterbird communities within the European Union Natura 2000 (N2K) network changes in response to increases in temperature. We measured the community reshuffling of 97 waterbird species in 3,018 N2K sites over 25 years in 26 European countries. We find that N2K sites explicitly designated for protection of waterbirds and with a management plan had faster climate-driven community changes. In contrast, the designation period of the N2K sites was not associated with community adjustment, and sites funded under EU-LIFE had lower climate-driven community changes. Our findings imply that efficient conservation policy that may help waterbird community responses to climate warming is to manage sites that are specifically designated for waterbirds. ; Climate warming is driving changes in species distributions and community composition. Many species have a so-called climatic debt, that is, shifts in range lag behind shifts in temperature isoclines. Inside protected areas (PAs), community changes in response to climate warming can be facilitated by greater colonization rates by warm-dwelling species, but also mitigated by lowering extirpation rates of cold-dwelling species. An evaluation of the relative importance of colonization-extirpation processes is important to inform conservation strategies that aim for both climate debt reduction and species conservation. We assessed the colonization-extirpation dynamics involved in community changes in response to climate inside and outside PAs. To do so, we used 25 years of occurrence data of nonbreeding waterbirds in the western Palearctic (97 species, 7071 sites, 39 countries, 1993–2017). We used a community temperature index (CTI) framework based on species thermal affinities to ...
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In: Climate prosperity : report 2
In: Arid ecosystems, Band 8, Heft 1, S. 13-21
ISSN: 2079-0988
In: Sibirskie issledovanija: recenziruemyj naučno-praktičeskij žurnal = Siberian research : peer-reviewed scientific journal, S. 66-72
ISSN: 2658-7270
An international team of researchers from Finland, Norway and the United States claims that nearly four million people and 70% of the existing permafrost infrastructure are in areas with high prospect of defrosting of its active layers by the middle of the 21st century as a result of climate warming. The authors declare that even achieving the objectives of the Paris Climate Agreement will not significantly reduce the predicted effects. The data are available in the article «Degrading permafrost puts Arctic infrastructure at risk by mid-century» published in the journal «Nature Communications» on December 11, 2018.
Protected area networks facilitate community changes in responses to climate warming. However, the contribution of the site environmental and conservation-oriented characteristics to these responses to climate warming are not well understood. Here, we investigate how composition of non-breeding waterbird communities within the European Union Natura 2000 (N2K) network changes in response to increases in temperature. We measured the community reshuffling of 97 waterbird species in 3,018 N2K sites over 25 years in 26 European countries. We find that N2K sites explicitly designated for protection of waterbirds and with a management plan had faster climate-driven community changes. In contrast, the designation period of the N2K sites was not associated with community adjustment, and sites funded under EU-LIFE had lower climate-driven community changes. Our findings imply that efficient conservation policy that may help waterbird community responses to climate warming is to manage sites that are specifically designated for waterbirds.
BASE
Protected area networks facilitate community changes in responses to climate warming. However, the contribution of the site environmental and conservation-oriented characteristics to these responses to climate warming are not well understood. Here, we investigate how composition of non-breeding waterbird communities within the European Union Natura 2000 (N2K) network changes in response to increases in temperature. We measured the community reshuffling of 97 waterbird species in 3,018 N2K sites over 25 years in 26 European countries. We find that N2K sites explicitly designated for protection of waterbirds and with a management plan had faster climate-driven community changes. In contrast, the designation period of the N2K sites was not associated with community adjustment, and sites funded under EU-LIFE had lower climate-driven community changes. Our findings imply that efficient conservation policy that may help waterbird community responses to climate warming is to manage sites that are specifically designated for waterbirds.
BASE