Dr. Craig D. Idso, Lead Author/Editor

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Presentation transcript:

Earth’s Future Biosphere: Key Findings of Climate Change Reconsidered II, Biological Impacts Dr. Craig D. Idso, Lead Author/Editor Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC) www.nipccreport.org

IPCC Position Human activities, especially the burning of fossil fuels, are increasing the carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere Rising CO2 concentrations will lead to … Catastrophic global warming Numerous undesirable consequences Little to no positive effects. The NIPCC disagrees with many aspects of the IPCC position (www.nipccreport.org)

The Climate Change Reconsidered Reports

CCR2 Volume 2: Physical Science No dangerous human influence in Earth’s climate. This finding is sufficient to dismiss nearly all of the negative climate-related impacts predicted by IPCC WGII. Nevertheless, there is a huge body of literature on the biological impacts of rising temperatures and atmospheric CO2 levels that the IPCC ignores

CCR2 Volume 2: Biological Impacts 37 authors, contributors and reviewers from 12 countries 7 Chapters 1062 pages Thousands of peer-reviewed journal references Reporting the science the IPCC ignores

Chapter 1: CO2, Plants, and Soils Atmospheric CO2 is NOT a pollutant

Chapter 1: CO2, Plants, and Soils Elevated levels of CO2 increase the biomass and productivity of nearly all plants and ecosystems

Chapter 2: Plant Characteristics In addition to plant productivity and biomass, atmospheric CO2 enrichment enhances numerous other plant characteristics 34 discussed in Chapter 2

Water Lily CO2 Experiment Example Normal Air (350 ppm) Emerged on time Smaller leaves Less leaf dry matter Elevated CO2 Air (650 ppm) Emerged on time Larger leaves More leaf dry matter (68% more)

Ambient vs Elevated CO2 Results Normal Air (350 ppm) Fewer leaves Shorter growing season Elevated CO2 Air(650 ppm) More leaves (75% more) Longer growing season

Ambient vs Elevated CO2 Results Normal Air (350 ppm) Less flowers, less substantial Less flower and leaf stem dry matter Elevated CO2 Air (650 ppm) More flowers (twice as many, more petals, longer petals, weighed more) More flower and leaf stem dry matter (60% more)

Ambient vs Elevated CO2 Results Normal Air (350 ppm) Produced fewer major roots Produced less total below-ground dry matter Enriched CO2 Air (650 ppm) Produced more major roots (3.2 times more) Produced more total below-ground dry matter (4.3 times greater)

Elevated CO2 also enhances health-promoting (nutritional) properties of foods and medicinal properties of plants.

Chapter 3: Plants Under Stress Atmospheric CO2 enrichment reduces the negative effects of a number of environmental plant stresses high salinity low light high and low temperatures insufficient water air pollution herbivory etc.

Adding CO2 to the Atmosphere Reduces Plant Water Stress Plant water use efficiency (WUE) -- the amount of biomass produced per unit of water lost -- is enhanced at high CO2 The result is a reduction in water loss via transpiration, thus increasing plant WUE by as much as 70-100%

Adding CO2 to the Atmosphere Reduces Plant Water Stress Water Use Efficiency Benefits Can produce the same amount of crop yields using less water Plants will be able to grow and reproduce where it has previously been too dry to exist Win back lands lost previously to desertification Greater vegetative cover can reduce adverse effects of soil erosion

Adding CO2 to the Atmosphere Ameliorates High Temperature Stress The beneficial effects of atmospheric CO2 enrichment typically rise with an increase in air temperature. Higher atmospheric CO2 concentrations typically boosts the optimum temperature for plant photosynthesis by several degrees Centigrade Higher CO2 raises the temperature at which plants experience heat-induced death

Adding CO2 to the Atmosphere Ameliorates Environmental Stresses Earth’s plants will likely not be eliminated from large portions of their current natural habitats in a CO2-enriched world of the future The NIPCC foresees a likely great CO2-induced proliferation of regional biodiversity, as opposed to extinctions of species globally There is much evidence from the peer-reviewed scientific literature to support such an outcome…

Change in Mountaintop Species of the Swiss Alps

Chapter 4: Earth’s Vegetative Future Rising temperatures and atmospheric CO2 levels have benefited historic food production ($3 trillion in past 50 yrs) and will continue to do so in the future. Without the yield-enhancing benefits of CO2 enrichment on agriculture, world food supply could fall short of world food demand by the year 2050

Chapter 4: Earth’s Vegetative Future The ongoing rise in the air’s CO2 content is causing a great greening of the Earth.

Repeat Photos of Section 13, T4S,R8W, Utah 1901 1976 Juniper trees have greatly expanded their range

Repeat Photographs Taken Near Sasabe, AZ 1893 1984 Devoid of shrubs in 1893, this area now boasts significant populations of mesquite, ocotillo, mimosa, snakeweed and burroweed

Horse Ridge Natural Research Area, Central Oregon 1951 1995 1:15,840 aerial photographs reveal extensive increase in tree cover

Annual global net carbon (C) uptake by Earth’s lands and oceans (1959-2010) Source: Ballantyne et al. (2012).

Earth’s land surfaces were a net source of CO2-carbon to the atmosphere until about 1940. Source: Five-year smoothed rates of carbon transfer from land to air (+) or from air to land (-) vs. time. Adapted from Tans (2009).

Chapter 4: Earth’s Vegetative Future The observed CO2-induced stimulation of growth has occurred all across the globe in spite of many real and imagined assaults on Earth’s vegetation, including fires, disease, pest outbreaks, deforestation, and climatic change!

Chapter 5: Terrestrial Animals Rising temperatures and atmospheric CO2 levels do not pose a significant threat to terrestrial animals. Empirical data show that warmer temperatures and rising levels of atmospheric CO2 tend to foster the expansion and proliferation of animal habitats, ranges, and populations, or they otherwise have no observable impacts one way or the other.

Chapter 5: Terrestrial Animals Multiple lines of evidence indicate animal species are adapting, and in some cases evolving, to cope with climate change of the modern era.

Evolution May Also Play a Significant Role in Helping Animals Adapt to Climate Change Animals (and plants) can evolve over much shorter periods of time than was previously thought possible populations have undergone localized microevolution in thermal tolerance, temperature-specific development rate, and thermal preference in very few years insects have shown marked changes in thermal tolerance after a handful of generations

Chapter 6: Aquatic Life Rising temperatures and atmospheric CO2 levels do not pose a significant threat to aquatic life.

Chapter 6: Aquatic Life Many aquatic species have shown considerable tolerance to temperatures and CO2 values predicted for the next few centuries, and many have demonstrated a likelihood of positive responses in empirical studies. Any projected adverse impacts of rising temperatures or declining seawater and freshwater pH levels (“acidification”) will be largely mitigated through adaptation or evolution during the many decades to centuries it is expected to take for pH levels to fall.

Claims of great harm to marine organisms via ocean acidification are largely overstated Source: Iglesias-Rodriguez et al., 2008. Science 320: 336-340 In spite of rising CO2 (declining pH) and temperature

Chapter 7: Human Health and Welfare A modest warming of the planet will result in a net reduction of human mortality from temperature-related events.

Monthly deaths in the Castile-Leon region of Spain attributable to cardiovascular disease Source: Fernandez-Raga et al. (2010).

Earth’s Future Biosphere: Key Findings of Climate Change Reconsidered II, Biological Impacts Dr. Craig D. Idso, Lead Author/Editor Nongovernmental International Panel on Climate Change (NIPCC) www.nipccreport.org

Other Reasons to Suggest Ocean Acidification Will be a Non-Problem The responses of other entities and processes within a marine community have the potential to buffer the negative impacts of ocean acidification on neighboring organisms

Other Reasons to Suggest Ocean Acidification Will be a Non-Problem Models are focused on changes in bulk water chemistry that do not represent conditions actually experienced by marine organisms, which are separated from the bulk water of the ocean by a diffusive boundary layer

Other Reasons to Suggest Ocean Acidification Will be a Non-Problem Essentially all forms of marine life have the inherent genetic capacity to adapt and evolve Nearly all studies to date have been conducted over short timeframes and therefore cannot adequately address the well-known influence of adaptation or evolution