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Assessing the Vulnerability of Species, Ecological Communities
and Ecological Systems to Projected Future Climate Change in the Pacific
Northwest
The Nature Conservancy (TNC), in cooperation with partners from the
University of Washington College of Forest Resources, and the U.S.
Geological Survey, is currently developing a study to investigate
the potential impacts of future climate change on The Nature Conservancy’s
conservation targets and portfolio sites in the Pacific Northwest.
First, we will create a database that ranks TNC conservation targets,
including ecological systems (e.g., Pinus ponderosa woodlands),
ecological communities (e.g., plant associations), and individual
species with respect to their intrinsic sensitivities to climate change.
Climate-change sensitivities will be based on multiple aspects of
species’ biology and the ecology of communities and ecosystems,
and will be determined independently of any projected changes in climate.
The second part of the study will use 30 simulations of future climate
from 10 coupled atmosphere-ocean general circulation models (AOGCMs)
to assess the magnitude and range of potential future climate change
in the Pacific Northwest. These climate-change simulations will be
used to model the effects of climate change on the distribution of
vegetation and on the distributions of 80 bird and mammal species
in the region.
For the final stage of the study, we will integrate the data compiled
in the the climate-sensitivity database with the three sets of climate-based
projections (climate change, vegetation changes, and shifts in bird
and mammal distributions) to asses the particular vulnerabilities
of TNC’s conservation targets and portfolio sites. The analyses
of climate-change impacts will be developed to address both basic
science questions and the particular information needs of TNC scientists.
A unique part of this project is the explicit collaboration between
climate-change modelers and conservation practitioners. Each component
of this study will be developed in collaboration with TNC scientists
and managers, allowing us to develop research results that specifically
meet the needs of conservation scientists, managers, and practitioners.
For more information about this project, please contact:
, Ph. D., Director of Conservation Science, The Nature Conservancy
, Ph. D., Assistant Professor, College of Forest Resources, University
of Washington
, Ph. D., Research Scientist, U.S. Geological Survey
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