Uncertainties in projected impacts of climate change on European agriculture and terrestrial ecosystems based on scenarios from regional climate models
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Olesen, J. E.
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Uncertainties in projected impacts of climate change on European agriculture and terrestrial ecosystems based on scenarios from regional climate models
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Abstract
The uncertainties and sources of variation in projected impacts of climate change on
agriculture and terrestrial ecosystems depend not only on the emission scenarios and climate
models used for projecting future climates, but also on the impact models used, and the local
soil and climatic conditions of the managed or unmanaged ecosystems under study. We
addressed these uncertainties by applying different impact models at site, regional and
continental scales, and by separating the variation in simulated relative changes in ecosystem
performance into the different sources of uncertainty and variation using analyses of variance.
The crop and ecosystem models used output from a range of global and regional climate models (GCMs and RCMs) projecting climate change over Europe between 1961–1990 and
2071–2100 under the IPCC SRES scenarios. The projected impacts on productivity of crops
and ecosystems included the direct effects of increased CO2 concentration on photosynthesis.
The variation in simulated results attributed to differences between the climate models
were, in all cases, smaller than the variation attributed to either emission scenarios or local
conditions. The methods used for applying the climate model outputs played a larger role
than the choice of the GCM or RCM. The thermal suitability for grain maize cultivation in
Europe was estimated to expand by 30–50% across all SRES emissions scenarios. Strong
increases in net primary productivity (NPP) (35–54%) were projected in northern European
ecosystems as a result of a longer growing season and higher CO2 concentrations.
Changing water balance dominated the projected responses of southern European
ecosystems, with NPP declining or increasing only slightly relative to present-day
conditions. Both site and continental scale models showed large increases in yield of
rain-fed winter wheat for northern Europe, with smaller increases or even decreases in
southern Europe. Site-based, regional and continental scale models showed large spatial
variations in the response of nitrate leaching from winter wheat cultivation to projected
climate change due to strong interactions with soils and climate. The variation in simulated
impacts was smaller between scenarios based on RCMs nested within the same GCM than
between scenarios based on different GCMs or between emission scenarios.
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Climatic Change (2007) 81:123–143
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