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17 - Landscape ecology and global change

from PART IV - Landscape dynamics on multiple scales

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 November 2009

Ronald P. Neilson
Affiliation:
USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station USA
John A. Wiens
Affiliation:
The Nature Conservancy, Washington DC
Michael R. Moss
Affiliation:
University of Guelph, Ontario
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Summary

We often hear that the world is growing smaller. “Globalization” via rapid air travel, trade agreements, the internet, and a highly migratory global population are rapidly turning the earth into one very large landscape. Land-use change, once thought to be only a local phenomenon, is now of such a scale as to alter the composition of the atmosphere and to affect climate in far distant locations from the original perturbation. Industry across the globe, driven largely by fossil fuel combustion, has altered the composition of the atmosphere and is now clearly warming the earth's climate and producing complex responses and feedbacks between the earth's surface and its atmosphere. The global changes in the atmosphere, oceans, and land surface have forced the development of large-scale models both to understand the responses and feedbacks of change and to “predict” or forecast possible future changes, with the possibility of interventions to forestall or slow the onset of negative consequences. Since the issues of global change are by definition global, the models of atmosphere, oceans, and terrestrial biosphere are constrained to relatively coarse grids, due largely to computational limits. Unfortunately, in all three “spheres” many of the processes that determine the large-scale patterns occur at sub-grid scales. Dynamic Global Vegetation Models (DGVMs), for example, are typically implemented at 0.5° latitude–longitude resolution (c. 50-km resolution). Yet most of the patterns and processes fundamental to ecosystem modeling are sub-grid scale (landscape and lower levels), rendering global simulations a challenging enterprise.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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References

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