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In The News
July 16, 2008
USDA's U.S. Climate Change Science Program: Impact of Climate Change on Ag/Water/Land/Biodiversity
Authors/ Agency:
U.S. Climate Change Science Program (CCSP), USDA
Title
: "Synthesis and Assessment Product 4.3 (SAP 4.3): The Effects of Climate Change on Agriculture, Land Resources, Water Resources, and Biodiversity in the United States."
Date
: May 27, 2008
File
: For .pdf of original report (warning - huge file), click
here
Must sees
: Executive Summary, pages 1-11, contains additional info on insect vectors, diseases, etc.
Media coverage
: Extensive - see
US News & World Report
Summary
:
Copied from the USDA press release. Bold emphases added by CEP staff.
U.S. CLIMATE CHANGE SCIENCE PROGRAM RELEASES REPORT ON THE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON AGRICULTURE, LAND AND WATER RESOURCES AND BIODIVERSITY
WASHINGTON, May 27, 2008 --
The U.S. Climate Change Science Program (CCSP) today released "Synthesis and Assessment Product 4.3 (SAP 4.3): The Effects of Climate Change on Agriculture, Land Resources, Water Resources, and Biodiversity in the United States." The CCSP integrates the federal research efforts of 13 agencies on climate and global change.
Today's report is one of the most extensive examinations of climate impacts on U.S. ecosystems. USDA is the lead agency for this report and coordinated its production as part of its commitment to CCSP.
"The report issued today provides practical information that will help land owners and resource managers make better decisions to address the risks of climate change," said Agriculture Chief Economist Joe Glauber.
The report was written by
38 authors
from the universities, national laboratories, non-governmental organizations, and federal service. The report underwent
expert peer review by 14 scientists
through a Federal Advisory Committee formed by the USDA. The National Center for Atmospheric Research also coordinated in the production of the report. It is posted on the CCSP Web site at:
http://www.climatescience.gov/Library/sap/sap4-3/default.php
The report finds that climate change is already affecting U.S. water resources, agriculture, land resources, and biodiversity, and will continue to do so.
Specific findings include:
Grain and oilseed crops will mature more rapidly, but increasing temperatures will increase the risk of crop failures, particularly if precipitation decreases or becomes more variable.
Higher temperatures will negatively affect livestock. Warmer winters will reduce mortality but this will be more than offset by greater mortality in hotter summers. Hotter temperatures will also result in reduced productivity of livestock and dairy animals.
Forests in the interior West, the Southwest, and Alaska are already being affected by climate change with increases in the size and frequency of forest fires, insect outbreaks and tree mortality. These changes are expected to continue.
Much of the United States has experienced higher precipitation and streamflow, with decreased drought severity and duration, over the 20th century. The West and Southwest, however, are notable exceptions, and increased drought conditions have occurred in these regions.
Weeds grow more rapidly under elevated atmospheric CO2. Under projections reported in the assessment, weeds migrate northward and are less sensitive to herbicide applications.
There is a trend toward reduced mountain snowpack and earlier spring snowmelt runoff in the Western United States.
Horticultural crops (such as tomato, onion, and fruit) are more sensitive to climate change than grains and oilseed crops.
Young forests on fertile soils will achieve higher productivity from elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Nitrogen deposition and warmer temperatures will increase productivity in other types of forests where water is available.
Invasion by exotic grass species into arid lands will result from climate change, causing an increased fire frequency. Rivers and riparian systems in arid lands will be negatively impacted.
A continuation of the trend toward increased water use efficiency could help mitigate the impacts of climate change on water resources.
The growing season has increased by 10 to 14 days over the last 19 years across the temperate latitudes. Species' distributions have also shifted.
The rapid rates of warming in the Arctic observed in recent decades, and projected for at least the next century, are dramatically reducing the snow and ice covers that provide denning and foraging habitat for polar bears.
USDA agencies are responding to the risks of climate change
. For example, the
Forest Service
is incorporating climate change risks into National Forest Management Plans and is providing guidance to forest managers on how to respond and adapt to climate change.
The
Natural Resources Conservation Service and Farm Services Agency
are encouraging actions to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase carbon sequestration through conservation programs.
USDA's Risk Management Agency
has prepared tools to manage drought risks and is conducting an assessment of the risks of climate change on the crop insurance program.
For more information, please visit: *
http://www.usda.gov/oce/global_change/
*
http://www.climatescience.gov/Library/sap/sap4-3/default.php http://www.sap43.ucar.edu/
.
Contact Name:
Maril Hazlett
Contact Email:
info@climateandenergy.org
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