Global Biodiversity Scenarios for the Year 2100

Osvaldo E. Sala(Agricultural Plant Physiology and Ecology Research Institute), F. Stuart Chapin(University of Alaska Fairbanks), Iii., Juan J. Armestó(University of Chile), Eric L. Berlow(University of California, Berkeley), Janine Bloomfield(Environmental Defense Fund), Rodolfo Dirzo(Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), Elisabeth Huber-Sanwald(Technical University of Munich), Laura Huenneke(New Mexico State University), Robert B. Jackson(Duke University), Ann P. Kinzig(Arizona State University), Rik Leemans(National Institute for Public Health and the Environment), David M. Lodge(University of Notre Dame), Harold A. Mooney(Stanford University), Martı́n Oesterheld(Agricultural Plant Physiology and Ecology Research Institute), N. LeRoy Poff(Colorado State University), Martin T. Sykes(Lund University), Brian Walker(University of Alaska Fairbanks), Marilyn D. Walker(University of Alaska Fairbanks), Diana H. Wall(Colorado State University)
Science
March 10, 2000
Cited by 9,175

Abstract

Scenarios of changes in biodiversity for the year 2100 can now be developed based on scenarios of changes in atmospheric carbon dioxide, climate, vegetation, and land use and the known sensitivity of biodiversity to these changes. This study identified a ranking of the importance of drivers of change, a ranking of the biomes with respect to expected changes, and the major sources of uncertainties. For terrestrial ecosystems, land-use change probably will have the largest effect, followed by climate change, nitrogen deposition, biotic exchange, and elevated carbon dioxide concentration. For freshwater ecosystems, biotic exchange is much more important. Mediterranean climate and grassland ecosystems likely will experience the greatest proportional change in biodiversity because of the substantial influence of all drivers of biodiversity change. Northern temperate ecosystems are estimated to experience the least biodiversity change because major land-use change has already occurred. Plausible changes in biodiversity in other biomes depend on interactions among the causes of biodiversity change. These interactions represent one of the largest uncertainties in projections of future biodiversity change.


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