http://www.motherjones.com/news/dailymojo/2004/01/01_556.html

January 9, 2004

Death Warmed Over

A study published Thursday in the scientific journal Nature says that 
global warming at currently predicted rates will doom 15 to 37 
percent of living species to extinction by 2050. The team of 
scientists behind the study called for "rapid implementation of 
technologies" to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases and reverse 
global warming trends that could doom upwards of a million species by 
midcentury.

The study, titled "Extinction Risk From Climate Change," was done by 
a 19-member international team and is the first to produce a global 
analysis with concrete estimates of the effect of climate change on 
habitat. The researchers surveyed habitat decline for 1,103 plant and 
animal species in six bio-diverse regions covering about 20 percent 
of the world's land mass -- Europe; Queensland, Australia; Mexico's 
Chihuahuan Desert; the Brazilian Amazon; and the Cape Floristic 
Region at South Africa's southern tip -- and used computer models to 
simulate how the species, plants, mammals, birds, reptiles, frogs, 
butterflies and other invertebrates, are expected to move in response 
to changing temperatures and climate.

The lead researcher on the study, Chris Thomas of Britain's 
University of Leeds, had this to say:

"The midrange estimate is that 24 percent of plants and animals will 
be committed to extinction by 2050. We're not talking about the 
occasional extinction -- we're talking about 1.25 million species. 
It's a massive number."

Each species needs a very particular climate to survive, though some 
can adapt to change, within limits, or move to more conducive 
climates. Scientists used maps of regions to correlate climate 
changes to the needs of the species that live there. If all species 
are able to disperse or move from regions of climate change, only 15 
percent would be irrevocably headed for extinction by 2050. If no 
species were able to disperse, the extinction rate could rise as high 
as 37 percent.

The scientists say the only way to minimize the extinction rate is by 
reining in emissions: "A rapid shift to technologies that do not 
produce greenhouse gases, combined with carbon sequestration, could 
save 15-20% of species from extinction."

There are skeptics, of course. William O'Keefe, president of the 
George C. Marshall Institute, a conservative science policy 
organization said the research "ignored species' ability to adapt to 
higher temperatures" and assumed that technologies will not arise to 
reduce emissions.

News accounts generally take the study's findings at face value, a 
notable exception being Gregg Easterbrook of The New Republic. 
Easterbrook acknowledges that "species loss is indisputably a 
problem--it's among the few environmental issues where trends are 
negative," and takes care to stipulate that he accepts most aspects 
of global-warming theory and favors greenhouse-gas restrictions. But 
he thinks the study is way off base because computer simulation is a 
notoriously speculative method of prediction:

"[The study is] nothing but computer modeling É computer models can 
be trained to produce any desired result. Computer models are also 
notorious for becoming more unreliable the farther out they project, 
as estimates get multiplied by estimates. This is a 50-year 
projection, and everything beyond the first few years should be 
treated as meaningless statistically, given that tiny alterations in 
initial assumptions can lead to huge swings at the end of a 50-year 
simulation."

Easterbrook also notes that other instances of climate change 
throughout history have not produced the massive species loss 
predicted by this one:

"Past episodes of global warming have not produced the 
mass-extinction that the Thomas computer models project. Global 
average temperatures have risen one degree Fahrenheit in the past 
centuryÉ without any significant effect on speciesÉ European 
temperatures rose naturally by one or two degrees at the end of the 
"Little Ice Age" of the fourteenth through nineteenth centuries. This 
rise did not cause a mass extinction in the region; in fact, it 
appears to have caused few or no extinctions. Why would the same 
level of temperature increase suddenly trigger a mass extinction now?"

The study partly addresses this objection, warning that the scale of 
extinctions this time around could climb much higher because of 
mutually reinforcing interactions between climate change and habitat 
destruction caused by uniquely modern factors.

"The risk of extinction increases as global warming interacts with 
other factors - such as landscape modification, species invasions and 
build-up of carbon dioxide - to disrupt communities and ecological 
interactions."

And London's Independent notes that the global warming currently 
occurring might be more usefully compared with other natural 
disasters that have caused mass extinction, rather than with other 
periods of climate change:

"Five times in the past half-billion years, the fossil record shows 
us, living things have been wiped out over much of the earth. 
Catastrophic changes in climate, or the impact of an asteroid or a 
comet, are the likeliest causes for the five great extinctions which 
geologists and palaeobiologists have identified, ranging from the 
Ordovician-Silurian extinction, of about 439 million years ago, to 
the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction of 65 million years ago, when the 
dinosaurs disappeared. And it is not an asteroid that will have 
caused this, of course: it is us. The Sixth Great Extinction will be 
an entirely human achievement. To our widespread destruction of 
forests and other natural habitats, we are now adding the effect on 
the atmosphere of two centuries of burning coal, gas and oil on an 
ever-increasing scale."

Yet another reason, say many, to reduce fossil fuel emissions, spur 
conservation and invest in renewable energy sources. The Guardian 
says this:

"The only conservation response to climate change that makes any 
sense is to minimise the amount of warming that takes place. ...

Our estimates are only up to the year 2050, and most climate 
projections suggest that as much climate warming will take place 
between 2050 and 2100 as between now and 2050. These new climates are 
likely to make Earth hotter than it has been for 10m years. At that 
time, the bulk of species that now inhabit Earth had not evolved, and 
none of the currently observed biological communities (combinations 
of species) existed.

Serious conservation action means converting to progressively cleaner 
technologies rapidly and widely, and adhering to and tightening up 
international agreements. ...

Some species will actually be extinct by 2050, but probably most of 
the climate-threatened species will simply be in decline leading to 
their eventual extinction over the following decades. Reversing 
warming quickly may allow some, and possibly many, of these 
threatened species to hang on for long enough, until the climate 
improves for them again."


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