Managing Ecosystems in a Changing Climate
Ecologists outline necessary actions for mitigating and adapting to a changing 
climate



Global warming may impair the ability of ecosystems to perform vital 
services—such as providing food, clean water and carbon sequestration—says the 
nation’s largest organization of ecological scientists. In a statement released 
today, the Ecological Society of America (ESA) outlines strategies that focus 
on restoring and maintaining natural ecosystem functions to mitigate and adapt 
to climate change.

“Decision-makers cannot overlook the critical services ecosystems provide,” 
says ESA President Mary Power. “If we are going to reduce the possibility of 
irreversible damage to the environment under climate change, we need to take 
swift but measured action to protect and manage our ecosystems.”

ESA recommends four approaches to limiting adverse effects of climate change 
through ecosystem management:

Prioritize low-alteration strategies. Many ecosystems sequester a sizable 
amount of carbon—simply allowing them to function naturally can significantly 
help mitigation efforts. Deforestation, for example, has a two-fold impact: 
removing agents of carbon sequestration—trees in this instance—while 
simultaneously releasing stored carbon. Therefore, preserving forests is a 
straightforward way to both reduce and offset emissions. 

Critically evaluate management-intensive strategies. Management strategies that 
seek to increase carbon sequestration above natural levels should undergo 
thorough life-cycle analysis and evaluation prior to implementation. For 
example, increasing carbon uptake on agricultural lands—one approach to 
enhancing the sequestration potential of ecosystems—typically requires more 
fertilizer than standard processes; the tradeoff, therefore, is higher 
emissions and pollution associated with fertilizer production.

Acknowledge the ecological implications of geoengineering. Understand the 
potential risks associated with engineering the environment, called 
geoengineering, and the unintended negative impacts that could emerge from 
long-term or widespread use. For example, injecting sulfur particles into the 
atmosphere to reflect solar rays would have a cooling effect but could also 
increase acid rain and destabilize weather patterns.

Address long-term risks. Assess the far-reaching consequences of ecosystem 
alterations. Monitor carbon stores sequestered under given management practices 
and develop or apply models to forecast ecosystem responses several decades 
into the future.

In addition to mitigating climate change, steps should be taken to prepare 
ecosystems to withstand climate change impacts. Human activity has impaired the 
natural resilience of many ecosystems. ESA outlines four adaptation strategies 
to safeguard ecosystem services in the face of climate change:

Take additional steps to protect water quality and quantity. Freshwater 
resources are at particular risk from the interaction of climate change and 
intensification of human use. Rising temperatures have already lowered river 
flows, warmed surface waters and dried out wetlands. Sustaining freshwater 
resources is critical to both environmental and public health.

Enable natural species migration across human dominated landscapes. Create and 
maintain wildlife corridors across jurisdictions and private lands to help 
species relocate and adapt as habitats shift with climate change. Steps should 
be taken to restore the ability of native species to migrate across landscapes 
severely fragmented by human land use.

Improve capacity to predict extreme events. Monitoring and modeling natural 
disturbance and recovery processes at regional scales will help state and 
federal agencies understand and respond to novel rates and intensities of 
environmental change.

Manage collaboratively at the ecosystem level. Many natural resources and 
services, such as fresh water, clean air and crop pollination, are not 
contained within jurisdictional boundaries; resource management should reflect 
this and operate at the ecosystem level.

“Even conservative warming projections show that natural systems will 
experience unprecedented stresses, including shifting habitats and ecological 
processes and more frequent and severe natural disturbances, such as fires, 
floods and droughts,” ESA says in the statement. “These unavoidable changes 
will require management that addresses ecological thresholds, tipping points 
and other sources of uncertainty.”

According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, global temperatures 
could rise 1-6 degrees C by the end of the 21st Century. 

“The sooner such strategies are deployed, the more effective they will be in 
mitigating the extent of change and helping us to adapt to inevitable changes.” 
ESA says in its statement. 

The Ecological Society of America’s statement is available at:
http://www.esa.org/pao/policyStatements/pdfDocuments/Ecosystem Management in a 
Changing Climate.pdf.



Nadine Lymn
Director of Public Affairs 
Ecological Society of America
1990 M Street, NW
Suite 700
Washington DC  20036
202.833.8773 ext. 205
202.833.8775 Fax
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