Climate variability and change in the drylands of Western North America |
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Authors: | M.K. Hughes H.F. Diaz |
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Affiliation: | aLaboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA;bCooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) NOAA/ESRL/PSD1, 325 Broadway, Boulder, CO 80305, USA |
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Abstract: | We argue that it is important to expand the consideration of climate in the context of provision of ecosystem services in drylands. In addition to climate change, it is necessary to include climate variability on timescales relevant to human and ecological considerations, namely interannual to decadal and multidecadal. The period of global instrumental record (about a century and a half long at the very most) is neither an adequate nor an unbiased sample of the range and character of natural climate variability that might be expected with the climate system configured as it is now. We base this on evidence from W. N. America, where there has recently been a major multi-year drought, of a scale and intensity that has occurred several times in the last 2000 years, and on attempts to provide explanations of these phenomena based on physical climatology. Ensembles of runs of forced climate system models suggest the next 50 years will bring much more extensive and intense drought in the continental interior of North America. The trajectory followed by the supply of ecosystem services will be contingent not only on the genotypes available and the antecedent soil, economic and social conditions but also on climate variability and change. The critical features of climate on which patterns of plant growth and water supply depend may vary sharply during and between human generations, resulting in very different experiences and hence, expectations. |
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Keywords: | Western North America semi-arid regions natural and anthropogenic climatic change climate variability paleoclimatic reconstructions drought |
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