Impact of Climate Change on Ecosystem Services

Climate change is one of the most important global environmental challenges in the history of mankind. The change in climate is mainly caused by increasing concentration of Green House Gases in the atmosphere. Climate of the planet earth is always in a state of change as a natural process influence...

詳細記述

書誌詳細
出版年:International Journal of Economic Plants
第一著者: Satish Kumar Bhardwaj
フォーマット: 論文
言語:英語
出版事項: Puspa Publishing House 2016-05-01
主題:
オンライン・アクセス:https://ojs.pphouse.org/index.php/IJEP/article/view/4460
_version_ 1849883207306051584
author Satish Kumar Bhardwaj
author_facet Satish Kumar Bhardwaj
author_sort Satish Kumar Bhardwaj
collection DOAJ
container_title International Journal of Economic Plants
description Climate change is one of the most important global environmental challenges in the history of mankind. The change in climate is mainly caused by increasing concentration of Green House Gases in the atmosphere. Climate of the planet earth is always in a state of change as a natural process influenced by both natural variability and induced environmental changes due to anthropogenic reasons. Moreover Climate change according to Inter Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) refers to ‘a change in the state of the climate that can be identified (using statistical tests) by changes in the mean and/or the variability of its properties that persist for an extended period, typically decades or longer. Climate change will likely put at risk many of nature’s benefits, or ecosystem services, that humans derive from our lands and waters. Climate-mediated loss or disruption of ecosystem functions are very likely to have repercussions for society’s dependence on ecosystems for wild-caught and farmed food, recreation, nutrient cycling, waste processing, protection from natural hazards, climate regulation, and other services. Ecosystem services do not vary independently of one another, and as a result, one general strategy for responding to harmful reductions in one ecosystem service is to boost another ecosystem service, or to reduce interacting stressors. Better management of supporting services in general may provide substantial adaptive capacity for the negative impacts of climate change on other services. Policies and incentives aimed at getting people to behave differently, or change the location and type of livelihoods they engage in, are urgently required. Therefore, to understand the gaps in our scientific understanding of how ecosystem services will respond to climate change is need to be emphasized.
format Article
id doaj-art-6be6ef409a944b46a04c3dd157dbf2d5
institution Directory of Open Access Journals
issn 2349-4735
language English
publishDate 2016-05-01
publisher Puspa Publishing House
record_format Article
spelling doaj-art-6be6ef409a944b46a04c3dd157dbf2d52025-08-20T01:08:06ZengPuspa Publishing HouseInternational Journal of Economic Plants2349-47352016-05-013May, 2Impact of Climate Change on Ecosystem ServicesSatish Kumar Bhardwaj0Dept. of Environmental Science, Dr. Y. S. Parmar University of Horticulture and Forestry, Nauni, Solan, H.P. (173 230), India Climate change is one of the most important global environmental challenges in the history of mankind. The change in climate is mainly caused by increasing concentration of Green House Gases in the atmosphere. Climate of the planet earth is always in a state of change as a natural process influenced by both natural variability and induced environmental changes due to anthropogenic reasons. Moreover Climate change according to Inter Governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) refers to ‘a change in the state of the climate that can be identified (using statistical tests) by changes in the mean and/or the variability of its properties that persist for an extended period, typically decades or longer. Climate change will likely put at risk many of nature’s benefits, or ecosystem services, that humans derive from our lands and waters. Climate-mediated loss or disruption of ecosystem functions are very likely to have repercussions for society’s dependence on ecosystems for wild-caught and farmed food, recreation, nutrient cycling, waste processing, protection from natural hazards, climate regulation, and other services. Ecosystem services do not vary independently of one another, and as a result, one general strategy for responding to harmful reductions in one ecosystem service is to boost another ecosystem service, or to reduce interacting stressors. Better management of supporting services in general may provide substantial adaptive capacity for the negative impacts of climate change on other services. Policies and incentives aimed at getting people to behave differently, or change the location and type of livelihoods they engage in, are urgently required. Therefore, to understand the gaps in our scientific understanding of how ecosystem services will respond to climate change is need to be emphasized. https://ojs.pphouse.org/index.php/IJEP/article/view/4460Climate change, CO2, ecosystem, green house gasses
spellingShingle Satish Kumar Bhardwaj
Impact of Climate Change on Ecosystem Services
Climate change, CO2, ecosystem, green house gasses
title Impact of Climate Change on Ecosystem Services
title_full Impact of Climate Change on Ecosystem Services
title_fullStr Impact of Climate Change on Ecosystem Services
title_full_unstemmed Impact of Climate Change on Ecosystem Services
title_short Impact of Climate Change on Ecosystem Services
title_sort impact of climate change on ecosystem services
topic Climate change, CO2, ecosystem, green house gasses
url https://ojs.pphouse.org/index.php/IJEP/article/view/4460
work_keys_str_mv AT satishkumarbhardwaj impactofclimatechangeonecosystemservices