Journal article
Projecting climate change impacts on species distributions in megadiverse South African Cape and Southwest Australian Floristic Regions: Opportunities and challenges
CJ Yates, J Elith, AM Latimer, D Le Maitre, GF Midgley, FM Schurr, AG West
Austral Ecology | Published : 2010
Abstract
Increasing evidence shows that anthropogenic climate change is affecting biodiversity. Reducing or stabilizing greenhouse gas emissions may slow global warming, but past emissions will continue to contribute to further unavoidable warming for more than a century. With obvious signs of difficulties in achieving effective mitigation worldwide in the short term at least, sound scientific predictions of future impacts on biodiversity will be required to guide conservation planning and adaptation. This is especially true in Mediterranean type ecosystems that are projected to be among the most significantly affected by anthropogenic climate change, and show the highest levels of confidence in rain..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We thank the Australian Department of Climate Change, Bilateral Climate Change Partnerships Program for supporting a workshop that contributed to the development of this review.