<p>Global climate change is a certainty. The Earth's climate has never remained static for long and the prospect for human-accelerated climate change in the near future appears likely. Freshwater systems are intimately connected to climate in several ways: they may influence global atmospheric proce
Global Climate and Ecosystem Change
โ Scribed by Gordon J. MacDonald (auth.), Gordon J. MacDonald, Luigi Sertorio (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 258
- Series
- NATO ASI Series 240
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Humankind's ever-expanding activities have caused environmental changes that reach beyond localities and regions to become global in scope. Disturbances to the atmosphere, oceans, and land produce changes in the living parts of the planet, while, at the same time, alterations in the biosphere modify the atmosphere, oceans, and land. Understanding this complex web of interactions poses unprecedented intellectual challenges. The atmospheric concentrations of natural trace gases-carbon dioxide (C0 ), methane (CH. ), nitrous oxide (N0), and lower-atmosphere ozone 2 2 (Os)-have increased since the beginning of the industrial revolution. Industrial gases such as the chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), which are not part of the natural global ecosystem, are increasing at much greater rates than are the naturally occurring trace gases. All these gases absorb and emit infrared radiation and thus have the potential for altering global climate. The major terrestrial biomes are also changing. Although world attention has focused on deforestation, particularly in tropical areas, the development of agriculture, the diversion of water resources, and urbanization have all modified terrestrial ecosystems in both obvious and subtle ways. The terrestrial biosphere, by taking up atmospheric carbon dioxide, acts as a primary determinant of the overall carbon balance of the global ecosystem. Although the ways in which the biosphere absorbs carbon are, as yet, poorly understood, the destruction (and regrowth) of forests certainly alter this process.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-ix
Global Climate Change....Pages 1-95
Modeling Climate Change....Pages 97-140
The Responses of Terrestrial Ecosystems to Global Climate Change....Pages 141-164
The Impact of Global Climate Change on Marine Ecosystems....Pages 165-184
Prediction in Chaotic Nonlinear Systems: Time Series Analysis for Aperiodic Evolution....Pages 185-237
The Use of Simulated Annealing to Solve Extremely Large and Complex Problems....Pages 239-241
Predictability and Dimensionality of a Simplified Atmospheric Model....Pages 243-244
Back Matter....Pages 245-252
โฆ Subjects
Ecology; Environmental Management; Theoretical, Mathematical and Computational Physics
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