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CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVA

CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

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CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION. For many years TWS has a philosophy that our best contribution to meeting the threat of climate change was through the protection of standing carbon in forests and woodlands. . e. Ending broad acre land clearing in Queensland over 2004-6 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

Page 2: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

For many years TWS has a philosophy that our best contribution to meeting the threat of climate change was through the protection of standing carbon in forests and woodlands.

Page 3: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

eEnding broad acre land clearing in Queensland over 2004-6 helped Australia meet its Kyoto targets.

Page 4: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

Protecting carbon rich forests can only help…

Page 5: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

TWS FOSSIL FUEL POLICY 2013• Oppose the extraction and use of fossil fuels as an energy source;• Campaign against the exploitation of new fossil fuel basins and large new fossil fuel developments; • Campaign for new laws and improved corporate behaviour that deliver a rapid transition away from

fossil fuels.

Page 6: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

Fossil Fuels Campaign

Page 7: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

BIG NUMBERS• Maules Creek – 500 megatonnes CO2 equivalent• Pilliga/Channel Country – 10 gigatonnes CO2 equivalent• Canning Basin – 25 gigatonnes CO2 equivalent• Arckaringa – 100 gigatonnes CO2 equivalent• Great Australian Bight – 10 gigatonnes CO2 equivalent

Page 8: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

Humans are affecting the atmosphere…

Page 9: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

• Geographic range shifts (mainly south, some upwards)

• Life cycles (eg. advances in flowering, bird migration)

• Genetic change (heat shock proteins)

• Body size (latitudinal clines shifting)

• Warm-adapted species in communities increasing at expense of cool-adapted

We are already seeing….

Page 10: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

What to expect in the future

• Range expansions at cooler boundaries, contractions at warmer boundaries, many overall range contractions

• Decoupling of current day species interactions• Population losses under climatic stress• Shifts in ecotones• Novel communities• Increased extinction rates

…more of the same…but accelerating…

Page 11: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

• Long term drying trend in south east

• “Big Dry” 1997-2009 driest period on record, surpassing “Federation” & “WWII” droughts

• 10-20% reduction in late autumn/winter rainfall during last 2 decades

Some places getting drier, others wetter…….

Page 12: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

Global predictions of extinction rates

• Thomas et al (2004): 18 – 35% of species predicted to be “committed to extinction” or highly threatened by climate change by 2050

• IPCC (2007): 20-30% of species likely to be at increasingly high risk of extinction at 2-3oC above pre-industrial levels

• Warren (2011): 40% species at risk of extinction at 4oC

Page 13: CLIMATE CHANGE AND NATURE CONSERVATION

• Alpine zone• Coastal wetlands• Freshwater wetlands & rivers• North QLD Wet Tropics• South-west WA • Coral reefs

Ecosystems most at risk