生物多样性
气候变化
生物群落
生产力
重新造林
自然资源经济学
环境资源管理
碳汇
农林复合经营
环境科学
地理
生态学
生态系统
经济
生物
宏观经济学
作者
Akira Mori,Laura E. Dee,Andrew Gonzalez,Haruka Ohashi,Jane Cowles,Alexandra J. Wright,Michel Loreau,Yann Hautier,Tim Newbold,Peter B. Reich,Tetsuya Matsui,Wataru Takeuchi,K. Okada,Rupert Seidl,Forest Isbell
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41558-021-01062-1
摘要
The global impacts of biodiversity loss and climate change are interlinked, but the feedbacks between them are rarely assessed. Areas with greater tree diversity tend to be more productive, providing a greater carbon sink, and biodiversity loss could reduce these natural carbon sinks. Here, we quantify how tree and shrub species richness could affect biomass production on biome, national and regional scales. We find that GHG mitigation could help maintain tree diversity and thereby avoid a 9–39% reduction in terrestrial primary productivity across different biomes, which could otherwise occur over the next 50 years. Countries that will incur the greatest economic damages from climate change stand to benefit the most from conservation of tree diversity and primary productivity, which contribute to climate change mitigation. Our results emphasize an opportunity for a triple win for climate, biodiversity and society, and highlight that these co-benefits should be the focus of reforestation programmes. Exploring how biodiversity and climate change are interlinked, the authors show that limiting warming could maintain tree diversity, avoiding primary productivity loss. Countries with greater climate change economic costs benefit most: a potential triple win for climate, biodiversity and society.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI