4.8 Review

Ecosystem services provision by Mediterranean forests will be compromised above 2celcius warming

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 18, Pages 4210-4222

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15745

Keywords

climate change; ecological modelling; ecosystem services; fires; forecasting; hazards; Mediterranean forests; scenarios

Funding

  1. Spanish Government through the INMODES project [CGL2017-89999-C2-2-R]
  2. 'Juan de la Cierva' fellowship programs [IJCI-2016-30349, IJCI-2016-30049]
  3. CERCA Program of the Generalitat de Catalunya

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The study found that Mediterranean forests will experience changes in ecosystem service provision under different IPCC climate change scenarios. Climate change will lead to a reduction in regulating services, an increase in climate-related forest hazards, and unclear impacts on material services. The interaction of temperature rise and other drivers will play a key role in determining the extent of these changes.
Forests provide a wide range of provisioning, regulating and cultural services of great value to societies across the Mediterranean basin. In this study, we reviewed the scientific literature of the last 30 years to quantify the magnitude of projected changes in ecosystem services provision by Mediterranean forests under IPCC climate change scenarios. We classified the scenarios according to the temperature threshold of 2celcius set by the Paris Agreement (below or above). The review of 78 studies shows that climate change will lead to a general reduction in the provision of regulating services (e.g. carbon storage, regulation of freshwater quantity and quality) and a general increase in the number of fires, burnt areas and generally, an increase in climate-related forest hazards (median + 62% by 2100). Studies using scenarios above the 2celcius threshold projected significantly more negative changes in regulating services than studies using scenarios below this threshold. Main projected trend changes on material services (e.g. wood products), were less clear and depended on (i) whether or not the studies considered the interaction between the rise in temperatures and other drivers (e.g. forest management, CO2 fertilization) and (ii) differences in productivity responses across the tree species evaluated. Overall, the reviewed studies projected significant reductions in range extent and habitat suitability for the most drought-sensitive forest species (e.g. -88% Fagus sylvatica), while the amount of habitat available for more drought-tolerant species will remain stable or increase; however, the magnitude of projected change for these more xeric species was limited when high-end extreme climatic scenarios were considered (above Paris Agreement). Our review highlights the benefits that climate change mitigation (to keep global mean temperature increase <2celcius) can bring in terms of service provision and conservation of Mediterranean forests.

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