Vegetation increases global climate vulnerability risk by shifting climate zones in response to rising atmospheric CO2
Journal article, 2024

Global climate zones are experiencing widespread shifts with ongoing rise in atmospheric CO2, influencing vegetation growth and shifting its distributions to challenge ecosystem structure and function, posing threats on ecological and societal safety. However, how rising atmospheric CO2 affects the pace of global climate zone shifts is highly uncertain. More attentions are urgently required to understand the underlying mechanisms and quantifications of regional climate vulnerability in response to rising CO2. In this study, we employ nine Earth system models from CMIP6 to investigate global climate zone shifts with rising CO2, unravel the effects of vegetation physiological response (PHY), and categorize climate vulnerable regions depending on the extent of climate zone shifts. We find that climate zone shifts over half of the global land area, 16.8% of which is contributed by PHY at 4 × CO2. Intriguingly, besides warming, PHY-induced precipitation changes and their interactions with warming dominate about two-fifths of PHY-forced shifts, providing potential direction for model improvement in future predictions of climate zone shifts. Aided with PHY effects, 4 × CO2 imposes substantial climate zone shifts over about one-fifth of the global land area, suggesting substantial changes in local climate and ecosystem structure and functions. Hence, those regions would experience strong climate vulnerability, and face high risk of climate extremes, water scarcity and food production. Our results quantitatively identify the vulnerable regions and unravel the underlying drivers, providing scientific insights to prioritize conservation and restoration efforts to ensure ecological and social safety globally.

Rising atmospheric CO 2

Climate zone shifts

Climate vulnerability

Vegetation physiological response

Author

Mingzhu He

Beijing Normal University

Jiangpeng Cui

Chinese Academy of Sciences

Yonghong Yi

Tongji University

Hans Chen

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Geoscience and Remote Sensing

Qian Zhang

Nanjing Tech University

Lili Li

Yunnan University

Ling Huang

Beijing University of Technology

Songbai Hong

Beijing University of Technology

Science of the Total Environment

00489697 (ISSN) 18791026 (eISSN)

Vol. 949 174810

ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system (MERGE)

Lund University (9945095), 2010-01-01 -- .

Subject Categories

Climate Research

DOI

10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.174810

More information

Latest update

10/11/2024