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Human-Modified Temperatures Induce Species Changes: Joint Attribution

Summary/Abstract

Average global surface-air temperature is increasing. Contention exists over relative contributions by natural and anthropogenic forcings. Ecological studies attribute plant and animal changes to observed warming. Until now, temperature–species connections have not been statistically attributed directly to anthropogenic climatic change. Using modeled climatic variables and observed species data, which are independent of thermometer records and paleoclimatic proxies, we demonstrate statistically significant “joint attribution,” a two-step linkage: human activities contribute significantly to temperature changes and human-changed temperatures are associated with discernible changes in plant and animal traits. Additionally, our analyses provide independent testing of grid-box-scale temperature projections from a general circulation model (HadCM3).

Terry Root et al., Human-Modified Temperatures Induce Species Changes: Joint Attribution, 102 PROC. NAT’L ACAD. SCI. 7465 (2005)

Link to Full Study
May 2005
Terry L. Root,* Dena P MacMynowski, Michael D. Mastrandrea, and Stephen H. Schneider
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Synthesis Report
Global
Climate Change Attribution
Impact Attribution
Impact Attribution → Cross-cutting Research
Impact Attribution → Ecosystem Impacts

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