September 2014 the Audubon Society launched
their climate change campaign with a
most remarkable assertion: 314 of 588 bird species are “on the brink” and “will
lose 50 percent or more of their current ranges by 2080” due to rising CO2.
Avid birder and renowned author Jonathan
Franzen shared his resentment of these claims in a recent New Yorker
article arguing that focusing on futuristic effects of climate change distracts
conservationists from dealing with more immediate problems that can be more
readily dealt with. Others were dubious of the hype because many of Audubon’s
“climate endangered” species have been enjoying increasing
population trends such as the recovering Bald Eagle. While Audubon contends
that their provisional scenarios will help future conservation efforts, others
have whispered that such an apocalyptic media campaign smacks of a crass
fundraising gimmick that relies on dubious models and naive fears.
Are Audubon’s models so reliable they can
justify hyping catastrophic conclusions? Will “Audubon science” promote better
environmental stewardship? Or, are
their projections just another example of misplaced alarmism that has also
obscured the critical issues facing butterflies,
polar
bears, emperor
penguins, golden
toad, pika
or moose.
Although we cannot ascertain Audubon’s intent, nor scientifically validate
their projections for 2080, we can examine the skill of their models and the trustworthiness
of their predictions. This essay illustrates the tremendous uncertainty of
Audubon’s models and highlights some of the current research that presently
contradicts Audubon’s predictions. Models that provide Pervasive Inadequate
Generalizations are PIGs, and
PIGs never provide reliable guidelines for wise environmental stewardship. The technical
report behind Audubon’s apocalyptic media blitz simply merged Bioclimatic
Envelope Models and downscaled Global Climate Models, and both models have been
severely challenged within and without the scientific community.
1. Bioclimatic Envelope Models (BEMs) Uncertainty
Bioclimatic envelope models circumscribe the
range of temperatures and precipitation that are deemed suitable for an
individual species. BEMs are typically not determined by experimentally
evaluating the species tolerances for any given range of temperatures and
precipitation. BEMs simply correlate the temperatures and precipitation within
a species’ current range. The major flaw in these models is the assumption that
a species current range is limited solely by those climatic factors and the
species is currently in equilibrium with those factors. But the availability of
resources and competition with other species will also limit a species range.
Landscape changes and overhunting have reduced many species’ range so that
their current boundaries may only represent a fraction of what is climatically
suitable.
For example, over a century ago the Greater
Prairie Chicken ranged from southern Texas to North Dakota. Historically its
climatic envelope encompassed a wide range of temperatures (both light and dark
green in map below). However due to extensive hunting and habitat loss it was
extirpated from most of its historic range (light green). A bioclimatic
envelope based only on temperatures in its current range (dark green) would
suggest the Greater Prairie Chicken depends on cooler temperatures of the
northern Great Plains. But whether natural or man‑made factors raise
temperatures 1-2 degrees by 2080, those temperatures would still be within the
historical range experienced by Greater Prairie Chicken that once thrived in
the southern end of its range.
Greater Prairie Chicken Historic Range |
BEMs assume each species genetically
conserves its reliance on a specified climate niche over millennia. For that reason we believe species
contracted their ranges towards the equator (or persisted in unique climate refugia)
during the last ice age. Conversely, we must likewise assume birds expanded
their ranges pole‑ward 6000 years ago during the Holocene Optimum when Northern
hemisphere temperatures were 1° to 6°C warmer than today. Typical for most of the northern hemisphere, multi‑proxy
evidence suggests the Great Plains were much warmer than today for most of
the mid‑Holocene (Fig. 2). Whether man-made of natural, if future warming
pushes species pole‑ward, would it be catastrophic as Audubon suggests? Or
would species simply re‑colonize habitat that was lost due to the Little Ice
Age between 1300 and 1850 AD? The
only reason species of the Great Plains would not re‑colonize the prolific
grasslands of the Holocene Optimum, would have nothing to do with the current
climate. It has everything to do with fire suppression and the loss of over 90%
of the grasslands in most regions to agriculture and development.
BEMs are not determined by a species’
physiological limits. Indeed those limits have never been determined for most
species. In addition, given that many species are confined to unique habitat
and plant associations, a species’ current range is in large part limited by
the climatic boundaries of its preferred vegetation (i.e. grasslands, forests,
wetlands, etc.). This is why the consensus among conservation biologists is
habitat loss has been the greatest threat to birds. So it is highly likely that the ranges and abundance of bird
species expanded and contracted in concert with expanding plant species during
the Holocene. Just as Holocen warming benefitted grassland expansion, 9000
years ago tree
line expanded to the shores of the Arctic Ocean, 100s of kilometers further
north than observed today. In California researchers
report that Sierra Nevada tree line was at higher elevations for most of
the past 3500 years, but was pushed to lower elevations during the Little Ice
Age. In some regions of Eurasia’s Ural Mountains, the cold of the Little
Ice Age prevented any new trees from spouting for hundreds of years. The
current warming that began 150 years ago has enabled a more productive forest
ecosystem, so we can infer this warming has also been beneficial for bird
species of the forest.
Nonetheless, even if BEMs could fully
determine the historical range of a species’ suitable macro‑climates over
millennia, BEMs cannot predict how birds will exploit the varied habitats and
micro-climates within that range. Paleontologists
are increasingly finding “enclaves of benign environmental conditions within an
inhospitable regional climate” that allowed species to persist during the Last
Glacial Maximum. I have measured micro‑climates within just a 100‑meter radius.
Temperatures along a gravelly roadside were 20° to 30°F
higher relative to the forested area, and 10° to 15° F
warmer than grassy and shrubby areas. In addition to those vegetation effects,
varied topography creates a similar wide array of microclimates between north‑facing
and south‑facing slopes. As daily temperatures fluctuate by 20° to
30°F, birds can easily exploit a wide variety of micro‑climates. It
is likely this great variety of microclimates explains the complex range shifts
that are not predicted by “Audubon science” and why so many species have not
shifted their range at all over the past century. It also highlights a
mechanism that will allow species to persist in their current habitat despite
Audubon’s models.
Recent
surveys of birds in montane California report that the elevation ranges of
223 breeding species identified a
century ago have not altered either their upper or lower range limits. For
those species that did shift their range, just as many species moved down‑slope
as up‑slope (Fig, 3). Again the difference appears to be more a function
micro-habitats than an individual species response to global climate change. Of
53 species that were common to all 3 transects, (Lassen National Park, Yosemite
and Southern California), only 5 species shifted their range in a similar
manner. For 91% of the species, one population moved upslope in one region,
another moved down‑slope or did not shift at all. Furthermore for those species
that moved upslope, increased warmth was unlikely to have been the driving
factor. Researchers reported that “although the northern (Lassen) region barely
warmed on average over the last century, showing localized areas of marginal
warming and cooling, the proportion of bird species shifting there was
comparable to the other two regions that experienced substantial warming.” Such results again argue that BEMs have
very little skill predicting how species’ range will shift. It also suggests
Audubon’s woeful predictions of 341 species “on the brink” are at best
unsupported premature speculation.
Proportion of California birds shifting breeding ranges upslope, downslope and no shift at all |
2. Climate Model Uncertainty
To predict how BEMs would shift in the
future, Audubon science employed IPCC global climate model predictions that
have suggested uniformly and steadily increasing temperatures across North
America (Fig. 4). But downscaled IPCC global climate models are notoriously bad
at simulating local and regional climate. A 2015
study reported, “Examining the local performance of the [global] models at
55 points, we found that local projections do not correlate well with
observed measurements. Furthermore, we found that the correlation at a large
spatial scale, i.e. the contiguous USA, is worse than at the local scale.”
This led the authors to ask if
“the most important question is not whether Global Climate Models can
produce credible estimates of future climate, but whether climate is at all
predictable in deterministic terms.”
Likewise Dr.
Roger Pielke Sr. cited several peer-reviewed papers when he
blogged, “regionally downscaled forecasts from global multi-decadal
climate model predictions have no skill beyond whatever is in the parent
global model.”… “These global multi-decadal predictions are unable to
skillfully simulate major atmospheric circulation features such the Pacific
Decadal Oscillation [PDO], the North Atlantic Oscillation [NAO], El Niño and La
Niña, and the South Asian monsoon.” Yet it those ocean oscillations that are
the major drivers of climate change. Johnstone 2014
wrote that natural shifts in the Pacific Ocean’s circulation “account for more
than 80% of the 1900–2012 linear warming in coastal NE Pacific SST [Sea Surface Temperatures]
and US Pacific northwest (Washington, Oregon, and northern California) SAT [Surface Air Temperatures]. An
ensemble of climate model simulations run under the same historical radiative
[Greenhouse gasses and solar] forcings fails to reproduce the observed regional
circulation trends. These results suggest that natural internally
generated changes in atmospheric circulation were the primary cause of coastal
NE Pacific warming from 1900 to 2012.”
In contrast to Audubon’s press releases
touting modeled results predicting Maryland’s state bird, the Baltimore oriole,
would soon be pushed northward and out of the state by global warming,
instrumental data suggests no such change. Instrumental records highlight a
century long cooling trend in the southeastern USA (Fig. 5), a region that climate
researchers refer to as a “warming
hole”. Additionally the brutal winters and record low temperatures for the
past few years further stand in stark contrast to Audubon’s simulations that
project increasing warmth and northward shifting wintering and breeding
grounds. Those cooling trends do not refute the hypothesis of a warming
contribution from rising CO2, but do demonstrate how greatly
regional temperatures can depart from global climate projections due to natural
dynamics. It also suggests Audubon’s climate science contributes precious
little to bird conservation.
IPCC warming prediction for North America |
North America "warming hole" |
I have always argued that to be good
environmental stewards, we must first understand local climate change, so I am
heartened to see researchers are now realizing the Parmesan
paradigm of a “coherent global climate fingerprint” does not explain
changes in a species range or abundance. Echoing my sentiments, a 2014 research
paper Beyond A Warming
Fingerprint: Individualistic Biogeographic Responses To Heterogeneous Climate
Change In California the authors wrote, “populations respond
to climate locally and local patterns of climate change often
differ substantially from global patterns. As a result, we are unlikely
to diagnose local climate change impacts using a global fingerprint.”
I would add we are also unlikely to diagnose
climate impacts using just regional average temperatures. The “average”
temperatures in California have assuredly increased since the Little Ice Age,
but the average has been driven by rising minimum temperatures, which are typically
driven by land use changes and urbanization effects. While rising minimum
temperatures may impact the rate of snowmelt, rising minimums do not
significantly contribute to heat stress.
Only maximum temperatures exert heat stress
on plants and wildlife, and compared to the 1900-1939 period, maximum
temperatures have declined over most of California (Fig. 6). IPCC climate
models failed to predict these regional cooling trends, in part, because IPCC models run hot
and overestimate
maximum temperatures. Although these cooling trends do not refute the
warming potential of rising CO2, these cooling trends again demonstrate
that natural climate variability can oppose CO2 warming and dominate
surface temperature trends.
California's cooling maximum temperatures |
Allen’s hummingbird is an excellent example
that demonstrates the failure of “Audubon science” when it combines a bad
species BEM with an inadequate climate generalizations. Audubon science
predicts the Allen’s hummingbird will lose 90 percent of its current breeding
range as global warming shifts breeding habitat northward. But as I watch these hummingbirds flit
through my backyard, I know that such a loss will only happen when PIGs fly. In
reality maximum temperatures have been cooling throughout most of their range.
Second, there are 2 subspecies of Allen's hummingbird; one is migratory, and the other
is a non-migratory permanent resident on the Channel Islands off southern
California. As noted in Wikipedia, the non-migratory population dispersed to
the mainland and colonized the Palos Verdes Peninsula of Los Angeles County in
the 1960s. Since that time the subspecies has spread over much of Los Angeles
and Orange Counties, spreading south
through San Diego County. This southward expansion of breeding habitat
towards the warmer regions is the exact opposite of Audubon’s behavioral predictions.
The migratory subspecies’ breeding habitat is
generally restricted to California’s coastal fog belt and extends just into
southern Oregon. Although there was a slight warming along California’s
northern coast since the end of the Little Ice Age, there has been no warming trend
its prime‑breeding habitat since 1950’s as observed in both instrumental data
and isotope
analyses of redwood tree rings (Fig. 7). Again there is no evidence to
support Audubon’s dire predictions.
No warming along northern California coast. |
So why is Audubon straying from habitat
preservation issues to hype unlikely dire predictions that will more than
likely give Audubon a black eye? As Franzen noted, climate change is a “ready-made
meme, it’s usefully imponderable” and that is well understood by Audubon’s new
president and CEO David Yarnold. Yarnold was
not hired for his scientific expertise. He is a journalist. Before Audubon, he
helped the Environmental Defense Fund double their revenues by pushing a
climate change campaign, so it is no surprise that he is repeating those
efforts for Audubon. But the new climate agenda seems more than a fundraising
campaign. There is a definite political agenda. This week Audubon launched a
new social media campaign #ClimateThing. The tactic appears to be less about
protecting birds, but the perpetuating a meme that blames everything from the
war in Syria to prostitution to stray kittens on rising CO2. We are
constantly bombarded with media hype that everything we love is threatened by
climate change. Hijacking the real conservation issues that face birds is just
another example to be used as a political hammer.
Audubon wrote,
“Clean drinking water is a #ClimateThing. Kids’ lungs are a #ClimateThing.
Environmental justice, disease prevention, food security, economic mobility,
family homes, beaches, ski slopes, vineyards, forests, whales, bats,
butterflies, and salamanders–each of these is a #ClimateThing, What is yours? “
So I suggest skeptics respond. Go on to
twitter and tell Audubon your #ClimateThing demands better science, not fear
mongering. Tweet David Yarnold (@david_yarnold) and tell him to get real and
stop hijacking the sincere concerns of so many of its members. Reply to tweets
and link to the analysis here or on my
website and ask for explanations to why “Audubon science” diverges so far from
reality. Ask how lowering CO2 concentrations will reclaim lost grasslands or restore
watersheds that are so critical to birds. Ask how lowering CO2 will protect the
truly endangered species on islands because humans introduced rats, cats and
stoats against which these birds have no defense. Audubon and real conservation
have become another scientific casualty inflicted by the politics of climate
change.
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