Department of Integrative Biology and Evolution, University of Veterinary Medicine, Vienna, Konrad Lorenz Institute of Ethology, Savoyenstraße 1a, A-1160, Vienna, Austria.
Glob Chang Biol. 2012 Sep;18(9):2707-19. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02736.x. Epub 2012 Jun 12.
Sea-level rise (SLR) due to global warming will result in the loss of many coastal areas. The direct or primary effects due to inundation and erosion from SLR are currently being assessed; however, the indirect or secondary ecological effects, such as changes caused by the displacement of human populations, have not been previously evaluated. We examined the potential ecological consequences of future SLR on >1,200 islands in the Southeast Asian and the Pacific region. Using three SLR scenarios (1, 3, and 6 m elevation, where 1 m approximates most predictions by the end of this century), we assessed the consequences of primary and secondary SLR effects from human displacement on habitat availability and distributions of selected mammal species. We estimate that between 3-32% of the coastal zone of these islands could be lost from primary effects, and consequently 8-52 million people would become SLR refugees. Assuming that inundated urban and intensive agricultural areas will be relocated with an equal area of habitat loss in the hinterland, we project that secondary SLR effects can lead to an equal or even higher percent range loss than primary effects for at least 10-18% of the sample mammals in a moderate range loss scenario and for 22-46% in a maximum range loss scenario. In addition, we found some species to be more vulnerable to secondary than primary effects. Finally, we found high spatial variation in vulnerability: species on islands in Oceania are more vulnerable to primary SLR effects, whereas species on islands in Indo-Malaysia, with potentially 7-48 million SLR refugees, are more vulnerable to secondary effects. Our findings show that primary and secondary SLR effects can have enormous consequences for human inhabitants and island biodiversity, and that both need to be incorporated into ecological risk assessment, conservation, and regional planning.
由于全球变暖导致的海平面上升(SLR)将导致许多沿海地区的消失。目前正在评估由于 SLR 引发的淹没和侵蚀所造成的直接或主要影响;然而,间接或次要的生态影响,如由于人口迁移而引起的变化,尚未得到评估。我们研究了未来 SLR 对东南亚和太平洋地区 1200 多个岛屿的潜在生态影响。使用三种 SLR 情景(海平面上升 1、3 和 6 米,其中 1 米近似于本世纪末的大多数预测),我们评估了人类迁移引发的主要和次要 SLR 影响对选定哺乳动物物种栖息地可利用性和分布的影响。我们估计,这些岛屿的沿海地区有 3-32%可能由于主要影响而消失,因此,将有 8-5200 万人成为 SLR 难民。假设淹没的城市和集约农业区将与内陆地区的同等面积的栖息地损失一起重新安置,我们预计,在中度范围损失情景下,二级 SLR 影响可能导致比主要影响更高的范围损失百分比,而在最大范围损失情景下,则为至少 10-18%的样本哺乳动物和 22-46%的样本哺乳动物。此外,我们发现有些物种比主要影响更容易受到次要影响。最后,我们发现脆弱性存在高度的空间差异:大洋洲岛屿上的物种更容易受到主要 SLR 影响,而印度-马来西亚群岛上的物种,可能有 7-4800 万 SLR 难民,更容易受到二级影响。我们的研究结果表明,主要和次要 SLR 影响可能对人类居民和岛屿生物多样性产生巨大影响,因此都需要纳入生态风险评估、保护和区域规划。