Department of Biological Sciences and Institute for the Study of the Environment, Sustainability, and Energy, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL, United States of America.
Environmental Studies Department, Center for Integrated Spatial Research, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2020 May 29;15(5):e0233005. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0233005. eCollection 2020.
Helping the world's coastal communities adapt to climate change impacts requires evaluating the vulnerability of coastal communities and assessing adaptation options. This includes understanding the potential for 'natural' infrastructure (ecosystems and the biodiversity that underpins them) to reduce communities' vulnerability, alongside more traditional 'hard' infrastructure approaches. Here we present a spatially explicit global evaluation of the vulnerability of coastal-dwelling human populations to key climate change exposures and explore the potential for coastal ecosystems to help people adapt to climate change (ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA)). We find that mangroves and coral reefs are particularly well situated to help people cope with current weather extremes, a function that will only increase in importance as people adapt to climate change now and in coming decades. We find that around 30.9 million people living within 2km of the coast are highly vulnerable to tropical storms and sea-level rise (SLR). Mangroves and coral reefs overlap these threats to at least 5.3 and 3.4 million people, respectively, with substantial potential to dissipate storm surges and improve resilience against SLR effects. Significant co-benefits from mangroves also accrue, with 896 million metric tons of carbon stored in their soils and above- and below-ground biomass. Our framework offers a tool for prioritizing 'hotspots' of coastal EbA potential for further, national and local analyses to quantify risk reduction and, thereby, guide investment in coastal ecosystems to help people adapt to climate change. In doing so, it underscores the global role that conserving and restoring ecosystems can play in protecting human lives and livelihoods, as well as biodiversity, in the face of climate change.
帮助世界沿海社区适应气候变化的影响需要评估沿海社区的脆弱性,并评估适应选项。这包括了解“自然”基础设施(生态系统及其支撑的生物多样性)减少社区脆弱性的潜力,以及更传统的“硬”基础设施方法。在这里,我们对沿海居住人口受到关键气候变化影响的脆弱性进行了空间明确的全球评估,并探讨了沿海生态系统帮助人们适应气候变化(基于生态系统的适应(EbA))的潜力。我们发现,红树林和珊瑚礁特别适合帮助人们应对当前的极端天气,随着人们现在和未来几十年适应气候变化,这种功能的重要性只会增加。我们发现,生活在距海岸 2 公里范围内的约 3090 万人极易受到热带风暴和海平面上升(SLR)的影响。红树林和珊瑚礁分别与这些威胁重叠至少 530 万人和 340 万人,具有消散风暴潮和提高对 SLR 影响的恢复力的巨大潜力。红树林还带来了巨大的共同效益,其土壤和地上及地下生物量中储存了 8.96 亿吨碳。我们的框架提供了一个工具,用于确定沿海 EbA 潜力的“热点”,以便进行进一步的国家和地方分析,量化风险降低,并指导对沿海生态系统的投资,以帮助人们适应气候变化。这样做强调了保护和恢复生态系统在应对气候变化时可以发挥的保护人类生命和生计以及生物多样性的全球作用。