Climate Variability and Change in High Elevation Regions: Past, Present and Future

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CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND CHANGE IN HIGH ELEVATION

REGIONS: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE

HENRY F. DIAZ 1, MARTIN GROSJEAN 2 and LISA GRAUMLICH 3


1 Climate Diagnostics Center, NOAA, 325 Broadway, Boulder, CO 80305, U.S.A.
E-mail: [email protected]
2 NCCR Climate, University of Bern, 9 Erlachstrasse, 3012 Bern, Switzerland
3 Big Sky Institute, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717, U.S.A.

Abstract. This special issue of Climatic Change contains a series of research and review articles,
arising from papers that were presented and discussed at a workshop held in Davos, Switzerland
on 25–28 June 2001. The workshop was titled ‘Climate Change at High Elevation Sites: Emerging
Impacts’, and was convened to reprise an earlier conference on the same subject that was held in
Wengen, Switzerland in 1995 (Diaz et al., 1997). The Davos meeting had as its main goals, a discus-
sion of the following key issues: (1) reviewing recent climatic trends in high elevation regions of the
world, (2) assessing the reliability of various biological indicators as indicators of climatic change,
and (3) assessing whether physical impacts of climatic change in high elevation areas are becoming
evident, and to discuss a range of monitoring strategies needed to observe and to understand the
nature of any changes.

1. Why the Focus on Mountains?

The world’s mountain systems, including the people in them, have gained an inter-
national focus during the last few decades. In many respects, the United Nations’
International Year of Mountains–2002 is the culmination of a long process involv-
ing research, development of research networks, a greater awareness by various
sectors of society of the critical importance of mountain regions for a sustainable
future, and recognition of that fact by policy makers.
Past efforts and accomplishments in this area include the U.N.’s Environmen-
tal Scientific and Cultural Organization’s (UNESCO) Man and the Biosphere
(MAB-6) programme beginning in 1971, the successive worldwide establishment
of regional multinational research institutions and cross-border research and in-
formation networks, the recognition of ‘Mountains’ in the political Agenda 21 of
the U.N. Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) 1992 in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil (Chapter 13), and the follow-up Earth Summits known as Rio+5
and Rio+10, finally leading to the start of the Mountain Research Initiative (MRI)
in 2001 (Becker and Bugmann, 2001). The MRI is an international collaborative
research effort that involves the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme
(IGBP), the Global Terrestrial Observing System (GTOS) and the International Hu-

Climatic Change 59: 1–4, 2003.


© 2003 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands.
2 HENRY F. DIAZ ET AL.

man Dimensions of Global Change programme (IHDP) – a truly interdisciplinary


approach.
Mountains cover 25% of the global land surface, providing home and living
space for 26% of the world’s population. In arid and semi-arid areas, where water
is critical, mountains provide as much as 90–100% of the freshwater resources for
drinking, irrigation, and industrial supply in the surrounding lowlands (Meybeck et
al., 2001). Mountains have also been shown to be hotspots of biodiversity – reason
enough for the world’s nations to establish a firm commitment to help sustain
mountain environments in the future (NRC, 1999).

2. Climatic Changes and Mountains

Mountains are unique ecosystems covering all latitudinal belts and encompassing
within them all the earth’s climatic zones. Mountains are widely recognized as
containing highly diverse and rich ecosystems, and thus, they are key elements
of the global geosphere-biosphere system. At the same time, mountains contain
ecosystems that are quite sensitive and highly vulnerable to natural risks, disasters,
and ecosystem changes, be it through the occurrence of rapid mass movements,
such as landslides, or via slow land degradation due to human activities, with all
the attendant socioeconomic consequences (Messerli and Ives, 1997).
Many studies (e.g., Thompson, 2000) suggest that high elevation environments,
comprising glaciers, snow, permafrost, water, and the uppermost limits of vegeta-
tion and other complex life forms are among the most sensitive to climatic changes
occurring on a global scale. The stratified, elevationally-controlled vegetation belts
found on mountain slopes represents an analogue to the different latitudinally-
controlled climatic zones, but these condensed vertical gradients are capable of
producing unique hotspots of biodiversity, such as those that serve as habitat for
a variety of species ranging from butterflies, frogs and toads, to species of birds,
trout and salmon. High relief and high gradients make mountain ecosystems very
vulnerable to slight changes of temperatures and to extreme precipitation events.
Likewise, mountains provide life-sustaining water for most regions of the world.
The critical function of mountains as seasonal and longer-term water storage im-
plies that climatic and other environmental changes in the world’s mountains will
have a large impact, not only on those immediate regions, but for a much greater
area as well. In essence, mountain regions provide a discreet quantifiable domain
where relatively small perturbations in global processes, can cascade down to pro-
duce large changes in most or all of the myriad interdependent mountain systems,
from its hydrological cycle to its complex fauna and flora, and the people that
depend on those resources.
What will changes in global climate mean at the regional scale? Are moun-
tains intrinsically more sensitive than other ecosystems? How big of a threat to
the future of mountain regions is global climate change? Are we monitoring the
CLIMATE VARIABILITY AND CHANGE IN HIGH ELEVATION REGIONS 3

right variables? Are the relevant observing systems adequate to the task? Can we
identify critical systems at risk (i.e., ‘canaries in the coal mine’) that will alert us
to imminent and perhaps irreversible changes impacting montane systems?
We do not yet have the answers to these questions. But, in this volume, we
see evidence that investigations of mountain ecosystems may provide critical in-
sights into understanding climate variability and its impacts. A particular and
unique feature of mountain ecosystems is the steep temperature gradients due to
the complex topography. Changes in temperature, together with humidity, and in
the occurrence of extreme climatic events, are some of the key impacts expected
under global climate change. Temperature and humidity changes imply changes in
sensible and latent heat fluxes, which are modulated by the atmospheric circulation
on different space and time scales, and which in turn control many biogeochemical
processes, including non-linear effects, thresholds, and phase-transitions. Exam-
ples are growth limits for plants near the timberline or at the upper limit of the
alpine life zones. Temperature also controls the volatility of many toxic substances
(e.g., volatile organic compounds, mercury). Studies have shown that cold high
mountain regions are preferred areas for atmospheric scavenging and deposition.
Among the most important thresholds of the global ecosystem is the phase
transition of the water molecule from its liquid to the solid state around 0 ◦ C.
Particularly in mid- and low-latitude areas of the globe, this threshold plays a strong
role in mountain areas, be it at daily scales (e.g., frost cycles) or at multi-annual to
decadal or centennial scales (e.g., permafrost and glaciers). In the frozen form of
snow and ice, water is naturally stored in mountains and buffers seasonal and inter-
annual water shortage due to climate variability. For example, although the Alps
cover only 23% of the Rhine River catchment, in the dry summer of 1976, snow
and ice melt from the mountains contributed as much as 95% of the total Rhine
discharge into the North Sea. Small temperature changes around the 0 ◦ C threshold
strongly modulate the amount and timing of runoff and peak discharge in rivers
and thus control floods. Water, snow, ice, and freeze-thaw cycles are prominent
weathering agents, account for a wide range of natural hazards, and are a key com-
ponent for a number of socio-economic activities, including tourism and energy
production.
These are some of the reasons why we focus on climatic changes in mountain
regions in the present volume, particularly on changes in temperature, the water
cycle, the cryosphere, and on selected ecosystem responses in some mountain
areas. We fully recognize that there are many other equally important scientific
issues related to mountain research, and it is not our intent here to be all-inclusive.
More comprehensive reviews have appeared in the literature (IPCC, 1996; Messerli
and Ives, 1997), although in the more recent IPCC assessment reports (e.g., IPCC,
2001) the subject of changes induced by global climate change in mountain envi-
ronments is not developed explicitly, and instead must be found in other contexts.
However, the subject matter is extremely important for a variety of reasons (see,
4 HENRY F. DIAZ ET AL.

e.g., Schimel et al., 2002), and the present volume addresses some of the key issues
regarding climatic change in high elevation regions.
Mountain research requires a truly inter- and multidisciplinary approach that
includes the natural, social, health, and engineering sciences (Messerli and Bern-
baum, 2002). Within that framework, our goal as organizers of the Davos work-
shop, is to present new information about recent trends and impacts of climate
variability and climate change in mountain regions. The articles in this special
issue address findings from observations applicable on multiple time and spatial
scales, as well as from modeling work; they deal with some of the more impor-
tant elements in mountain research, and particularly with issues related to global
climate change. As noted above, this issue occupies an important place in national
and international scientific activities because of its wide-ranging impacts on bio-
geophysical and socio-economic systems. This volume may be viewed as one
contribution towards the goal of future sustainability of our mountain regions.

References

Becker A. and Bugman, H.: 2001, Global Change and Mountain Regions. The Mountain Research
Initiative, IGBP Report 49.
Diaz, H. F., Beniston, M., and Bradley, R. S. (eds.): 1997, Climatic Change at High Elevation Sites,
Kluwer Acad. Publ., Dordrecht, p. 298.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC): 1996, in Watson, R. T., Zinyowera, M. C.,
Moss, R. H., and Dokken, D. J. (eds.), Climate Change 1995. Impacts, Adaptations and Mitiga-
tion of Climate Changes: Scientific Technical Analyses, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,
p. 878.
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC): 2001, in McCarthy, J. J., Canziani, O. F., Leary,
N. A., Dokken, D. J., and White, K. S. (eds.), Climate Change 2001. Impacts, Adaptation, and
Vulnerability, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, p. 1,032.
Messerli, B. and Ives, J. D. (eds.): 1997, Mountains of the World: A Global Priority, Parthenon, New
York, p. 495.
Messerli, B. and Bernbaum E.: 2002, Bishkek Global Mountain Summit Paper D2, http://www.
mtnforum.org/bgms/paperd2.htm
Meybeck, M., Green, P., and Vörösmart, C.: 2001, ‘A New Typology for Mountains and Other Relief
Classes: An Application to Global Continental Water Resources and Population Distribution’,
Mountain Res. Develop. 21, 34–45.
National Research Council (NRC): 1999, Our Common Journey: A Transition Toward Sustainability,
National Academy Press, Washington, D.C., p. 363.
Schimel, D., Kittel, T. G. F., Running, S., Monson, R., Turnipseed, A., and Anderson, D.: 2002,
‘Carbon Sequestration Studied in Western U.S. Mountains’, EOS 83, 445, 449.
Thompson, L. G.: 2000, ‘Ice Core Evidence for Climate Changes in the Tropics: Implications for
Our Future’, Quat. Sci. Rev. 19, 19–35.

(Received 25 October 2002; in revised form 6 January 2003)

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