We applied a recently developed tool to examine the reduction in climate risk to biodiversity in moving from a 2°C to a 1.5°C target. We then reviewed the recent literature examining the impact of (a) land-based mitigation options and (b) land-based greenhouse gas removal options on biodiversity. We show that holding warming to 1.5°C versus 2°C can significantly reduce the number of species facing a potential loss of 50% of their climatic range. Further, there would be an increase of 5.5–14% of the globe that could potentially act as climatic refugia for plants and animals, an area equivalent to the current global protected area network. Efforts to meet the 1.5°C target through mitigation could largely be consistent with biodiversity protec...
The role of bioenergy in climate change mitigation is a topic of heated debate, as the demand for la...
Climate change and land use change often interact, altering biodiversity in unexpected ways. Researc...
International audienceDiscuss this article (0) Comments 2 1 Abstract Because ecological interactions...
The Paris Agreement to keep global temperature increase to well-below 2 °C and to pursue efforts to ...
Climate change is already affecting species and their distributions. Distributional range changes ha...
Climate and land-use change interactively affect biodiversity. Large-scale expansions of bioenergy h...
生物多様性保全と温暖化対策は両立できることが判明 --生物多様性の損失は気候安定化の努力で抑えられる--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2019-12-04.Limiting the magnitude...
Climate change is expected to have significant influences on terrestrial biodiversity at all system ...
Recent assessment reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the Intergover...
Nations of the world have, to date, pursued nature protection and climate change mitigation and adap...
Limiting climate change to less than 2°C is the focus of international policy under the climate conv...
The two most urgent and interlinked environmental challenges humanity faces are climate change and b...
Rapid economic and population growth over the last centuries have started to push the Earth out of i...
Biodiversity loss due to changes in climate and land use has been assessed recently. The earliest bi...
Climate change mitigation through the sequestration of carbon (C), and the protection of biodiversit...
The role of bioenergy in climate change mitigation is a topic of heated debate, as the demand for la...
Climate change and land use change often interact, altering biodiversity in unexpected ways. Researc...
International audienceDiscuss this article (0) Comments 2 1 Abstract Because ecological interactions...
The Paris Agreement to keep global temperature increase to well-below 2 °C and to pursue efforts to ...
Climate change is already affecting species and their distributions. Distributional range changes ha...
Climate and land-use change interactively affect biodiversity. Large-scale expansions of bioenergy h...
生物多様性保全と温暖化対策は両立できることが判明 --生物多様性の損失は気候安定化の努力で抑えられる--. 京都大学プレスリリース. 2019-12-04.Limiting the magnitude...
Climate change is expected to have significant influences on terrestrial biodiversity at all system ...
Recent assessment reports by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and the Intergover...
Nations of the world have, to date, pursued nature protection and climate change mitigation and adap...
Limiting climate change to less than 2°C is the focus of international policy under the climate conv...
The two most urgent and interlinked environmental challenges humanity faces are climate change and b...
Rapid economic and population growth over the last centuries have started to push the Earth out of i...
Biodiversity loss due to changes in climate and land use has been assessed recently. The earliest bi...
Climate change mitigation through the sequestration of carbon (C), and the protection of biodiversit...
The role of bioenergy in climate change mitigation is a topic of heated debate, as the demand for la...
Climate change and land use change often interact, altering biodiversity in unexpected ways. Researc...
International audienceDiscuss this article (0) Comments 2 1 Abstract Because ecological interactions...