How will climate novelty influence ecological forecasts? Using the Quaternary to assess future reliability

Glob Chang Biol. 2018 Aug;24(8):3575-3586. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14138. Epub 2018 Apr 17.

Abstract

Future climates are projected to be highly novel relative to recent climates. Climate novelty challenges models that correlate ecological patterns to climate variables and then use these relationships to forecast ecological responses to future climate change. Here, we quantify the magnitude and ecological significance of future climate novelty by comparing it to novel climates over the past 21,000 years in North America. We then use relationships between model performance and climate novelty derived from the fossil pollen record from eastern North America to estimate the expected decrease in predictive skill of ecological forecasting models as future climate novelty increases. We show that, in the high emissions scenario (RCP 8.5) and by late 21st century, future climate novelty is similar to or higher than peak levels of climate novelty over the last 21,000 years. The accuracy of ecological forecasting models is projected to decline steadily over the coming decades in response to increasing climate novelty, although models that incorporate co-occurrences among species may retain somewhat higher predictive skill. In addition to quantifying future climate novelty in the context of late Quaternary climate change, this work underscores the challenges of making reliable forecasts to an increasingly novel future, while highlighting the need to assess potential avenues for improvement, such as increased reliance on geological analogs for future novel climates and improving existing models by pooling data through time and incorporating assemblage-level information.

Keywords: Quaternary; climate change; climate novelty; community-level modeling; ecological forecasting; no-analog climate; species distribution modeling.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Climate Change*
  • Ecosystem*
  • Forecasting
  • Fossils
  • Models, Theoretical*
  • North America
  • Pollen
  • Reproducibility of Results