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An empirical perspective for understanding climate change impacts in Switzerland

Henne, Paul D. and Bigalke, Moritz and Buntgen, Ulf and Colombaroli, Daniele and Conedera, Marco and Feller, Urs and Frank, David and Fuhrer, Jurg and Grosjean, Martin and Heiri, Oliver and Luterbacher, Juerg and Mestrot, Adrien and Rigling, Andreas and Rossler, Ole and Rohr, Christian and Rutishauser, This and Schwikowski, Margit and Stampfli, Andreas and Szidat, Sonke and Theurillat, Jean-Paul and Weingartner, Rolf and Wilcke, Wolfgang and Tinner, Willy. (2018) An empirical perspective for understanding climate change impacts in Switzerland. REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE, 18 (1). pp. 205-221.

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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/67688/

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Abstract

Planning for the future requires a detailed understanding of how climate change affects a wide range of systems at spatial scales that are relevant to humans. Understanding of climate change impacts can be gained from observational and reconstruction approaches and from numerical models that apply existing knowledge to climate change scenarios. Although modeling approaches are prominent in climate change assessments, observations and reconstructions provide insights that cannot be derived from simulations alone, especially at local to regional scales where climate adaptation policies are implemented. Here, we review the wealth of understanding that emerged from observations and reconstructions of ongoing and past climate change impacts in Switzerland, with wider applicability in Europe. We draw examples from hydrological, alpine, forest, and agricultural systems, which are of paramount societal importance, and are projected to undergo important changes by the end of this century. For each system, we review existing model-based projections, present what is known from observations, and discuss how empirical evidence may help improve future projections. A particular focus is given to better understanding thresholds, tipping points and feedbacks that may operate on different time scales. Observational approaches provide the grounding in evidence that is needed to develop local to regional climate adaptation strategies. Our review demonstrates that observational approaches should ideally have a synergistic relationship with modeling in identifying inconsistencies in projections as well as avenues for improvement. They are critical for uncovering unexpected relationships between climate and agricultural, natural, and hydrological systems that will be important to society in the future.
Faculties and Departments:05 Faculty of Science > Departement Umweltwissenschaften > Geowissenschaften > Geoökologie (Heiri)
UniBasel Contributors:Heiri, Oliver
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Further Journal Contribution
Publisher:SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
ISSN:1436-3798
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal item
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Last Modified:23 Apr 2020 15:46
Deposited On:23 Apr 2020 15:46

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