Protected areas’ role in climate-change mitigation
Author(s)
Melillo, Jerry M.; Lu, Xiaoliang; Kicklighter, David W.; Reilly, John M.; Cai, Yongxia; Sokolov, Andrei P.; ... Show more Show less
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Globally, 15.5 million km2 of land are currently identified as protected areas, which provide society with many ecosystem services including climate-change mitigation. Combining a global database of protected areas, a reconstruction of global land-use history, and a global biogeochemistry model, we estimate that protected areas currently sequester 0.5 Pg C annually, which is about one fifth of the carbon sequestered by all land ecosystems annually. Using an integrated earth systems model to generate climate and land-use scenarios for the twenty-first century, we project that rapid climate change, similar to high-end projections in IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report, would cause the annual carbon sequestration rate in protected areas to drop to about 0.3 Pg C by 2100. For the scenario with both rapid climate change and extensive land-use change driven by population and economic pressures, 5.6 million km2 of protected areas would be converted to other uses, and carbon sequestration in the remaining protected areas would drop to near zero by 2100.
Date issued
2015-10Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Center for Global Change Science; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Joint Program on the Science & Policy of Global ChangeJournal
Ambio
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Citation
Melillo, Jerry M., Xiaoliang Lu, David W. Kicklighter, John M. Reilly, Yongxia Cai, and Andrei P. Sokolov. “Protected Areas’ Role in Climate-Change Mitigation.” Ambio 45, no. 2 (October 16, 2015): 133–145.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0044-7447
1654-7209