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The perpetual state of emergency that sacrifices protected areas in a changing climate
Authors:Dirac Twidwell  Carissa L. Wonkka  Christine H. Bielski  Craig R. Allen  David G. Angeler  Jacob Drozda  Ahjond S. Garmestani  Julia Johnson  Larkin A. Powell  Caleb P. Roberts
Affiliation:1. Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68583‐0915, U.S.A.;2. University of Nebraska, School of Natural Resources, Lincoln, NE 68583‐0961, U.S.A.;3. U.S. Geological Survey, Nebraska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, School of Natural Resources, Lincoln, NE 66583‐0984, U.S.A.;4. Department of Aquatic Sciences and Assessment, Swedish University of Agriculture Sciences, Uppsala, SE‐750 07, Sweden;5. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Cincinnati, OH 45268, U.S.A.
Abstract:A modern challenge for conservation biology is to assess the consequences of policies that adhere to assumptions of stationarity (e.g., historic norms) in an era of global environmental change. Such policies may result in unexpected and surprising levels of mitigation given future climate‐change trajectories, especially as agriculture looks to protected areas to buffer against production losses during periods of environmental extremes. We assessed the potential impact of climate‐change scenarios on the rates at which grasslands enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) are authorized for emergency harvesting (i.e., biomass removal) for agricultural use, which can occur when precipitation for the previous 4 months is below 40% of the normal or historical mean precipitation for that 4‐month period. We developed and analyzed scenarios under the condition that policy will continue to operate under assumptions of stationarity, thereby authorizing emergency biomass harvesting solely as a function of precipitation departure from historic norms. Model projections showed the historical likelihood of authorizing emergency biomass harvesting in any given year in the northern Great Plains was 33.28% based on long‐term weather records. Emergency biomass harvesting became the norm (>50% of years) in the scenario that reflected continued increases in emissions and a decrease in growing‐season precipitation, and areas in the Great Plains with higher historical mean annual rainfall were disproportionately affected and were subject to a greater increase in emergency biomass removal. Emergency biomass harvesting decreased only in the scenario with rapid reductions in emissions. Our scenario‐impact analysis indicated that biomass from lands enrolled in the CRP would be used primarily as a buffer for agriculture in an era of climatic change unless policy guidelines are adapted or climate‐change projections significantly depart from the current consensus.
Keywords:climate change  Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)  emergency haying and grazing  Great Plains  nonstationarity  policy threshold  protected areas  scenario analysis  aná  lisis de escenarios  á  reas protegidas  cambio climá  tico  Grandes Planicies  no inmovilidad  pastoreo y alimentació  n con heno por emergencia  Programa de Reservas para Reservas (CRP)  umbral de polí  ticas                                CRP) 》                                                                      
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