modeling the impacts of climate change – changes made in a species specific modeling system jim...

46
MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation at 9 th Biennial Conference of Research on the Colorado Plateau Oct 29 - Nov 1, 2007 Flagstaff, Arizona

Upload: brenden-kick

Post on 01-Apr-2015

213 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC

MODELING SYSTEM

Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation at 9th Biennial Conference of Research

on the Colorado Plateau Oct 29 - Nov 1, 2007Flagstaff, Arizona

Page 2: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES

MADE BEING MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING

SYSTEM

Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside

Page 3: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

The species specific modeling system is:

http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/missoula/4151/SIMPPLLE/

Page 4: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

SIMPPLLE is designed to:

Be a management tool Provide user access to “system knowledge” Work on computers that managers and stakeholders have Integrate knowledge from research, models and expert opinion Let a user make choices to fit the tool to specific issues

Page 5: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Current version of SIMPPLLE – utilizes a simplified climate variable

Page 6: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Current version of SIMPPLLE – utilizes a simplified climate variable

Only choices availablefor a time step

Page 7: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Bark beetles and drought in Southern California Spruce bark beetle and warming in SC Alaska Cheatgrass and wildfire interaction in Mesa Verde Park

Current version of SIMPPLLE – utilizes a simplified climate variable that has been used to address:

Page 8: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Two studies that are contributing to thechanges in SIMPPLLE:

Regional Dynamic Vegetation Model for the Colorado Plateau: A Species-Specific Approach

The FRAME Project – A Collaborative Modeling Approach to Natural Resource Management at Mesa Verde National Park

Page 9: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Regional Dynamic Vegetation Model for the Colorado Plateau: A Species-Specific Approach

Funded by the National Institute for Climatic Change Research (NICCR)

Page 10: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Regional Dynamic Vegetation Model for the Colorado Plateau: A Species-Specific Approach

Flagstaff

8 million acres +

Page 11: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Objectives:

Develop individual species-specific climate models identifying suitable climate space.

Develop an ecosystem model at the landscape scaleusing the SIMPPLLE framework that simulates ecosystem disturbance processes using species-specific relationships.

Simulate species-specific mortality and migration in response to climate under downscaled GCMscenarios in SIMPPLLE.

Regional Dynamic Vegetation Model for the Colorado Plateau: A Species-Specific Approach

Page 12: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

1. Include climate input

2. Include the “suitable climate space” for each species

3. For each individual plant community, add a comparison of projected climate variables with the suitable climate space for each species

4. Adjust system knowledge on ecological

processes based on this comparison.

Four changes in SIMPPLLE that have to be made:

Page 13: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

SIMPPLLE is designed to provide in one system the interaction between vegetation and other landscape components; land units, aquatic units, and man-made features.

vegetation

dem

Each landscape componentis a separate class inSIMPPLLE with spatialrelationships and attributes derived from the GIS environment

1. Include climate model output as input

Page 14: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

The climate is another class. The attributes and spatial relationships to the other classes comes from adding climate as a “feature class” within ESRI’s ArcGIS.

vegetation

dem

Climate layer – feature class

Page 15: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Our ArcGIS SIMPPLLE toolbox will have one morelayer

Add “climate feature class”

Page 16: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

User interface screen for examiningindividual vegetation units with links to other types of units

Page 17: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Will add the climate unit.

Climate Units

Page 18: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

An expansion of the “species attributes” already in SIMPPLLE.

Visible to users.

We want the users to be able to identify how significant the difference between the projected climate variables and these values are.

We want the users to think about “thresholds” where differences will start to influence ecological processes.

2. Include the “suitable climate space”

Page 19: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Add access to “Suitable Species Space” from the species attributes screen

Page 20: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

A diagram for each variable

precipitation

temperature

Interactions betweentemp and precip

Degree days

Soil moisture

CO2

---

---

other variables

Page 21: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Allow for the delineation of “threshold zones”. If the comparison of simulated climate variables to the suitable space variable fall within a “zone” a specific change to system logic will be made.

Page 22: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation
Page 23: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Zone of no adjustments

Reduce growth, Increase impact of bark beetles

Increase probability ofbark beetles, reduce probabilityof regeneration, increase droughtmortality

Page 24: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Remember, SIMPPLLE is designed to:

Be a management tool Provide user access to “system knowledge” Work on computers that managers and stakeholders have Integrate knowledge from research, models and expert opinion Let a user make choices to fit the tool to specific issues

Page 25: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

This design facilitates:

Be a management tool Provide user access to “system knowledge” Work on computers that managers and stakeholders have Integrate knowledge from research, models and expert opinion Let a user make choices to fit the tool to specific issues

Published in the Proceedings of the Eight Biennial Conferenceof Research on the Colorado Plateau

Page 26: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Regeneration logic Successional pathways (growth) Probability of insect and disease occurrence Next vegetative state resulting from insects and

disease Changes in fire logic – type of fire, fire spread

4. Adjust system knowledge on ecological processesbased on comparison.

Page 27: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Regeneration logic Successional pathways (growth) Probability of insect and disease occurrence Next vegetative state resulting from insects and

disease Changes in fire logic – type of fire, fire spread

4. Adjust system knowledge on ecological processesbased on comparison.

All of these components have logic screens that can be expanded to include columns for: “climate variable x / zone number y”

Page 28: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Regeneration logic

Page 29: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Regeneration logic

Will add columns choices for thecombination of “climate value / zone”with a probability value for the regeneration occurring. Users can select the climate values for each typeof regeneration and modify the defaultprobability values.

Page 30: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Disturbance logic – bark beetles in pinyon pine - juniper

Page 31: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Disturbance logic – bark beetles in pinyon pine - juniper

Will make the logic rules more species specificand add climate variable columns to adjust theoriginal probability of occurrence.

Page 32: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Succession pathways – time is size classes (growth)

Page 33: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Succession pathways – time is size classes (growth)

Time between states – will itincrease or decrease?

Page 34: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

In the default pathways, the occurrence of bark beetles causes enough mortality to dropthe density by one canopy cover class.

Disturbance pathways – the next state if a process occurs

Page 35: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Change in climate variables - additional stress = increased mortality

Disturbance pathways – the next state if a process occurs

Page 36: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Fire logic – type of fire

Page 37: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Fire logic – type of fire

Replace the original moisture and temperature columnswith “climate variable x / zone y” columns

Page 38: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Fire logic – fire spread

Page 39: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Fire logic – fire spread

Replace the original moisture and temperature columnswith “climate variable x / zone y” columns

Page 40: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

The FRAME Project – A Collaborative Modeling Approach to Natural Resource Management at Mesa Verde National Park

Page 41: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Through USGS partners – continue to build on the design of SIMPPLLE

vegetation

dem

To make the other landscape components dynamic interacting with the vegetation changes

Page 42: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Working through theCoLab at ColoradoState University

Page 43: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

To utilize the ObjectModeling System

Page 44: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

To link SIMPPLLE and PRMS

Page 45: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

Debris-Flow Probability Model Susan Cannon, et al., USGS Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP), ARS Aquatic Habitat model

To evaluate other modelsto link with SIMPPLLE

Page 46: MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING SYSTEM Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside Invited presentation

MODELING THE IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE – CHANGES

MADE BEING MADE IN A SPECIES SPECIFIC MODELING

SYSTEM

Jim Chew, Kirk Moeller, Kirsten Ironside

Invited presentation at 9th Biennial Conference of Researchon the Colorado Plateau Oct 29 - Nov 1, 2007

Flagstaff, Arizona