Climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks

Abstract Climate change poses significant challenges to protected area management globally. Anticipatory climate adaptation planning relies on vulnerability assessments that identify parks and resources at risk from climate change and associated vulnerability drivers. However, there is currently lit...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Julia L. Michalak, Joshua J. Lawler, John E. Gross, Michelle C. Agne, Robert L. Emmet, Hsin‐Wu Hsu, Vivian Griffey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-07-01
Series:Conservation Science and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.12703
_version_ 1811331891041665024
author Julia L. Michalak
Joshua J. Lawler
John E. Gross
Michelle C. Agne
Robert L. Emmet
Hsin‐Wu Hsu
Vivian Griffey
author_facet Julia L. Michalak
Joshua J. Lawler
John E. Gross
Michelle C. Agne
Robert L. Emmet
Hsin‐Wu Hsu
Vivian Griffey
author_sort Julia L. Michalak
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Climate change poses significant challenges to protected area management globally. Anticipatory climate adaptation planning relies on vulnerability assessments that identify parks and resources at risk from climate change and associated vulnerability drivers. However, there is currently little understanding of where and how protected area assessments have been conducted and what assessment approaches best inform park management. To address this knowledge gap, we systematically evaluated climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks. We categorized the spatial scale, resources, methods, and handling of uncertainty for each assessment and mapped which parks have assessments and for what resources. We found that a few broad‐scale assessments provide baseline information—primarily regarding physical climate change exposure—for all parks and can support regional to national decisions. However, finer‐scale assessments are required to inform decisions for individual or small groups of parks. Only 10% of parks had park‐specific assessments describing key climate impacts and identifying priority resource vulnerabilities, and 37% lacked any regional or park‐specific assessments. We identify assessment approaches that match the scale and objectives of different protected area management decisions and recommend a multi‐scaled approach to implementing assessments to meet the information needs of a large, protected area network like the National Park system.
first_indexed 2024-04-13T16:27:35Z
format Article
id doaj.art-562c4b82344d4d48947406745dd0b616
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2578-4854
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-13T16:27:35Z
publishDate 2022-07-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Conservation Science and Practice
spelling doaj.art-562c4b82344d4d48947406745dd0b6162022-12-22T02:39:41ZengWileyConservation Science and Practice2578-48542022-07-0147n/an/a10.1111/csp2.12703Climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National ParksJulia L. Michalak0Joshua J. Lawler1John E. Gross2Michelle C. Agne3Robert L. Emmet4Hsin‐Wu Hsu5Vivian Griffey6School of Environmental and Forest Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USASchool of Environmental and Forest Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USAU.S. National Park Service Climate Change Response Program Fort Collins Colorado USASchool of Environmental and Forest Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USAIllinois Natural History Survey Champaign Illinois USASchool of Environmental and Forest Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USASchool of Environmental and Forest Sciences University of Washington Seattle Washington USAAbstract Climate change poses significant challenges to protected area management globally. Anticipatory climate adaptation planning relies on vulnerability assessments that identify parks and resources at risk from climate change and associated vulnerability drivers. However, there is currently little understanding of where and how protected area assessments have been conducted and what assessment approaches best inform park management. To address this knowledge gap, we systematically evaluated climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks. We categorized the spatial scale, resources, methods, and handling of uncertainty for each assessment and mapped which parks have assessments and for what resources. We found that a few broad‐scale assessments provide baseline information—primarily regarding physical climate change exposure—for all parks and can support regional to national decisions. However, finer‐scale assessments are required to inform decisions for individual or small groups of parks. Only 10% of parks had park‐specific assessments describing key climate impacts and identifying priority resource vulnerabilities, and 37% lacked any regional or park‐specific assessments. We identify assessment approaches that match the scale and objectives of different protected area management decisions and recommend a multi‐scaled approach to implementing assessments to meet the information needs of a large, protected area network like the National Park system.https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.12703biodiversity conservationclimate changeclimate change adaptationclimate change vulnerability assessmentNational Parksnatural resource management
spellingShingle Julia L. Michalak
Joshua J. Lawler
John E. Gross
Michelle C. Agne
Robert L. Emmet
Hsin‐Wu Hsu
Vivian Griffey
Climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks
Conservation Science and Practice
biodiversity conservation
climate change
climate change adaptation
climate change vulnerability assessment
National Parks
natural resource management
title Climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks
title_full Climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks
title_fullStr Climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks
title_full_unstemmed Climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks
title_short Climate‐change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in U.S. National Parks
title_sort climate change vulnerability assessments of natural resources in u s national parks
topic biodiversity conservation
climate change
climate change adaptation
climate change vulnerability assessment
National Parks
natural resource management
url https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.12703
work_keys_str_mv AT julialmichalak climatechangevulnerabilityassessmentsofnaturalresourcesinusnationalparks
AT joshuajlawler climatechangevulnerabilityassessmentsofnaturalresourcesinusnationalparks
AT johnegross climatechangevulnerabilityassessmentsofnaturalresourcesinusnationalparks
AT michellecagne climatechangevulnerabilityassessmentsofnaturalresourcesinusnationalparks
AT robertlemmet climatechangevulnerabilityassessmentsofnaturalresourcesinusnationalparks
AT hsinwuhsu climatechangevulnerabilityassessmentsofnaturalresourcesinusnationalparks
AT viviangriffey climatechangevulnerabilityassessmentsofnaturalresourcesinusnationalparks