Cascading tipping points of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean.

IF 5.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ENGINEERING, ENVIRONMENTAL Ambio Pub Date : 2024-12-10 DOI:10.1007/s13280-024-02101-9
Ida Kubiszewski, Vanessa M Adams, Rachel Baird, Anne Boothroyd, Robert Costanza, Darla Hatton MacDonald, Glenn Finau, Elizabeth A Fulton, Catherine K King, Matt A King, Delphine Lannuzel, Elizabeth Leane, Jess Melbourne-Thomas, Can-Seng Ooi, Mala Raghavan, Valeria Senigaglia, Natalie Stoeckl, Jing Tian, Satoshi Yamazaki
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Abstract

Antarctica and the Southern Ocean are key elements in the physical and biological Earth system. Human-induced climate change, and other human activities in the region, are leading to several potential interacting tipping points with major and irreversible consequences. Here, we examine eight potential physical, biological, chemical, and social Antarctic tipping points. These include ice sheets, ocean acidification, ocean circulation, species redistribution, invasive species, permafrost melting, local pollution, and the Antarctic Treaty System. We discuss the nature of each potential tipping point, its control variables, thresholds, timescales, and impacts, and focus on the potential for cumulative and cascading effects as a result of their interactions. The analysis provides substantial evidence of the need for more concerted and rapid action to limit climate change and to minimise the impacts of local human activities to avoid these cascading tipping points.

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南极洲和南大洋的层叠引爆点。
南极洲和南大洋是地球物理和生物系统的关键要素。人为引起的气候变化以及该地区的其他人类活动正在导致几个潜在的相互作用的临界点,这些临界点具有重大和不可逆转的后果。在这里,我们研究了八个潜在的物理、生物、化学和社会南极引爆点。其中包括冰盖、海洋酸化、海洋环流、物种再分配、入侵物种、永久冻土融化、局部污染和南极条约体系。我们讨论了每个潜在临界点的性质、控制变量、阈值、时间尺度和影响,并重点讨论了它们相互作用的累积效应和级联效应。该分析提供了大量证据,表明需要采取更加协调一致和迅速的行动来限制气候变化,并尽量减少当地人类活动的影响,以避免这些连锁反应的临界点。
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来源期刊
Ambio
Ambio 环境科学-工程:环境
CiteScore
14.30
自引率
3.10%
发文量
123
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Explores the link between anthropogenic activities and the environment, Ambio encourages multi- or interdisciplinary submissions with explicit management or policy recommendations. Ambio addresses the scientific, social, economic, and cultural factors that influence the condition of the human environment. Ambio particularly encourages multi- or inter-disciplinary submissions with explicit management or policy recommendations. For more than 45 years Ambio has brought international perspective to important developments in environmental research, policy and related activities for an international readership of specialists, generalists, students, decision-makers and interested laymen.
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