PA51A-2203
Development and Application of Future Climate Scenarios for Natural Resource Management in Southwestern Colorado

Friday, 18 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Imtiaz Rangwala, Physical Sciences Division, NOAA ESRL, Boulder, CO, United States; Western Water Assessment/CIRES, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, United States, Renee Rondeau, Colorado Natural Heritage Program, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, United States, Carina Wyborn, College of Forestry and Conservation, University of Montana, Missoula, MT, United States; Luc Hoffmann Institute, WWF International, Gland, Switzerland, Katherine Renee Clifford, CIRES, Boulder, CO, United States and William Travis, University of Colorado, Boulder, United States
Abstract:
Locally relevant projections of climate change provide critical insights for natural resource managers seeking to adapt their management activities to climate change in the context of uncertainty. To provide such information, we developed climate scenarios, in form of narratives and quantitative information, of future climate change and its impacts in southwestern Colorado. This information was intended to provide detailed insights into the range of changes that natural resource managers may face in the future. The scenarios were developed in an iterative process through interactions among the ecologists, social and climate scientists. In our scenario development process, climate uncertainty is acknowledged by having multiple scenarios, where each scenario is regarded as a storyline with equal likelihood as another scenario. We quantified changes in several decision relevant climate and ecological responses based on our best available understanding and provided a tight storyline for each scenario to facilitate (a) a more augmented use of scientific information in a decision-making process, (b) differential responses from stakeholders across the different scenarios, and (c) identification of strategies that could work across these multiple scenarios. Here, we discuss the process of selecting the scenarios, quantifying climate and ecological responses, and the criteria for building the narrative for each scenario. We also discuss the process by which these scenarios get used, and provide an assessment of their effectiveness and users’ feedbacks that could inform the future development of these tools and processes. This research involvement and collaboration occurred, in part, as a result of the PACE Fellowship Program that is associated with NOAA Climate Program Office and the U.S. CLIVAR community.