Grassy Ecosystems in the Anthropocene

Author:

Stevens Nicola1,Bond William23,Feurdean Angelica456,Lehmann Caroline E.R.78

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom;

2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa;

3. South African Environmental Observation Network, National Research Foundation, Claremont, South Africa

4. Department of Physical Geography, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany;

5. Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK-F), Frankfurt am Main, Germany

6. STAR-UBB Institute, Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania

7. Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom;

8. School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Abstract

As the Anthropocene advances, there are few parts of Earth that have not been impacted by human influence. Humans have had a long-sustained interaction with grassy ecosystems, but they are becoming severely impacted by direct and indirect impacts as the Anthropocene advances. Grassy ecosystems are easy to clear and cultivate, poorly protected, and poorly defined due to legacies of colonial narratives that can describe them as deforested, wastelands, or derived. Climate change, land conversion, and the erosion of the processes that have shaped grassy ecosystems for millennia have had cascading and cumulative impacts on grassy ecosystem extent and integrity. We examine how these changes are impacting grassy ecosystems, more specifically, those that fall into ecosystem uncertain space—a climate envelope where vegetation is not at equilibrium with climate and either grassy or forest ecosystems can occur. It is within this space that climate, CO2, and disturbances (fire, herbivores) interact to determine the presence of grassy ecosystems. Changes to any of these components reduce the integrity of grassyecosystems. The loss of these ancient biodiverse ecosystems means loss of an array of ecosystem services fundamental to the lives of more than 1 billion people alongside Earth-system impacts of altered albedo, carbon, and hydrological cycles.

Publisher

Annual Reviews

Subject

General Environmental Science

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