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© 1992 Oxford University Press

RESEARCH-ARTICLE

Effects of Climate Change and a Doubling of CO2 on Vegetation Diversity

L. ROCHEFORT1 and F. I. WOODWARD2

Department of Botany, University of Cambridge Cambridge CB2 3EA, UK

2 Present address and to whom correspondence should be sent: Department of Animal and Plant Science, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S10 2UQ, UK.

A model is presented for predicting the response of global family diversity to global environmental change. The model assumes that three primary mechanisms determine diversity: the capacity to survive the absolute minimum temperature of a site, the ability to complete the life cycle in a given length and warmth of the growing season, and the capacity to expand leaves in a defined regime of precipitation and vegetation transpiration. The direct effects of CO2 on vegetation transpiration are also included.

About one-third of the floristic regions of the world exhibit increased diversity with a 3°C increase in temperature, a 10% increase in precipitation, and a doubling of the CO2 concentration. The addition of CO2 offsets the increased rates of transpiration, caused by global warming through its capacity to reduce transpiration. As a consequence, the diversity of dry regions displayed the greatest increase in diversity due to increased CO2.


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