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ISSN: 1835-7156

The International Journal of Climate Change seek to create an interdisciplinary forum for discussion of evidence of climate change, its causes, its ecosystemic impacts and its human impacts. The conference and journal also explore technological, policy, strategic and social responses to climate change.

Scope and Concerns

Climate Change: The Evidence

Earth’s climate is one of the pivotal and dynamic forces of the natural history of the earth. Paleoclimatology provides us a long view of the ebb and flow climate changes, and a framework within which to interpret its ecosystemic consequences. In some times and places climate change explains processes of biodiversification, in other times and places a reduction in biodiversity. In this long view, the history of life on earth is integrally related to climatalogical history.

For the first time in natural history, the conscious actions of one creature—homo sapiens—has come to influence the course of earth’s natural history, not just in local ecosystems, but on a planetary scale. This has been the case since humans began a process of populating the whole earth about one hundred thousand years ago. Ecosystems were revolutionised by the sustained yield harvesting technologies of hunters and gathers, then the farming and animal husbandry technologies of self-sufficient peasantries, and most recently and most intensively by the global division of labour of the industrial revolution, market-directed agriculture and the widespread harvesting of forests.

It is now widely accepted that the most recent phase of human society has had an impact on the earth’s climate: greenhouse gases are heating up the earth. Ice that was permanent until recently, is rapidly melting. Sea levels are rising. Extreme weather events are occurring with greater frequency. Different regions are affected by these changes in different ways. However, a wide range of climatic changes can be attributed to patterns of human activity.

Some of the changes we are experiencing today may be part of the course of natural history. Other changes, it seems certain, are the byproduct of human history. Key questions include: how do we measure and explain these changes? And what are their immediate and likely future impacts?

Ecosystemic Impacts

There is the potential for disastrous impacts on ecosystems, communities, species and genetic diversity that could well lead to mass extinctions in a relatively brief period. The special effects of glacial melt on mountain and riverine biodiversity and that of sea level rise on coastal and mangrove systems form a key concern for the future of biodiversity. The effect of climate change on coral reefs is already a major concern. Increased rainfall variability (in especially monsoon regions) could dry up or expand wetlands temporarily which in both scenarios would be disastrous.

The most affected ecosystems will undoubtedly be situated in mountains, forests (especially evergreen types) grasslands, deserts and wetlands. Glacial riverine and coastal ecosystems will also be altered. Knowledge currently available through Dynamic Global Vegetation models that simulate possible changes clearly demonstrate that there will be species loss. Many genetically poorly adapted species to environmental disturbances would inevitably vanish without a trace before scientists can catch the decline.

The specific regional impacts on biomes and the vulnerabilities of different ecosystems across the globe need to be assessed. There are obviously various parallels between some areas, while there are subtle and complex dissimilarities between the changes that are occurring in different parts of the world. These include floods, drought, forest fires, hurricanes and other sporadic events that could devastate endemic species and threaten microhabitats.

Some ecosystems could be highly vulnerable and will not be able to respond even to short term impacts such as natural disasters. In the presence of climate change these short term events could be even more cataclysmic. The possible impacts of invasive alien species that will spread due to climatic change is very little understood and could be devastating.

The possibility of ‘ecological surprises’ in ecologically sensitive areas is a factor that also needs to be addressed. ‘Extreme events’ could be especially damaging. There is thus a great need for scientists and practitioners to be brought on a common platform that will at least reduce the ill effects on species ecosystems and protected areas.

This journal will share international research based on local experiences, so that mitigation and adaptation to climate change can be understood by scientists, policymakers and practitioners concerned with the management of different ecosystems.

Human Impacts

Humans are agents in climate change, as makers of greenhouse gases and their land use patterns.

Humans will also be affected by climate change in many ways: including shifting shorelines, agricultural productivity, food supply, availability of water, the health of populations and extreme weather events. For instance, environment related diseases could spread rapidly in epidemic proportions with changes in water availability and quality.

These impacts will be felt differentially in developed and developing worlds. Marginalized populations of people may not only have their lives and livelihoods affected, but the species abundance and diversity of ecosystems at a landscape level on which they are dependant. In heterogeneous landscapes with a mix of wilderness islands within a changing agricultural environment, urbanization and industrial spread could well increase pressures on protected area networks as the effects of climatic changes increase. Agricultural communities, especially traditional farmers and pastoralists, may be forced to shift into what is now within the protected area networks in developing countries.

Framing Responses

This peculiar creature in natural history, homo sapiens, is increasingly being recognised to an agent of climate change, though the precise mix of natural and human causes has yet to be determined. With conscious agency comes responsibility for the future course of natural history.

On the experience of the past hundred thousand years, humans are clearly capable of adaptive responses, nurturing nature though a period of transition, creating corridors to assist species adaptation and inventing new agricultures which alleviate and mitigate the effects of climate, for instance. Humans are also capable of precautionary action, reducing greenhouse gases for instance as part of a broader strategy of sustainable development.

The key, however, will be the extent to which our species can take a proactive role, be that technological (carbon sequestration and other technologies) or acts of social and political which produce changed patterns of land and energy use. Like no other creature in natural history, and like no other time in this creature’s human history, this is moment when the future of the planet is in our hands. The consciousness which made us a unique species perhaps a hundred thousand years ago, for the first time today puts us in a position of unprecedented responsibility for the course of natural history. Climate change is a key intellectual and practical challenge for today’s science, economics, politics, sociology and ethics.

Editors and Advisory Board

Editors |Advisory Board

Editors of the International Journal of Climate Change: Impacts and Responses

International Advisory Board

  • Viraal Balsari, Vice President, ABN Amro Bank, Mumbai, India.
  • Dr. Erach Bharucha Director, Institute of Environment Education and Research, Bharati Vidyapeeth Univeristy, Pune
  • Tapan Chakrabarti, National Environmental Engineering Research Institute (NEERI), Nagpur, India
  • Amareswar Galla, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
  • Dr. Thomas Krafft, Director, Geomed Research Corporation, Germany
  • Ms. Shamita Kumar, Vice Principal, Institute of Environment Education and Research, Bharati Vidyapeeth Univeristy, Pune
  • Mr. R. Mehta, Advisor, Environment Education, Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India
  • Dr. Kranti Yardi, Senior Faculty, Institute of Environment Education and Research, Bharati Vidyapeeth Univeristy, Pune

Associate Editors


Journal Profile


STATISTICS/CITATIONS

Statistics/citations

At this stage we are unable to provide citation statistics as the journal is relatively new. However, we envisage a high impact factor insofar as the journal is both part of the conventional world of academic publishing and highly visible to internet search engines.


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