Predicting the future Flashcards
1
Q
why prediction?
A
- increasingly important to be able to make predictions about likely changes in the environment (climate change, land use change etc.)
- prediction is the acid test of our ecological understanding
2
Q
how is a forecast made?
A
- study previous trends
- identify the key variables (birth rate, death rate and migration)
- consider likely changes in these variables over time
3
Q
problems with prediction
A
- society may need to make predictions over longer time scales
- the world is a complicated place and driving forces may interact, factors do not act in isolation
- feedback loops may result in more rapid change than expected
4
Q
drivers of change
A
- climate change
- population
- life style
- technology
- global politics
- economics and world trade
5
Q
climate change impacts
A
- sea level rise necessitating a clear response to coastal zone management
- effects on water demand, water availability and flood risk
- effects on future land use cropping patterns and the distribution of farm types and introduction of new crops
- effects on the resilience of biodiversity and on sensitive habitats
- effects on life style choices such decisions about countryside visits, holiday destinations etc.
6
Q
use of scenarios
A
- different scenarios lead to different predictions
- the complexity of interacting factors has led to the development of scenarios
- there are not predictions, they are plausible combinations of future conditions
- usually defined with reference to the indirect drivers of change (demography, politics, economies, technology, culture/belief system)