Abstract
The Earth’s environment is continuously subjected to various stresses through natural processes and human interference. With the rapid industrialization and population growth that the 20th century has experienced worldwide, however, humankind has added a new dimension of stress to the global environment in general, and mountain regions in particular. In some instances, environmental degradation is inevitable because of the basic requirements of human populations, particularly where those are growing rapidly; in other cases, environmental damage is a direct result of mismanagement and over-exploitation of natural resources (Beniston 2000). The sensitivity of a given mountain region to changes in environmental conditions depends largely upon the climatic, geological and biological features of the region considered. Changes in these controlling factors, particularly through direct human interference or indirect effects such as climatic change, may have significant impacts upon numerous mountain environments.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
References
Beniston, M. (2000). “Environmental change in mountains and uplands.” Arnold Publishers, London, and Oxford University Press, New York.
Beniston, M. (2002). Climatic change. Implications for the hydrological cycle and for water management. In “Advances in global change research.” (M. Beniston, Ed.). Kluwer, Dordrecht.
Beniston, M., and Jungo, P. (2002). Shifts in the distributions of pressure, temperature and moisture in the alpine region in response to the behavior of the North Atlantic Oscillation. Theoretical and Applied Climatology 71, 29–42.
Carver, M., and Nakarmi, G. (1995). The effect of surface conditions on soil erosion and stream suspended sediments. In “Challenges in resource dynamics in Nepal: Processes, trends and dynamics in middle mountain watersheds.” Proceedings of an ICIMOD Workshop (International Center for Integrated Mountain Development), (H. Schreier, P. B. Shah, and S. Brown, Eds.), pp. 155–162. Kathmandu, Nepal.
Dikau, R., Gärtner, H., Holl, B., Kienholz, H., Manni, P., and Zimmermann, M. (1997). Untersuchungen zur Murgangaktivität in Mattertal, Wallis, Schweiz. In “Proceedings of the Interpraevent Conference, Garmisch-Partenkirchen,” pp. 397–408.
Fitzharris, B. B., Allison, I., Braithwaite, R. J., Brown, J., Foehn, P., Haeberli, W., Higuchi, K., Kotlyakov, V. M., Prowse, T. D., Rinaldi, C. A., Wadhams, P., Woo, M. K., and Youyu Xie (1996). The Cryosphere: Changes and their impacts. In “Second Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).” Chapter 5, pp. 241–265. Cambridge University Press.
Giorgi, F., and Mearns, L. O. (1991). Approaches to the simulation of regional climate change: A review. Reviews of Geophysics 29, 191–216.
Goyette, S., Beniston, M., Jungo, P., Caya, D., and Laprise, R. (2001). Numerical investigation of an extreme storm with the Canadian Regional Climate Model: The case study of windstorm Vivian, Switzerland, February 27, 1990. Climate Dynamics 18, 145–168.
Goyette, S., Brasseur, O., and Beniston, M. (2003). Application of a new wind gust parameterisation: Multi-scale case studies performed with the Canadian RCM. Journal of Geophysical Research (in press).
Haeberli, W., and Beniston, M. (1998). Climate change and its impacts on glaciers and permafrost in the Alps. Ambio 27, 258–265.
Hastenrath, S., and Greischar, L. (1997). Glacier recession on Kilimanjaro, East Africa, 1912–89. Journal of Glaciology 43, 455–459.
IPCC (2001). “Climate change. The IPCC Third Assessment Report.” Cambridge University Press, Cambridge and New York. Volumes I (The Scientific Basis), II (Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability) and III (Mitigation).
Johnson, E. A. (1992). “Fire and vegetation dynamics. Studies from the North American boreal forest.” Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Jungo, P., and Beniston, M. (2001). Changes in the anomalies of extreme temperature anomalies in the 20th century at Swiss climatological stations located at different latitudes and altitudes. Theoretical and Applied Climatology 69, 1–12.
Jungo, P., Goyette, S., and Beniston, M. (2002). Daily wind gust speed probabilities over Switzerland according to three types of synoptic circulation. International Journal of Climatology 22, 485–499.
Keller, F., Kienast, F., and Beniston, M. (2000). Evidence of the response of vegetation to environmental change at high elevation sites in the Swiss Alps. Regional Environmental Change 2, 70–77.
King, G. A., and Neilson, R. P. (1992). The transient response of vegetation to climate change: A potential source of CO2 to the atmosphere. Water, Air and Soil Pollution 64, 365–383.
Laprise, R, Caya, D., Giguère, M., Bergeron, G., Côté, H., Blanchet, J.-R, Boer, G. J., and McFarlane, N. A. (1998). Climate of Western Canada under current and enhanced greenhouse gas concentration as simulated by the Canadian Regional Climate Model. Atmosphere and Oceans 36, 119–167.
Meier, M. (1998). Land ice on Earth: A beginning of a global synthesis. In “Unpublished transcript of the 1998 Walter B. Langbein Memorial Lecture,” American Geophysical Union Spring Meeting, Boston, MA, 26 May 1998.
Shiklomanov, I. A., Ed. (2001). World water resources at the beginning of the 21st century. UNESCO Publications, Paris.
Thompson, L. G., Mosley-Thompson, E., and Henderson, K. A. (2000). Ice core paleoclimate records in tropical South America since the Last Glacial Maximum. Journal of Quaternary Science 15, 377–394.
Zorita, E., and von Storch, H. (1999). The analog method — a simple statistical downscaling technique: Comparison with more complicated methods. Journal of Climate 12, 2474–2489.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 Springer
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Beniston, M. (2005). The Risks Associated with Climatic Change in Mountain Regions. In: Huber, U.M., Bugmann, H.K.M., Reasoner, M.A. (eds) Global Change and Mountain Regions. Advances in Global Change Research, vol 23. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3508-X_51
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3508-X_51
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-3507-4
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-3508-1
eBook Packages: Earth and Environmental ScienceEarth and Environmental Science (R0)