Assess Vulnerability

The expected impacts of climate change can vary wildly in nature and extent across species, ecosystems, cultural sites, historic buildings, and park facilities. Understanding the relative degree to which park resources are susceptible to—or unable to cope with—effects from climate change is important for responsibly managing parks in a warming world. Vulnerability assessments help identify why, where, when, and which resources may be most at risk.
Flowchart that shows Exposure + Sensitivity = Potential Impact. Adding that with Adaptive Capacity gives you Vulnerability
Adapted from Glick et al. (2011) and Foden et al. (2019). Recent work on the concept of adaptive capacity (Thurman et al. 2020), historically the most challenging aspect of vulnerability, clarifies the concept and helps operationalize it.
Vulnerability assessments typically explore the confluence between the exposure of resources to climate change and their sensitivity to that change. This potential impact is then evaluated against the ability of those resources to adapt to change. The resulting assessment provides a useful measure of relative vulnerability. Vulnerability assessments are generally built on future climate projections and two or more resulting scenarios of future plausible conditions. They may target individual species and structures, or they may simultaneously address diverse resource types across broad landscapes.

The results of vulnerability assessment should not dictate decision-making. Rather, they are an important tool to guide park management discussions about risk, priorities, and options for adaptation. The National Park Service has worked with various partners to develop—and assess—several distinct methods for conducting vulnerability assessments.

Below you'll find more information and links to a variety of types of vulnerability assessments.

Dig deeper:

  • View looking upward at two saguaro cacti that grow out of a rocky hillslope
    NPVuln

    A project to quantify the vulnerability of national parks and regions to climate change

  • An ocean view looking directly out at white frothy waves with sunrays shining through brown clouds
    Coastal Vulnerability Assessments

    Climate change impacts on sea level, storm surge, and shoreline erosion present unique hazards for coastal units of the NPS

  • Sun sets over a brown sandy beach with orange and purple clouds dotting the sky
    Integrated Vulnerability Assessments

    Park management decisions are often interdisciplinary, as these integrated coastal climate change vulnerability assessments attest

Cover of a report with two images of a blue butterfly. The title is "Blue Snowflakes in a Warming World"

A species-specific vulnerability assessment

Download the Karner blue butterfly report
This report brings together existing knowledge on the federally endangered Karner blue butterfly's vulnerability to climate change and applies current adaptation strategies to support a strategic and long-term approach to its recovery and conservation. Using the Resist-Accept-Direct (RAD) framework, this report explores potential responses for managing the butterfly and its habitat in light of climate change and offers guidance on how these responses can be implemented.

A natural resource vulnerability assessment

Download the Apostle Islands report
To better understand and address key long-term natural resource climate change vulnerabilities, Apostle Islands National Lakeshore collaborated with the NPS Climate Change Response Program, the Northern Institute for Applied Climate Sciences, and numerous tribal, state, and academic partners to develop a broad terrestrial ecosystem vulnerability assessment for the end of the 21st century. This scenario-based assessment, which emerged from a highly participatory process, provides detailed information about observed and projected climate trends and associated vulnerability and confidence determinations for boreal forests, pine barrens, peat swamps and bogs, maritime bluffs, coastal wetlands, and other important park ecosystems. This assessment is useful for Apostle Islands resource management and interpretive staff as well as the park’s many partners.

References

Foden, W. B., Young, H. R. Akcakava, R. A. Garcia, A. A. Hoffman, B. A. Stein, C. D. Thomas, C. J. Wheatley, D. Bickford, J. A. Carr and D. G. Hole. 2019. Climate change vulnerability assessment of species, Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 10:e551.

Glick, P., B. A. Stein and N. A. Edelson, Eds. 2011. Scanning the Conservation Horizon: A Guide to Climate Change Vulnerability Assessment, Washington, DC: National Wildlife Federation.

Thurman, L. L., B. A. Stein, E. A. Beever, W. Foden, S. R. Geange, N. Green, J. E. Gross, D. J. Lawrence, O. LeDee, J. D. Olden, L. M. Thompson, and B. E. Young. 2020. Persist in place or shift in space? Evaluating the adaptive capacity of species to climate change. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.

Last updated: September 9, 2024

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