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Science Shows How Nature Can Help Both the Climate and Biodiversity Crises

From mice to moose, a new study analyzes how reforestation, afforestation, and bioenergy could impact more than 14,000 species.

a jaguar stalks through a forest in mexico
Reforestation and Wildlife Reforestation will benefit many species both locally and globally, including iconic species like jaguar. © Fernando Constantino Martínez Belmar/TNC Photo Contest 2019

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Reforestation (restoring forests in places where they historically grew), afforestation (adding forests in places like savannahs and grasslands), and bioenergy cropping (farming plants like switchgrass for renewable energy) are common strategies for helping the world meet its climate goals. Until now, it has been challenging to predict how these strategies will impact biodiversity because they affect species in multiple, complex ways. 

A new study, published this week in Science, evaluates the potential biodiversity impacts of those three climate change mitigation strategies. A team of scientists—led by Dr. Jeffrey Smith, an Associate Research Scholar at Princeton University’s High Meadows Environmental Institute and including TNC's Senior Forest Restoration Scientist Dr. Susan Cook-Patton—modelled the impact of these mitigation strategies on over 14,000 species, from creatures smaller than a mouse to larger than a moose.

These questions are far from hypothetical. Most countries worldwide, from Austria to Zimbabwe, have committed to using these nature-based methods to reach their climate targets. However, Dr. Smith points out: “In their effects on biodiversity, these strategies are not created equal. It's critical that, in our work to address climate change, we do not inadvertently worsen the biodiversity crisis.”

The team of scientists—including Jonathan Levine, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at Princeton, and Dr. Evelyn Beaury, a former HMEI Post-Doctoral Research Scholar now at the New York Botanical Garden—found that reforestation will benefit many species both locally, by increasing habitat, and globally, by mitigating climate change. These include many iconic forest species from spotted salamanders and red-bellied woodpeckers to jaguars. 

"This research shows fighting climate change is not enough to safeguard biodiversity," says co-author Cook-Patton. "Some climate mitigation options are bad for biodiversity, but when done in the right places and in the right way, reforestation is a cost-effective way to address both the climate crisis and the biodiversity crisis."

Co-Benefits of Natural Climate Solutions

Natural climate solutions are good for people and nature. Strategies to protect, better manage and restore ecosystems not only reduce greenhouse gas emissions, they can also promote biodiversity, provide clean air and water, and make communities more resilient to the impacts of climate change. 

See a comprehensive analysis of natural climate solutions co-benefits.

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The outcomes for planting monocultures of bioenergy crops or converting natural savannahs and grasslands to forests are not as rosy. While these efforts may help address climate change and reduce climate threats to biodiversity, they will also lead to immediate habitat loss. Replacing biodiverse meadows with bioenergy crops would be hugely detrimental for species from grouse to elk. Similarly, converting savannahs to forests would lead to the decline of iconic species like ostriches and lions. The study found that the loss of habitat due to afforestation and bioenergy would be far greater than the benefit they would provide to biodiversity by helping mitigate climate change. 

While ecologists have long suspected that some of these interventions would mean less habitat for creatures from turtles to tigers, this study provides the first quantitative assessment of these potential impacts. As Professor Levine points out, “Few ecologists doubt that addressing climate change would be a boon for biodiversity. However, our study finds that it’s not enough to reach net zero. It also matters how we get there.”

This research demonstrates that society should not seek solutions for either climate change or biodiversity loss in isolation. Instead, we must address these crises jointly to identify the best outcomes for wildlife and humanity. 

The Nature Conservancy is a global conservation organization dedicated to conserving the lands and waters on which all life depends. Guided by science, we create innovative, on-the-ground solutions to our world’s toughest challenges so that nature and people can thrive together. We are tackling climate change, conserving lands, waters and oceans at an unprecedented scale, providing food and water sustainably and helping make cities more sustainable. The Nature Conservancy is working to make a lasting difference around the world in 81 countries and territories (40 by direct conservation impact and 41 through partners) through a collaborative approach that engages local communities, governments, the private sector, and other partners. To learn more, visit nature.org or follow @nature_press on X.