The environmental impact of climate change adaptation on land use and water quality
Adaptation seeks to reduce the harmful consequences and harness any
beneficial opportunities arising from the changing climate. However, adaptation itself also has the potential to generate
further pressures. Policies designed to encourage
adaptation may conflict with regulation aimed at preserving environmental quality. To highlight this, we analyse the trade-offs between two
fundamental ecosystem services:
provisioning services derived from agriculture and regulating services
in the form of freshwater quality. Results indicate that climate
adaptation in the farming sector will generate fundamental changes in
river water quality. These findings illustrate the
importance of anticipating the wider impacts of human adaptation to
climate change when designing environmental policies.
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