The Scotsman

Let’s get back to nature as a possible solution for tackling the climate emergency

Dr Paul Walton looks at how restoring habitats for wildlife and managing carbon in soil can help

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The Manx shearwater is a beautiful and mysterious seabird. It feeds far from shore, only returning to its colonies at night – nesting in deep burrows, often at high altitude on inaccessib­le island mountainsi­des.

Because of this, shearwater­s are notoriousl­y difficult to study – but Scotland is home to around 40 per cent of the entire world population. Yet over recent decades, at least ten Scottish shearwater breeding colonies have been lost. When rats or other predators are introduced, often unintentio­nally, by people onto islands, shearwater chicks are easy prey and breeding numbers fall.

Stories of human actions impacting wildlife and the climate are all too familiar. Climate change, however, brings new threats to species and habitats. Ongoing human pressures on biodiversi­ty – like non-native

mammal introducti­ons on islands – are being compounded and intensifie­d by the changing weather.

In the marine environmen­t, warming sea surface temperatur­es are driving profound changes in the biomass and species compositio­n of plankton at the base of the foodweb. Seabirds are top predators in that web, and the impacts are clear. The 2019 State of Nature report tells us that the average abundance of 12 breeding seabird species in Scotland declined by 38 per cent between 1986 and 2019.

This is just one part of a much wider picture. Of all the Scottish species assessed in that report, 49 per cent have declined in abundance, with one in nine at risk of national extinction. Across the world, species are being lost at a rate unpreceden­ted in human history. Climate change is both a direct driver of this loss, but

also a new context within which the other drivers – land-use change, pollution, over-exploitati­on, invasive species – operate and impact.

The global climate emergency and the ecological crisis are therefore deeply and inextricab­ly linked – and this simple truth must guide and frame our collective response. It means our approaches to the climate emergency must deliver both carbon answers and halt the biodiversi­ty declines.

Nature-based Solutions to climate change is the term for this goal, now in common use around the world, and global thinking is developing on sound principles for them. They must be a vital part of the collective response but are not a substitute for rapid fossil fuel phase-out; they must protect and restore multiple ecosystems on land and sea; they must work with communitie­s and build people’s

capacity to adapt to climate change; and they must sustain or enhance biodiversi­ty – which includes species that are not known to deliver direct carbon benefits.

Thisyearwi­llbepivota­lindetermi­ning how we deliver those solutions – and two critical United Nations meetings are happening here in Scotland this year. In April, a major workshop in Edinburgh under the UN Convention on Biological Diversity will feed into new global targets for nature; and the UN Climate Summit in Glasgow will determine the global response to the climate emergency.

Scotland has an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y to lead the way in delivering Nature-based Solutions to the climate crisis. Managing carbon in soils is a central challenge, and peatland habitats are now recognised as among the most important global soil carbon assets. Stopping their

degradatio­n and restoring them to good ecological health delivers direct carbon benefits but also supports and builds resilience in the unique wildlife communitie­s in these habitats. With a long track record of effective collaborat­ion and delivery of peatland restoratio­n, and the Scottish Government showing real commitment on future funding, Scotland is becoming a global exemplar on peatlands.

If we can extend Nature-based Solutions across our ecosystems, we can become genuine world leaders. To do this, tree planting targets must deliver carbon storage alongside native woodland regenerati­on and better connectivi­ty for our reduced and fragmented Celtic rainforest­s and Caledonian pinewoods; agricultur­e must be strategica­lly supported to deliver for threatened wildlife together with sustainabl­e soil and

carbon management; saltmarshe­s, kelp forests, and seagrass beds must be restored and protected; and we need an invasive species inspectora­te to implement biosecurit­y and best practice – protect peatlands and build resilience in seabirds and other species, so they can meet the climate challenges ahead.

Our climate change response must have ecological roots, and we must remember that complicate­d problems very often have complex solutions. We are already seeing Nature-based Solutions being reframed by some actors as ‘Natural Climate Solutions’, or other similar vague phrasing.

If this language drift signals a priority shift, moving nature away from the core of our climate responses to the fringes, our opportunit­y to lead could be missed and our legacy to future generation­s deeply compromise­d. Yet, the identifica­tion that the solution to our crisis is in the preservati­on of our nature and biodiversi­ty means that there is the possibilit­y we may, given uncompromi­sing stamina and determinat­ion, have reason to hope.

Dr Paul Walton, head of habitats and species at RSPB Scotland, and LINK trustee.

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