The big idea: A warmer climate does not just raise the temperature — it changes where species can live, who they live alongside, and when they do things.
Learn the three threads and you can answer almost any 'consequence of climate change' question:
1. Distribution — species shift their range (often poleward and uphill).
2. Ecosystems — the community structure changes as winners spread and losers decline.
3. Phenology — the timing of life-cycle events (flowering, breeding, migration) shifts.
Climate sets which biome (and which species) can live in a place. Each biome sits at its own mean temperature and rainfall — change the climate and the boundaries move.
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- Distribution (range)
- The geographical area in which a species is found.
- Hardiness zone
- A band of climate (mainly defined by how cold the winters get) in which a particular plant can survive.
- Community structure
- Which species are present in an ecosystem and how abundant each one is.
- Phenology
- The timing of seasonal life-cycle events — such as budburst, flowering, breeding and migration.
- Poleward
- Towards the poles (north in the northern hemisphere, south in the southern) — generally cooler ground.
WHERE, WHO, WHEN: A quick memory hook for the three consequence-threads:
WHERE a species lives = distribution / range shift.
WHO it lives with = community / ecosystem change.
WHEN it does things = phenology shift.
Each consequence falls out of one simple fact: a species can only live where the climate suits it.
Change the climate and you move the ground that suits it — so the species, its neighbours and its calendar all have to follow.
1. Distribution — ranges shift poleward and uphill: As an area warms, the conditions a species can tolerate now occur further towards the poles and higher up mountains.
So the species' suitable range shifts in that direction — its warm edge retreats and its cool edge advances into newly-suitable ground.
This is exactly why hardiness zones shift: the band a tree can survive in moves poleward, so the tree can spread northwards (or to higher altitude). A species that cannot move fast enough, or has nowhere left to go (already at a coast or mountain-top), may be lost from the area.
Hardiness zones work the same way: the band of temperature a tree can survive in moves towards the poles as the climate warms, so the tree can spread northwards into newly-suitable ground.
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2. Ecosystems — community structure changes: Different species shift at different rates, so the mix of species in an ecosystem changes.
Warm-tolerant species are favoured — they spread and become more abundant.
Cold-adapted species decline or are lost locally, especially if they cannot move.
In a warming lake, for example, cold-water fish lose out to warm-tolerant species; warmer water also holds less dissolved oxygen, which adds further stress. The result is a changed community structure — the same place, but a different set of species.
3. Phenology — timing shifts (and can mismatch): Many species use temperature as their cue, so in warmer springs they do things earlier: leaves burst, flowers open, insects hatch and animals breed sooner.
The danger is timing mismatch (trophic mismatch). If a predator and its food respond to different cues, they can drift out of step — the food peaks before the consumer is ready, leaving the consumer short of food at a critical time.
| Species | Cue it responds to | How fast its timing shifts |
|---|---|---|
| Oak tree (food plant) | Temperature — leaves burst early in a warm spring | Shifts a lot (very temperature-sensitive) |
| Caterpillar (eats the leaves) | Temperature — hatches early in a warm spring | Shifts a lot, but not always in step with the tree |
| Migrating bird (eats caterpillars) | Day length — arrives at the same date each year | Barely shifts (day length does not change with warming) |
Why the bird is caught out: The oak and caterpillar shift earlier because they respond to temperature.
The migrating bird arrives on roughly the same date because it responds to day length, which warming does not change.
So the caterpillar peak can come and go before the chicks hatch — the parents miss the food, and fewer chicks survive. That is a phenological mismatch.
| Consequence | What changes | A worked example |
|---|---|---|
| Distribution (range) shift | WHERE a species can live | As the climate warms, suitable conditions move poleward and uphill, so species shift northwards / to higher altitude (e.g. trees spread into ground that was once too cold) |
| Ecosystem / community change | WHO lives together | Warm-tolerant species are favoured and spread; cold-adapted species decline or are lost locally — so the mix of species (community structure) changes |
| Phenology shift | WHEN life-cycle events happen | Spring events (budburst, flowering, breeding, migration arrival) occur earlier as temperatures rise |
Consequences at a glance
- Ranges shift poleward and to higher altitude as suitable climate moves
- Hardiness zones move, so trees can spread northwards
- Species that cannot move (or have nowhere to go) may be lost locally
- Warm-tolerant species win, cold-adapted species lose → community structure changes
- Spring events happen earlier (budburst, flowering, breeding, migration)
- Different cues cause timing mismatch between a consumer and its food
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How this is tested: On Paper 1 a 1-mark item asks you to identify or predict a consequence of global warming — name one clear effect (a range shift, an earlier spring event, or a species lost).
A common Predict item gives shifting hardiness zones and asks what happens to trees — the expected answer is that trees spread northwards / poleward (into newly-suitable ground).
On Paper 2 a 1-mark Predict can ask for one effect on the community structure of an ecosystem — say which kind of species is favoured and which declines, so the mix of species changes.
IB-style question — predict the effect of shifting hardiness zones
As the climate warms, the hardiness zones suitable for a species of tree shift. Predict the effect of this shift on where the tree grows, and justify your answer. [2]
How to score both marks
- State the prediction. The tree's range will spread northwards / poleward (and to higher altitude) into ground that was previously too cold.
- Justify it. The band of climate the tree can survive in (its hardiness zone) has moved towards the poles as the area warmed, so newly-suitable conditions now exist further north — and may disappear at the warm (southern) edge, so the range shifts rather than simply growing. (Mark 1: spreads northwards/poleward. Mark 2: because the suitable climate / hardiness zone has moved that way.)
Final answer
The tree's range shifts northwards / poleward (and uphill) because the band of climate it can survive in has moved that way as the area warmed.
✓ Why this scores full marks: A Predict answer needs the stated outcome (spreads northwards) and a reason tied to the warming (the suitable climate / hardiness zone moved poleward).
Just writing 'the tree moves' with no direction or reason would not score both marks.
Warming slides a location to the RIGHT on the temperature axis (hotter). The conditions a species can tolerate now occur further poleward / higher up — so its suitable range shifts that way.
Interactive diagram
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