Readably larger.
Here is the stoic summary of some of those Major Impacts, shown on that last map:
Climate Change 2014 -- Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability
Summary for Policymakers
[...]
A: OBSERVED IMPACTS, VULNERABILITY, AND ADAPTATION IN A COMPLEX AND CHANGING WORLD
A-1 Observed Impacts, Vulnerability, and Exposure
In recent decades, changes in climate have caused impacts on natural and human systems on all continents and across the oceans.
Evidence of climate-change impacts is strongest and most comprehensive for natural systems. Some impacts on human systems have also been attributed[5] to climate change, with a major or minor contribution of climate change distinguishable from other influences.
See Figure SPM.2. [See previous image] Attribution of observed impacts in the WGII AR5 [IPCC's Working Group II (WG II); IPCC's Fifth Assessment Report (AR5)] generally links responses of natural and human systems to observed climate change, regardless of its cause.[6]
In many regions, changing precipitation or melting snow and ice are altering hydrological systems, affecting water resources in terms of quantity and quality (medium confidence).
Glaciers continue to shrink almost worldwide due to climate change (high confidence), affecting runoff and water resources downstream (medium confidence). Climate change is causing permafrost warming and thawing in high-latitude regions and in high-elevation regions (high confidence).[7]
Many terrestrial, freshwater, and marine species have shifted their geographic ranges, seasonal activities, migration patterns, abundances, and species interactions in response to ongoing climate change (high confidence). See Figure SPM.2B.
While only a few recent species extinctions have been attributed as yet to climate change (high confidence), natural global climate change at rates slower than current anthropogenic climate change caused significant ecosystem shifts and species extinctions during the past millions of years (high confidence).[8]
Based on many studies covering a wide range of regions and crops, negative impacts of climate change on crop yields have been more common than positive impacts (high confidence).
The smaller number of studies showing positive impacts relate mainly to high-latitude regions, though it is not yet clear whether the balance of impacts has been negative or positive in these regions (high confidence). Climate change has negatively affected wheat and maize yields for may regions and the global aggregate (medium confidence). Effects on rice and soybean yield have been smaller in major production regions and globally, with a medium change of zero across all available data, which are fewer for soy compare to other crops. Observed impacts relate mainly to production aspects of food security rather than access or other components of food security. See Figure SPM.2C. [See next image] Since AR4 [IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report (AR4)], several periods of rapid food and cereal price increases following climate extremes in key producing regions indicate a sensitivity of current markets to the climate extremes among other factors (medium confidence).[11]
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[Note: I had to transcribe this, since oddly Copy & Paste was not a viable option. Nothing like 'ease of distribution' of your important conclusions, eh?]
What do you think, is the Negative Crop Yield Percentage, that will take, to actually get the Media and the Politicians to treat this like the Crisis, it really is?
10%, 20%, 50%? ... 100%?
When do you think, those Scientifically-ill-informed folks will ever realize:
That the Prices in their Grocery Stores are "inversely-related" to those declining Crop Yields?
Inversely-related: simply put means two things are linked in a such a way that, when one of them moves down, the other moves up, in roughly the same proportion.
[ Image Source: pixshark.com ]
Perhaps, someone needs to jump off that playground device, at just the right moment -- Maybe THAT would get their attention?
When things suddenly go BOOM!
I found that above document Here.
Posted plainly under Assessment Reports -- for all the 'teetering' world to see. Go figure.