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View Full Version : Climate now shifting on a continental scale, huge study says


Richard Tafoya
May 16th, 2008, 12:46 AM
USA Today:
http://www.usatoday.com/weather/climate/globalwarming/2008-05-14-climate-study_N.htm

A landmark climate study released Wednesday reports that global warming is changing the life cycles of thousands of animals and plants — as well as hundreds of physical systems — worldwide.

It documents rapid glacier melts in North America, South America and Europe; trees and plants sprouting leaves much earlier in the spring in Europe, Asia and North America; permafrost melting in Asia; and changes in bird migration patterns across Europe, North America and Australia, all in response to rising global temperatures.

Though previous studies have looked at single phenomena or smaller areas, the latest analysis examines data on a continental scale, says lead author Cynthia Rosenzweig, a scientist at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York.

The study found that 95% of the observed physical changes, and 90% of the biological changes, are consistent with warming temperatures.

Some of the physical changes:
•Melting glaciers on all continents, notably in Alaska, Peru and the Alps.
•Earlier breakup and thinning of river and lake ice in Mongolia.
•Declining mountain snowpack in western North America.

Some of the observed effects on living things include:

•Movements of species to higher latitudes and altitudes throughout the Northern Hemisphere.
•Population of emperor penguins declining 50% on Antarctic Peninsula.
•Advance of spring arrival of long-distance migratory birds in Europe

"It was a real challenge to separate the influence of human-caused temperature increases from natural climate variations or other confounding factors, such as land-use changes or pollution," says study co-author David Karoly, a climate scientist at the University of Melbourne in Victoria, Australia. Scientists reported in the study, however, that "these temperature increases at continental scales cannot be explained by natural climate variations alone."