Scientific experts agree that the Earth's climate is changing. Climate change, more commonly known as global warming, is caused by the emission of heat-trapping gases produced by vehicles, power plants, industrial processes and deforestation. As these gases build up, they act like a big blanket, over-heating the planet and threatening our health, our economy and our environment.
Research shows that the world has now become hotter than at any time during the past 1000 years. Climate models that project future conditions show that global warming will continue if emissions of heat-trapping gases continue to increase.
Earth's Ecosystems at Risk
Global warming is changing distributions of plants and animals, population sizes, growth rates, timing of plant flowering, and timing of animal migration. It is changing the intensity and frequency of storms, droughts, and fire, raising the level of the oceans, and melting glaciers.
While land is fixed in space, the climate is not. Many of the places we protect are selected because they provide the proper habitat and climate for unique and important plants or animals. Unfortunately, given global warming, these places may no longer have the right climate for the species or communities that were the reason underlying their selection.
For example, as the planet warms, Peter's Mountain mallow in Virginia, or the California gnatcatcher in San Diego County, or wet prairies in Oregon may no longer be able to survive on the same lands where they once flourished.
Scientific research shows that heat-trapping emissions from human activities have caused most of the global warming observed over the past 50 years. In addition to those emissions, the intermingling of highways, human developments, plantations, and farms with nature has enormously circumscribed the options for nature's response to the current warming.
Human Communities at Risk
Evidence is mounting almost daily of the dangers posed by global warming. Villages along Alaskan coastlines are literally crumbling into the sea as ice and permafrost melts away. Record-high seawater temperatures in 1998 may have killed as much as 10 percent of the world's corals, jeopardizing the survival of reef fish on which millions of coastal residents depend.
Glacial melt
In New Hampshire, Maine and Vermont, maple syrup producers say they are tapping their trees one month earlier than in years past, and as temperatures continue to rise, sap production will decline and leave trees vulnerable to disease and insects. In southern New England, lobster catches have plummeted because of parasites and heat stresses.
By working now to curb heat-trapping emissions we can reduce both the pace and magnitude of global warming, and be more successful in adjusting our conservation approaches to cope with the changing climate. Even incremental decreases in the emissions of CO2 will bring benefits to biodiversity.
This Earth Day, make a difference by sharing your personal message of hope for the future of our planet, send a free Earth Day e-card to your friends and family, and volunteer for local Earth Day events and activities near you.
Learn more about The Nature Conservancy by joining our group on Gather.
|
by
Jonathon D. C.
Member since:
April 12, 2006 Climate Change: The Threat
April 22, 2006 12:35 PM EDT
views: 89
|
rating: 10/10
(4 votes)
|
comments: 5
Please provide details below to help Gather review this content. If it is found to be inappropriate and in violation of the Gather Terms of Service, action will be taken.
You have successfully submitted a report for this post.
|
|
More by Jonathon D. C. |
|||||||
About Gather |
Engagement Marketing |
Make New Friends |
Gather Points |
Advertise on Gather |
Gather Press |
Privacy |
Terms of Service |
Community Guidelines
Books | Celebs | Entertainment | Family | Food | Health | Moms | Money | News | Politics | Spirituality | Sports | Travel | Writing
Books | Celebs | Entertainment | Family | Food | Health | Moms | Money | News | Politics | Spirituality | Sports | Travel | Writing
Version 16836, "Oz"; Copyright © 2009 Gather Inc. All rights reserved.


Comments: 5
Thanks,
For this article and promoting green things...
Over 400 prominent scientists from more than two dozen countries recently voiced significant objections to major aspects of the so-called "consensus" on man-made global warming. (Senate Report)