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Archive for the 'Climate change' Category

Do birds help curb global warming?

April 8th, 2010, 9:55 am by

The early bird catches the worm — and, one UC Irvine scientist says, might also help reduce the effects of global warming.

Eastern bluebird with leaf-eating caterpillar. Photo by Mike Onyon.

In a new study published in a scientific journal this week, ecologist and lead author Kailen Mooney shows that birds, bats and lizards consume enough insects to reduce the damage they cause to plants and promote plant growth — by 14 percent on average.

“The goal was to understand how natural communities work, and the role of top predators in shaping and affecting communities of insects,” Mooney said.

The study itself, a “meta-analysis” of 63 previous studies involving 113 experiments, looked only at how plant growth is affected by removing birds and other animals that prey on insects. But the implications for climate change are clear, Mooney said.

“Anytime a plant is growing, it’s taking carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and turning it into tissues,” he said.

Humanity’s release of carbon dioxide, along with other greenhouse gases, is believed by climate scientists to be Read the rest of this entry »

Snowpack prompts boost in state water supply

April 1st, 2010, 3:23 pm by

The agency that manages much of California’s water supply increased the amount allocated to downstream agencies Thursday, saying recent storms have improved the snow pack in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.

Lake Oroville. Photo courtesy Department of Water Resources

But the new allocation — 20 percent, meaning 20 percent of what water agencies requested — remains a fairly low figure. Some reservoirs, such as Lake Oroville, also remain low, so the state Department of Water Resources will continue asking California residents to conserve.

“Statewide, the snowpack is hovering right around normal, which is a welcome thing after three dry years,” said the agency’s director, Mark Cowin. “We do expect to get more precipitation before the spring is over, but after April 1 is typically considered the end of snow season.”

The latest readings placed the Sierra snowpack at 106 percent of normal, up from 81 percent of normal at this time last year.

The agency started the year with its lowest water allocation ever: just five percent. Typically, the figure is raised as the winter rain and snow increase water supplies.

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O.C. firms go dark for global warming event

March 26th, 2010, 2:57 pm by

It’s lights out across the planet Saturday night for “Earth Hour,” a symbolic call for action on global warming, and many Orange County businesses will flip the switch as well.

Golden Gate Bridge, lights on. Courtesy World Wildlife Fund

Golden Gate Bridge, lights off. Courtesy World Wildlife Fund

At least 12 appeared on a partial list compiled by World Wildlife Fund, the yearly event’s organizers, among them Ecotek in Huntington Beach and Westin South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa.

The idea is to switch lights off for one hour starting at 8:30 p.m. in each time zone on Saturday.

“We’re going to make it as dark as we can without causing any issues or concerns,” said Dan Pittman, spokesman for the Westin, which turned its lights out last year as well.

Most hotel guests seemed willing to participate, he said, though whether they turn lights out in their rooms will be up to them.

“People seem to buy into it,” he said. “People, given the chance, like to participate in these things. Candle light is kind of romantic anyhow.”

Should Orange County residents and business owners switch off their lights Saturday to call attention to global warming?
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Spring reminder: water worries not over

March 20th, 2010, 9:17 am by

Orange County’s winter rains might have felt like a deluge, but that’s because dry is becoming the new normal.

Fifteen inches has fallen so far this season, passing the average by about 2 inches. After five dry years, however, it was enough to moisten parched soil and fuel expectations of an explosive wildflower season.

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Report: February was 6th warmest on record

March 17th, 2010, 12:00 pm by

A federal climate-monitoring agency says last month was the sixth warmest February on record when land and ocean-surface temperatures are combined.

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Feds: Cold winter is not ‘global cooling’

March 10th, 2010, 12:28 pm by

Photo courtesy NOAA

Temperatures were colder than normal across the United States this winter, according to the latest assessment from the nation’s climate-monitoring agency.

But the cold weather, including heavy snow on the East Coast, is not a sign of ‘global cooling’ — an assertion made in recent weeks by some who take issue with the idea that the climate is warming.

The winter temperature assessment from the National Climatic Data Center, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, says 63 percent of the nation experienced below-normal temperatures during the winter season, December to February.

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