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Archive for the 'global warming' Tag

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 »

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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Study: high heat, higher hospital admissions

March 2nd, 2010, 2:31 pm by

Register file photo of high temperature reading at a Fullerton bank by Bruce Chambers

Higher temperatures bring a spike in hospital admissions for a variety of diseases in California, a new state study says — an effect that holds true even without heat waves, and one that could grow worse with global warming.

“Any of the diseases related to heat in this study could be exacerbated if temperatures continue to increase in the future,” said Shelley Green, an epidemiologist with the state Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment and lead author of the study. “That’s what the concern is; that’s why we’re studying this.”

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NOAA: January was 4th warmest on record

February 23rd, 2010, 1:30 pm by

Temperature chart courtesy, National Climatic Data Center

The nation’s climate monitoring agency says January’s global land and sea-surface temperatures combined were the fourth warmest on record for that month — much of it the result of the Pacific ocean-warming phenomenon known as El Niño.

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Students track ocean threat at Crystal Cove

February 4th, 2010, 6:17 am by

High school students are wading bravely into chilly surf at Crystal Cove State Park this week, buckets in hand, to measure what climate scientists call a growing threat: an increasingly acidic ocean. oceantestinggoc

But it might be more than an academic exercise. Their measurements could become part of a real-world research effort to learn how severely the rise in greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is affecting the oceans — and how that, in turn, could affect marine life.

“I believe it doesn’t really matter who caused it, whether it’s natural or man-made,” said Aurelio Isidro, 18, one of 75 advanced-placement environmental-science students from Segerstrom High School in Santa Ana taking part in the program Wednesday. “We still have to take responsibility, ’cause it is going to affect us — maybe not us, but our children.”

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