Book Review: Climate, Ecosystems, and Human Societies

The Christian Science Monitor Online
March 04, 2008
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0304/p13s02-bogn.html

Climate change’s most deadly threat: drought

Anthropologist Brian Fagan uses Earth’s distant
past to predict the crises that may lie in its
future.

By Todd Wilkinson

Spring is on its way back to northern latitudes.
In many locales, it will arrive earlier than
“normal,” yielding, ostensibly, a longer growing
season, a hotter summer, balmier autumn, and
future winters will lack their ferocious
post-Pleistocene bites.

While vineyards are being planned for northern
England, millions of residents around desiccated
Atlanta are praying for enough rain to flow
through their taps.

Brian Fagan believes climate is not merely a
backdrop to the ongoing drama of human
civilization, but an important stage upon which
world events turn.

As it turns out, the anecdotal evidence of
climate change in this, the 21st century, shares
much in common with a historical antecedent, the
Medieval Warm Period, circa AD 800 to 1200, that
radically shaped societies across the globe.

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Climate Extremes Impacting Plants, Crops

Oak Ridge National Laboratory – US Department of Energy
News Release
March 5, 2008

Killer freeze of ’07 illustrates paradoxes of warming climate

OAK RIDGE, Tenn., March 5, 2008 – A destructive
spring freeze that chilled the eastern United
States almost a year ago illustrates the threat a
warming climate poses to plants and crops,
according to a paper just published in the
journal BioScience. The study was led by a team
from the Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge
National Laboratory.

The “Easter freeze” of April 5-9, 2007, blew in
on an ill wind. Plants had been sending out young
and tender sprouts two to three weeks earlier
than normal during an unusually warm March. Plant
ecologists, as well as farmers and gardeners,
took note of the particularly harsh turn of the
weather in early April.

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Climate Change Already Impacting Living Systems

I have the complete article as pdf file. Feel free to ask.
Lance

NATURE
VOL 421
2 JANUARY 2003

A globally coherent fingerprint of climate change
impacts across natural systems
Camille Parmesan* & Gary YoheÝ

* Integrative Biology, Patterson Laboratories
141, University of Texas, Austin, Texas 78712, USA
Ý John E. Andrus Professor of Economics, Wesleyan
University, 238 Public Affairs Center,
Middletown, Connecticut 06459, USA
………………………………………………………………………………………
Abstract:
Causal attribution of recent biological trends to
climate change is complicated because
non-climatic influences dominate local,
short-term biological changes. Any underlying
signal from climate change is likely to be
revealed by analyses that seek systematic trends
across diverse species and geographic regions;
however, debates within the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) reveal several
definitions of a ‘systematic trend’.  Here, we
explore these differences, apply diverse analyses
to more than 1,700 species, and show that recent
biological trends match climate change
predictions. Global meta-analyses documented
significant range shifts averaging 6.1 km per
decade towards the poles (or metres per decade
upward), and significant mean advancement of
spring events by 2.3 days per decade. We define a
diagnostic fingerprint of temporal and spatial
‘sign-switching’ responses uniquely predicted by
twentieth century climate trends. Among
appropriate long-term/large-scale/multi-species
data sets, this diagnostic fingerprint was found
for 279 species. This suite of analyses generates
‘very high confidence’ (as laid down by the IPCC)
that climate change is already affecting living
systems.

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Climate Change and Wildfire: High Latitudes and Elevations

——– Original Message ——–
Subject: [Stumps] PLOS : Fire moving higher
Date: Wed, 5 Mar 2008 08:46:44 -0700
From: Lance Olsen <lancolsn@gmail.com>
To: Climate Change and Biodiversity list <gwspecies@lists.onenw.org>

Over and over again, we see changes at the high latitudes matched by
changes at the high altitudes. For an example from the Northern
Hemisphere, the glacial melting at Greenland is matched by the glacial
melting at Glacier National Park. Likewise, we see concern for the
high latitude polar bear matched by concern for a high altitude
species like the pika.

Well, of course, since high latitude and high altitude share so much,
including temperature levels and species not found at lower
altitude/latitude. And the ptarmigan probably deserves some special
notice, because it is distributed over low elevations at high
latitudes and at high elevations at lower latitudes like Glacier
National Park.

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