Climate Change, Drought, and Beavers

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“The study, published online recently in
Biological Conservation, also found that
temperature, precipitation and other climate
variables were much less important than beaver in
maintaining open water areas in the wetlands of
the mixed-wood boreal forest.”
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News release
University of Alberta

Beaver population helps battle drought

The presence of busy beavers can do more to
preserve water resources than temperature,
precipitation and other climate variables.

by Bev Betkowski
http://www.expressnews.ualberta.ca/article.cfm?id=9085

February 19, 2008 – Edmonton – They may be
considered pests, but beaver can help mitigate
the effects of drought, and because of that,
their removal from wetlands to accommodate
industrial, urban and agricultural demands should
be avoided when possible, according to a new
University of Alberta study.

Continue reading

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“Those who blithely factor oceanic uptake into the equations of
what people can get away with when it comes to greenhouse-
gas pollution should, perhaps, have second thoughts.”
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The Economist
Feb 21st 2008

Climate change

Sour times

The sea is becoming more acidic. That is not good news if you live in it

EVERY silver lining has its cloud. At the moment,
the world’s oceans absorb a million tonnes of
carbon dioxide an hour. Admittedly that is only a
third of the rate at which humanity dumps the
stuff into the atmosphere by burning fossil
fuels, but it certainly helps to slow down global
warming. However, what is a blessing for the
atmosphere turns out to be a curse for the
oceans. When carbon dioxide dissolves in water it
forms carbonic acid. At the moment, seawater is
naturally alkaline-but it is becoming less so all
the time.

The biological significance of this acidification
was a topic of debate at the American Association
for the Advancement of Science meeting in Boston.
Many species of invertebrate have shells or
skeletons made of calcium carbonate. It is these,
fossilised, that form rocks such as chalk and
limestone. And, as anyone who has studied
chemistry at school knows, if you drop chalk into
acid it fizzes away to nothing. Many marine
biologists therefore worry that some species will
soon be unable to make their protective homes.
According to Andrew Knoll, of Harvard University,
many of the species most at risk are corals.

Continue reading

Climate Change and Animal Migrations

“The ability to move, at some stage in the life
cycle, is fundamental to success in life.”

Andrew Sugden and Elizabeth Pennisi
SCIENCE VOL 313 11 AUGUST 2006

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“Animals have no choice but to move, since their
survival is at stake. ŠStudies of more than 1,000
species of plants, animals, and insects, found an
average migration rate toward the North and South
Poles of about four miles per decade in the
second half of the 20th century. That is not fast
enough. During the past 30 years the lines
marking the regions in which a given average
temperature prevails, or isotherms, have moved
poleward at a rate of about 35 miles per decade.

“As long as the total movement of isotherms
toward the poles is much smaller than the size of
the habitat, or the ranges in which the animals
live, the effect on species is limited. But now
the movement is inexorably toward the poles,
totaling more than 100 miles in recent decades.
If emissions of greenhouse gases continue to
increase at the current rate — “business as
usual” — then the rate of isotherm movement will
double during this century to at least 70 miles
per decade. If we continue on this path, a large
fraction of the species on Earth, as many as 50
percent or more, may become extinct.”
James Hansen
19 October 2006
The Planet in Peril – Part I
http://yaleglobal.yale.edu/display.article?id=8305

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“Each 1 degree C of global warming will shift
temperature zones by about 160 km (100 miles). In
the northern hemisphere this means that if the
climate warms 3°C species may have to shift
northward as much as 500 km (300 miles) in order
to find suitable habitat under the new climatic
regime.”

“Global warming may make a mockery of our
attempts in all nature reserves, including
Glacier National Park, to preserve natural
communities and rare, threatened, and endangered
native species.”

“Perhaps many of Glacier’s species will be able
to survive farther north, in the Banff-Jasper
area. Protection of corridors linking the Greater
Yellowstone Ecosystem, the Crown of the Continent
Ecosystem, and parks in the Canadian Rockies may
provide critical avenues for species dispersal.”

Glacier National Park Biodiversity Paper #7
  http://www.nps.gov/glac/resources/bio7.htm

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In its “Managing Mountain Parks,” the UN’s Food
and Agriculture Organization says, “The major
challenges for the twenty-first century include
this one:

“To link together the isolated existing mountain
protected areas by conservation corridors along
the mountain ranges. This not only increases
effective size, but provides migration corridors
for gene flow and species movement. As the
climate changes, poleward migration corridors in
north-south ranges (e.g. the Andes) will better
accommodate temperature change, and migration
along the east-west ranges (e.g. the Western Tien
Shan) will be a response to rainfall changes.

full FAO report at:
http://www.fao.org/documents/show_cdr.asp?url_file=/docrep/x0963E/x0963e06.htm

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The United Nations Environmental Programme stresses the same basic point:

“Forest management responses to climate change
should focus on maintaining species diversity on
national or continental scales through
facilitating the processes of species migration,
rather than by solely preserving specific
reserves.”

full UNEP report at:
http://www.unep-wcmc.org/forest/flux/executive_summary.htm

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Intact Native Forests Mitigate Climate Change Effects

Scopical
http://www.scopical.com.au
22 February 2008

Old growth forests reducing climate change effects
<http://www.scopical.com.au/articles/Politics/2831/Old-growth-forests-reducing-climate-change-effect>

The “Old Forests, New Management” conference in Tasmania has heard
from imminent scientists that there is no justification for logging of
old growth forests, and that re-growth forest logging could soon lose
its social licence under future carbon trading systems.

The conference, held in Hobart, has also warned that international
pressure could force an end to logging in native forests as the world
develops its approach to global warming and carbon trading.

In the context of Australia, there is not a need for old-growth forest
logging any more. But there needs to be structural adjustment for
industry and no perverse outcomes, as has happened in Tasmania
before,” the Australian National University Pofessor David Lindenmayer
said.

The four-day conference, attended by more than 250 delegates from 20
countries, was warned climate change and carbon trading could bring
massive pressure to end native forest logging.

University of Tasmania forestry Professor David Bowman predicted
carbon trading would throw accepted forest management and harvesting
systems into chaos.

“These calls are a warning to the Victorian Brumby Government that no
climate change policy is credible unless our forests are protected,”
said Victorian Forest Campaigner Luke Chamberlain.

“The destruction of Victoria’s native forests for woodchips shows that
we are lagging years behind international policy in tackling climate
change, especially when we have a massive plantation resource for the
logging industry to transition into.”

“Victoria’s forests are amongst the most carbon rich in the world and
their protection from logging must be part of the Brumby government’s
response to climate change.”

The call from scientists comes just a week after an economic report
released by McKinsey & Company highlighted massive opportunities to
reduce carbon emissions from the forestry sector, leading to enormous
cuts in Australia’s overall greenhouse gas emissions.

“Protecting old growth forests is an immediate way to curb emissions,
and allowing young native forests to grow old is a long term insurance
policy to remove excess carbon we have put into the atmosphere.”

“Logging causes climate change and the forest industry is a massive
emitter of carbon pollution. When you log old growth forests, and turn
our forests into woodchips, waste and sawdust, millions of tonnes of
carbon dioxide are released into the atmosphere.”

(c) 2007 Scopical Pty Ltd – All rights reserved

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