Showing posts with label land. Show all posts
Showing posts with label land. Show all posts

Relationship Between Warming Over Land and in the Sea

As we continue to pour billions of tons of greenhouse gas (GHG) pollution into our atmosphere each year the evidence continues to show that this is warming our climate both on land and at sea. The abundance of evidence for global warming comes from temperature records, atmospheric pollution readings, in ice cores and statistical analysis. A couple of recent studies reiterate this warming trend and help to explain the relationship between warming on land and at sea.

Since the 1980s each successive decade has been hotter than the one before.  Not a single month’s temperatures have fallen below the 20th-century average since February 1985. Half the world’s population is now too young to have lived through the last colder-than-average month. In worldwide temperature records going back to 1880, the 19 hottest years have all occurred since 1985. Eight of the nine hottest years on record were in the last decade.

Warming Over Land

According to a new study directed by Gilbert Compo a scientist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration there is strong evidence for global warming over land. Compo is a researcher at NOAA's Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado.

Compo and his colleagues reviewed the period from 1871 through 2010 using something called 20CR analysis which relies largely on barometers. According to their research, since 1952, the Earth has shown a rise of 0.78 degrees Celsius, which Compo termed "statistically indistinguishable" from 1.18 degrees Celsius. The study also showed an increase from 1901 to 2010 of 0.99 degrees Celsius,

What makes this study unique is that in addition to using barometric pressure rather than temperatures, it refutes the contention that this warming trend is caused by urban infrastructure which generates and retains heat.

Compo expressed the hope "that the general public and decision makers, no matter what their political affiliation, would recognize that the warming of the land areas is real. Even the barometers can tell that the planet is warming."

Warming of the Oceans

Our oceans may explain why steadily rising atmospheric temperatures appears to have plateaued in the last few years. This appears to be due to the fact that the ocean is absorbing more heat. This finding was reported in a study published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, a publication of the American Geophysical Union.

Here is how the USA Today reported the study's findings:

“[H]eat absorbed by the world's oceans has increased significantly...prompting the study co-authors to say that the warming has been diverted and is heating the oceans instead of the atmosphere.”

Conclusion

The warming of the oceans will increase the severity of extreme weather events, it is also killing sea life.  If we continue to do nothing (or too little) the world will get much hotter. As Fredd Krupp said, "We have reached the moment for action. There’s a new national conversation under way about how best to bolster our defenses against the extreme weather events." He goes on to suggest that a carbon cap and a carbon fee would go a long way to help us reduce GHGs and generate revenue.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Study Shows Deforestation of Tropical Rainforest Decreases Precipitation

Deforestation can have many impacts including increases in un-sequestered carbon, and decreases in atmospheric oxygen, but according to new research loss of tropical rainforests can also significantly decrease rainfall. According to a new study titled, "Observations of increased tropical rainfall preceded by air passage over forests," the destruction of tropical forests could reduce rain across the Amazon basin by more than a fifth (21%) in the dry season by 2050.

This is the finding of researchers from the University of Leeds and the NERC Centre for Ecology & Hydrology. Their study suggests that rainforests can double the amount of rainfall even in areas thousands of kilometres away.

Lead author Dr Dominick Spracklen from the School of Earth and Environment at the University of Leeds said: “Our study implies that deforestation of the Amazon and Congo forests could have catastrophic consequences for the people living thousands of kilometres away in surrounding countries."

According to their data the more vegetation the air had traveled over, the more moisture it carried and more rain was produced.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Study Shows that Climate Change is Killing Forests

Climate change is causing a massive forest die-off on almost every continent on Earth. Forests are already under threat from illegal logging and land clearing for agriculture. According to a new paper published in the journal Nature Climate Change, trees in forests all around the world are dying due to dry climatic conditions and elevated heat. This study corroborates the notion that global warming is increasing the risk of fires, disease and pest infestations like pine beetles. This die-off is undermining the wide range of ecological and economic benefits that forests provide.

The study, authored by William Anderegg of Carnegie Institution for Science at Stanford University and Jeffrey Kane and Leander Anderegg of Northern Arizona University, reviews dozens of scientific papers dealing with the ecological impacts of climate change on forests.

Although forests reflect more light and decrease local temperatures, there are a host of other issues that are exacerbated by global warming. Forests reduce the impacts of climate change by sequestering carbon and releasing oxygen, however, less trees means more carbon and less oxygen. This constitutes a dangerous feedback loop. Declining forests are being impacted by global warming and this is interfering with the natural processes that mitigate climate change.

As reviewed in a Mongabay article, "Forests cover 42 million square kilometers or 30 percent of Earth's land surface...Forests store 45 percent of the carbon found in terrestrial ecosystems and sequester as much as 25 percent of annual carbon emissions from human activities, helping mitigate a key driver of climate change...clear-cutting of forests in the tropics accounts for 8-15 percent of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions."

As stated in Science Daily, "From an ecosystem perspective, forest die-off will also likely affect hydrological processes and nutrient cycles...decomposition of fallen trees releases carbon into the atmosphere, thus producing a warming effect...Debris from fallen trees could also increase a forest's fire risk."

These impacts have a very real economic costs. Forests account for trillions of dollars of annual economic activity. Mass tree mortality will incur substantial losses to the timber industry and could cause declines in real-estate property values.

Forests cover 42 million square kilometers or 30 percent of Earth's land surface. Every continent on Earth is being impacted by forests loss with the exception of Antarctica. In the US, there has been an increase in the incidence and severity of forest fires since 2000. A wide range of forest are being impacted including the Redwood forest in Marin, CA. Rainforest in Borneo. Forests in Southeast Asia, the Russian Far East, and the Amazon has been particularly affected by drought over the past 20 years. Roughly a million hectares of Amazon rainforest suffered from severe drought stress in 2010.

Although more research is required, the study suggest a troubling global trend that could cost billions of dollars and substantially accelerate climate change.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Earth Wisdom Permaculture Event: A New Paradigm in Regenerative Living

Earth Wisdom Permaculture is a 2-week Permaculture Design Course. It will take place on July 20 to August 3 in London, Ontario. This internationally recognized, 72-hour training offers information on the ethics, principles, methods, techniques, and practices of Permaculture Design Course. The Earth Wisdom Permaculture course provides you with the skills to meet the challenging cultural, environmental and energy-supply changes that face us. It teaches how to reconnect with the 'Original Instructions' revealed within nature so that we are empowered to create positive, active and practical solutions for personal, community and environment benefit.
This intensive on the land experience gives you a comprehensive introduction to the principles and ethics of Permaculture, design techniques, natural building, rural and urban gardening and community design. It meets international standards as a foundation course for all permaculture practitioners and teachers.

There will be a balance between classroom time, hands-on experimental learning and personal empowerment work. This training will be useful for people with varying levels of experience - from backyard gardeners to design professionals. Participants become certified as a Permaculture Designer and receive a Permaculture Design Certificate recognized worldwide.

Earth Wisdom Permaculture is a complete design system, based on principles of ecology and sustainability that can be used to create resilient, economically stable, and productive landscapes, home and communities. Permaculture designers make their imprint on Earth, culture and economy a positive one.

Permaculture is "Consciously designed landscapes which mimic the patterns and relationships found in nature, while yielding an abundance of food, fiber and energy for provision of local needs. People, their buildings and the ways in which they organize themselves are central to permaculture." ~ David Holmgren, (co-originator of the Permaculture concept)

Earth Wisdom Permaculture blends a full Permaculture certification course with earth-based cosmology, teaching visionary and practical solutions for personal and social change. This course gives primary attention to regenerative living systems design for a temperate climate and is taught by certified instructors who live and create within the temperate environment.

“What permaculturists are doing is (some of) the most important activity that any group is doing on the planet. We don’t know what the details of a truly sustainable future are going to be like, but we need options. We need people experimenting in all kinds of ways and permaculturists are one of the critical groups that are doing that”. ~Dr. David Susuki, Geneticist, Renowned Environmentalist and Broadcaster

"We are nature, working." ~ Penny Livingston Stark

For more information click here.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Permaculture Design Course at the Whole Village

The Permaculture Design Course at the Whole Village will take place on July 22 to August 4, 2012, in Caledon, Ontario. This course is designed to create a self sufficient lifestyle in harmony with nature. This intensive 13 day course offers practical training in permaculture design principles and techniques to create sustainable environments that provide self-reliance in food, shelter, energy, fulfilling employment and supportive community. This training will be useful for those from beginning, backyard gardeners to design professionals. Field trips and practical sessions for design and gardening are included. Evening seminars and socials complete the day sessions. Topics include: Ecological Landscape Design, Organic Gardening, Edible Landscaping and Forest Gardening, Poultry Care, Appropriate Technology, Ecovillage Design, Ecoforestry, Soil Fertility and Composting, Fruit and Nut Production, Water Harvesting and Uses.

The instructor is Gregoire Lamoureux, he is a permaculture designer, writer, consultant and teacher. He is the director of the Kootenay Permaculture Institute. He has taught and worked with urban, rural and commercial permaculture systems in Canada for 20 years. Skilled guest speakers will be presenting as well, e.g. Richard Griffith, Jane Hayes.

Participants will be able to observe and take part in hands-on activities on the farm as well as experience a functioning ecovillage (green intentional community). Permaculture or “permanent agriculture” was originally conceived over 30 years ago by Australian ecologist Bill Mollison. Observing aboriginal culture and forest ecosystems, he concluded that we could deliberately design agriculturally productive ecosystems, echoing the diversity, stability and resilience of natural ecosystems.

Permaculture designs provide food, energy, and shelter for people and animal inhabitants while linking the needs and outputs of each element. The result is a dynamic yet stable system that sustains itself. Permaculture is a holistic approach to land use, which works with nature’s rhythm and patterns, weaving together the elements of microclimate, annual and perennial plants, animals, water and soil management, and human needs into intricately connected and productive communities. Permaculture systems can be developed in any climate and on any scale. Designs have been developed for balconies, backyards and for entire villages and urban communities.  

Testimonials

“It has been a joy and a privilege to be a part of this incredible, transformative experience.”

“You have fed my mind, my soul, and especially my body.”

“You have significantly changed so many lives.” “I will carry this experience in my heart - moving forward in my work, community life, and inner journey.”

Click here for more information or contat Brenda at bdolling (at) wholevillage.org or call 519-942-4010.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Ecological Farmers Summer Bus Tour to Rodale (Event)

On July 19-21, 2012, there will be a summer bus trip to Rodale (3 full days/2 nights). We will participants will be part of the Rodale Institute Annual Field Day where speakers will present research information and a tour of their research farm. They will also visit include several farm stops in New York and Pennsylvania including Eric and Anne Nordell’s vegetable farm (at Trout Run, Pa) and Steve Groff’s Farm to discuss cover crops and his crop management systems.

Cost is $175 for members ($220 for non-members) plus meals and accommodation. Call the EFO office, 519-822-8606 or 1 877 822-8606 to register. Registration deadline June 15th, 2012.  

For more information: Contact Name: Karen Maitland Website: http://www.efao.ca Phone: 1 877 822-8606 E-mail: info (at) efao.ca



© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
Food Production and UN Millennium Development Goals
Population Growth and Global Food Production
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