Thursday, March 27, 2008

Warming affects trees, streams in West

Climate change researchers are hesitant to ascribe a single cause for the warming, but they agree it's happening.
"By and large, there is a very detectable warming in this region," said Martin Hoerling, a meteorologist at the NOAA-funded Earth System Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colo. His own research suggests the West could heat up a lot more, possibly by 5 degrees by the midpoint of the century, depending on the level of greenhouse-gas emissions.
The report, "Hotter and Drier: The West's Changed Climate," crunched numbers kept by NOAA's Western Regional Climate Center in Reno, Nev.
"That sounds about right," the center's acting director, Kelly T. Redmond, said.
"It's been warming in this region for the past 35 years, after a cool period in the 1970s. We've been decidedly above average. You could put an exclamation on it," he said.
Redmond has made calculations similar to the report's 2.2-degree rise, which has meant fewer subzero nights to control the population of mountain pine beetles devastating Colorado's lodgepole pines.
At first, he said, "I didn't know whether to trust these numbers or not." They came from a network of about 2,000 thermometers across the West — from airports to weather hobbyists' backyards — recording lows and highs since the late 1800s.
But other recent patterns — earlier snowmelt in spring, earlier lilac and honeysuckle blooms — convinced Redmond the recordings were accurate.
"In 100 years, this is the largest change we've seen, so it catches your attention," he said. "We can't definitely attribute it to human causes, but my suspicion is at least part of it is due to climate change."
The West also is in the grip of a decade-long drought, which tends to raise temperatures, said Hoerling, who likewise is hesitant to attribute the warming of the West solely on carbon emissions. He believes cyclical changes in sea-surface temperatures also are to blame.
The consequences, though, are plain to see. In Yellowstone National Park, aerial photographs show vast orange-needled forests of whitebark pine that were green just three years ago. Yellowstone grizzly bears depend heavily on the fatty seeds of the whitebark pine for food. Colorado's signature aspen stands also are drying up, leaving them vulnerable to fungus.
The Rocky Mountain snowpacks that melt earlier in spring leave less water for summer irrigation and heat up trout streams. Glaciers, which provide consistent stream flows during summer, are melting. The glaciers at Montana's Glacier National Park could melt entirely by 2022, U.S. Geological Survey researchers have calculated.
Montana, Idaho and Wyoming had their hottest Julys on record last summer, while Phoenix had 47 days of 109 degrees or hotter, according to the National Weather Service.
Powell and Mead reservoirs, meanwhile, are half-empty. The reservoirs collect water from the Colorado River, supplying much of the booming Southwest. If they keep drying up, it could shred the Colorado River Compact of 1922, an agreement that allocates fixed amounts of water among seven states.
The upper basin states have the water, but lower basin states including California have senior water rights — a crisis in the making, said Bradley H. Udall, director of the Western Water Assessment Cooperative at the University of Colorado.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080327/ap_on_sc/warming_west

7 comments:

Desert Fox89 said...

Bader Ali:

Looks good! You can also add other CoolCities areas/ problems and the solutions for them. Where are the other links or comments??

Keep up the good work!

Desert Fox

Maftoon_ad said...

I wish somebody prvent sth to help stop this affects

Bader Ali said...

Sir , it is such an owner to visit me site and thanks for comment

Bader Ali said...

Maftoon_ad

We can do it just we need our abilities to prevent.

Al Shatri said...

this an important topic

thank you for your new posting


my regards
Mohamed Al Shateri

visit my blog: http://shateri-hct.blogspot.com

Desert Fox89 said...

Bader Ali :

can you spell my name???

good start, but be careful with 'usage'

the FOx

Desert Fox89 said...

They are all good and about local concerns about the environment and what is beeing done locally to protect the environment.

CHL 174 for the week 4 - 8 May: We will see (finally) 'Inconvenient Truth' and do the summary to post on your blogsites. The next 30% of your grade will deal primarily with the content of your blog and its quality and effectiveness. REad about 'AD's carbon footprint and we'll discuss this point on Tuesday.

Happy blogging...

the Fox