Global Warming - Globale Erwaermung

Samstag, 28. Januar 2006

Help protect polar bears, corals, seabirds, and other species threatened by climate change

From: rad-green-request@lists.econ.utah.edu
Sent: Friday, January 27, 2006 11:00 AM
Subject: Rad-Green Digest, Vol 28, Issue 61

Date: Fri, 27 Jan 2006 00:12:44 -0800 (PST)
From: james m nordlund
Subject: [R-G] Endangered Earth, No. 367 - Online


Biodiversity Activist, No. 367 Center for Biological Diversity January 19, 2006 http://www.biologicaldiversity.org
_______________________________

SPECIAL CLIMATE, AIR & ENERGY PROGRAM REPORT
_______________________________

JOIN THE VIRTUAL MARCH AGAINST GLOBAL WARMING

Help protect polar bears, corals, seabirds, and other species threatened by climate change

CENTER FILES LAWSUIT TO PROTECT POLAR BEARS

FLORIDA CORALS HEADED TOWARD ESA PROTECTION

GLACIER MURRELET ADVANCES TOWARD LISTING

NEW RESEARCH FINDINGS UNDERSCORE GLOBAL WARMING'S THREAT TO BIODIVERSITY

JOIN THE VIRTUAL MARCH AGAINST GLOBAL WARMING Help protect polar bears, corals, seabirds, and other species threatened by climate change

The Center has joined the Virtual March against global warming to help build political momentum to enact policies for major greenhouse gas reductions. Thus far more than one quarter of a million people are marching through the Virtual March Web site.

Please take a moment now to join the march and learn more by clicking here: http://www.stopglobalwarming.org/partners/?424528 .

Global warming is emerging as one of the greatest threats to the planet's biological diversity. The Center is working hard to protect some of the first species to be threatened with extinction due to climate change. Recently we have taken action to protect polar bears, coral reefs, and the Kittlitz's murrelet, a rare seabird.


CENTER FILES LAWSUIT TO PROTECT POLAR BEARS

Polar bears are threatened by global warming because rising temperatures are causing the rapid melting of their sea-ice habitat. The polar bear is the Arctic's top predator and is the largest of the four currently recognized species of bear in the genus Ursus. Polar bears live only in areas where there is sea ice for a substantial portion of the year and are completely dependent upon sea ice habitat for all of their essential behaviors, including mating, traveling, and hunting and feeding upon ringed seals, their primary prey. Some polar bears even give birth to their cubs in snow dens on top of drifting sea ice. Yet their Arctic sea ice habitat is fast disappearing, threatening polar bears with extinction.

The Arctic has experienced earlier and more rapid warming that any place else on the globe, and temperatures in parts of Alaska have already risen more than 5 deg. Fahrenheit in the past century and may rise 18 deg. Fahrenheit or more in the next. Polar bear populations are already in decline in some areas and cannot survive the complete loss of summer sea ice, which scientists now believe may occur well before the end of this century.

On December 15, 2005 the Center, along with our partners Greenpeace and the Natural Resources Defense Council, filed suit against Secretary of Interior Gale Norton and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to force the Bush administration to respond to our petition to list polar bears under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The ESA requires the administration to respond to the petition within 90 days of its filing. The Center filed the petition in February 2005 but has to date received no response from the administration.

Further details on the polar bear and the Center's campaign to protect it can be found on the Center's polar bear webpage.

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/species/polarbear/index.html
(polar bear)

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/press/polarbear10-12-05.html
(notice)

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/species/polarbear/Complaint12-15-05.pdf
(lawsuit)


FLORIDA CORALS HEADED TOWARD ESA PROTECTION

In response to a 2004 petition from the Center, the National Marine Fisheries Service has proposed to list two species of Caribbean corals, the staghorn and elkhorn corals, as threatened species under the Endangered Species Act. These species, which occur in Florida, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and elsewhere in the Caribbean, have declined by over 90 percent in many areas. The elkhorn and staghorn corals were until recently the dominant reef-building species in the Caribbean.

In the face of elevated ocean temperatures, the corals "bleach" by expelling the symbiotic algae that provide them nourishment. Such bleaching events are often fatal, and as they become more frequent with global warming, threaten not just these coral species but the entire reef ecosystem.

Corals face an additional threat from greenhouse gas emissions: increasing levels of dissolved carbon dioxide in the oceans from society's fossil fuel use reduces the rate of calcification corals need for growth.

A final rule to list the corals as threatened species is due May
9, 2006. Once listed, the staghorn and elkhorn corals will be the first species protected under the ESA due to the impacts of global warming.

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/species/coral/index.html
(petition)

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/press/coral5-12-05.html
(proposal)


GLACIER MURRELET ADVANCES TOWARD LISTING

In 2001, the Center filed its first petition seeking to have a species protected under the Endangered Species Act because of the impacts of global warming. The Kittlitz's murrelet, a small seabird that feeds at the base of tidewater glaciers in parts of Alaska and Russia has declined dramatically in recent years. Scientists believe that the Kittlitz's murrelet's decline is likely linked to global warming. After designating the Kittlitz's murrelet as a Candidate species, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service took no further action on the petition.

A Candidate species is one which the agency acknowledges warrants the protections of the ESA, but for which the agency claims it does not have the resources to protect. The Bush administration has placed numerous species in addition to the Kittlitz's murrelet in this bureaucratic waiting room for which extinction is the only exit. On November 8, 2005, the Center filed suit to force the Fish and Wildlife Service to fully protected the Kittlitz's murrelet under the ESA, as well as 282 similarly situated species.

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/species/murrelet/index.html
(petition)

http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/press/283species11-8-05.html
(lawsuit)


NEW RESEARCH FINDINGS UNDERSCORE GLOBAL WARMING'S THREAT TO BIODIVERSITY

This month, a study published in the preeminent scientific journal Nature linked the extinction of dozens of amphibian species in Central and South America to global warming. The study shows how climate change has contributed to ideal conditions for growth of the chytrid fungus, a disease which kills frogs by growing on their skin and attacking their epidermis and teeth, as well as by releasing a toxin. Seventy-four of the 110 species of brightly colored harlequin frogs of the genus Atelopus have disappeared in the past 20 years due to spread of the fungus.

The significance of the study is that global warming is not some future theoretical threat to Earth's biodiversity, but rather is already responsible for one of the largest vertebrate extinction events in the past 100 years. Harlequin frogs may be among the first modern extinctions linked to global warming, but unfortunately, absent major reductions in greenhouse gas emissions they will not be the last. A study published in 2004 in the journal Nature projected that approximately 35 percent of species could be committed to extinction by 2050 under a high climate-warming scenario, and that even under a minimal climate-warming scenario, the percentage of species committed to extinction is still 18 percent.

New research published since the Center submitted a petition to protect the polar bear under the Endangered Species Act has reinforced predictions of the impacts of global warming on the bear's Arctic habitat. New findings show that the Arctic may already be on a trajectory towards a summer ice-free, "super interglacial" state that has not existed for at least a million years. There appear to be no feedback processes in the Arctic system capable of altering this trajectory towards dramatically less permanent ice than at present. Large decreases in winter sea-ice extent in the Arctic have also been documented. The wintertime trend alone is now approaching sea ice reductions of 3 percent per decade. In addition, a new record minimum sea-ice extent was recorded in September 2005, further supporting the conclusion that Arctic sea ice is likely on an accelerating, long-term decline. The continuation of current rates of decline would leave the Arctic ice-free in the summertime well before the end of this century.

And as with the extinction of the harlequin frogs, the impacts of global warming on the polar bear are not limited to projections for the future; these impacts have arrived and are already affecting individuals and populations. A study released in 2005 by the U.S. Minerals Management Service shows that reduced sea ice is increasing polar bear drowning deaths. Researchers documented the drowning deaths of at least four polar bears in September 2004, when the sea ice was a record 160 miles off the north coast of Alaska. As the survey covered only
10 percent of the area, the number of actual polar bear deaths may be an order of magnitude higher. Other research has documented population level effects of global warming on polar bears, with the Western Hudson Bay population in Canada declining by approximately 14 percent since 1995.

Stunning research results like these, as well as in other areas - such as the impact global warming on human health and the economy - are garnering increasing media attention, and awareness of the magnitude of the global warming threat is growing. The Center's work to protect polar bears has been featured in the local and national television and print media and is contributing to this growing awareness. The Center's Climate, Air and Energy program will work hard to make 2006 a watershed year in which this dawning awareness is translated into meaningful action to curb U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.

Scientific Articles Mentioned:

Meier, W., J. et al. 2005. Reductions in arctic sea ice cover no longer limited to summer. Eos Vol. 86, No. 36: 326-237.

Monnett, C., et al. 2005. Potential effects of diminished sea ice on open-water swimming, mortality, and distribution of polar bears during fall in the Alaskan Beaufort Sea. Scientific Poster presented at the Society for Marine Mammalogy 16th Biennial Conference on the Biology of Marine Mammals, December 12-16, 2005.

National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC). 2005. Sea ice decline intensifies. Joint press release from the National Snow and Ice Data Center, NASA, and the University of Washington. Boulder, CO. September 28, 2005.

Overpeck, J.T., et al. 2005. Arctic system on trajectory to new, seasonally ice-free state. Eos Vol. 86, No. 34:309-316.

Polar Bear Specialist Group ("PBSG"). 2005. PRESS RELEASE. 14th Meeting of the IUCN/SSC Polar Bear Specialist Group. Seattle, Washington, USA.

Pounds, J.A., et al. 2006. Widespread amphibian extinctions from epidemic disease driven by global warming Nature 439: 161-167. January 12, 2006.

Thomas, C.D. et al. 2004. Extinction risk from climate change. Nature 427:145-148. January 8, 2004.


Learn more about how the Center works to reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions and protect species from global warming on the Center's Climate, Air, and Energy homepage: http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/swcbd/programs/policy/energy/index.html


Informant: Friends

Donnerstag, 26. Januar 2006

Klimawandel: NASA nennt 2005 wärmstes Jahr seit Beginn der Wetteraufzeichnung

26.01.06

Nach Angaben der US-Weltraumbehörde NASA war 2005 weltweit das wärmste Jahr seit Beginn der Wetteraufzeichnung vor mehr als hundert Jahren. Die NASA-Forscher machen wie die meisten Klimawissenschaftler die starke Zunahme der Treibhausgasemissionen für den Temperaturanstieg verantwortlich. Angesichts der ökologischen und ökonomischen Folgen der weltweiten Erwärmung fordert der Verkehrsclub Deutschland (VCD) wirksame Maßnahmen, um den Kohlendioxidausstoß des Verkehrs zu reduzieren.

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet: http://www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php?Nr=12772

Earth could warm up fast

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0126/p16s01-stss.html


Informant: Teresa Binstock

Rising Toll From Disasters Underscores Need For Humanitarian, Political Action

http://www.commondreams.org/news2006/0124-21.htm

2005 Was Warmest Year on Record: NASA

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/0125-08.htm

Dienstag, 24. Januar 2006

The Amazon is Drying: Catastrophically

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/17/AR2006011700895_pf.html

Washington Post January 18, 2006

Is It Warm in Here? We Could Be Ignoring the Biggest Story in Our History

By David Ignatius

One of the puzzles if you're in the news business is figuring out what's "news." The fate of your local football team certainly fits the definition. So does a plane crash or a brutal murder. But how about changes in the migratory patterns of butterflies?


Scientists believe that new habitats for butterflies are early effects of global climate change -- but that isn't news, by most people's measure. Neither is declining rainfall in the Amazon, or thinner ice in the Arctic. We can't see these changes in our personal lives, and in that sense, they are abstractions. So they don't grab us the way a plane crash would -- even though they may be harbingers of a catastrophe that could, quite literally, alter the fundamentals of life on the planet. And because they're not "news," the environmental changes don't prompt action, at least not in the United States.

What got me thinking about the recondite life rhythms of the planet, and not the 24-hour news cycle, was a recent conversation with a scientist named Thomas E. Lovejoy, who heads the H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics and the Environment. When I first met Lovejoy nearly
20 years ago, he was trying to get journalists like me to pay attention to the changes in the climate and biological diversity of the Amazon. He is still trying, but he's beginning to wonder if it's too late.

Lovejoy fears that changes in the Amazon's ecosystem may be irreversible. Scientists reported last month that there is an Amazonian drought apparently caused by new patterns in Atlantic currents that, in turn, are similar to projected climate change. With less rainfall, the tropical forests are beginning to dry out. They burn more easily, and, in the continuous feedback loops of their ecosystem, these drier forests return less moisture to the atmosphere, which means even less rain. When the forest trees are deprived of rain, their mortality can increase by a factor of six, and similar devastation affects other species, too.

"When do you wreck it as a system?" Lovejoy wonders. "It's like going up to the edge of a cliff, not really knowing where it is. Common sense says you shouldn't discover where the edge is by passing over it, but that's what we're doing with deforestation and climate change."

Lovejoy first went to the Amazon 40 years ago as a young scientist of
23. It was a boundless wilderness, the size of the continental United States, but at that time it had just 2 million people and one main road. He has returned more than a hundred times, assembling over the years a mental time-lapse photograph of how this forest primeval has been affected by man. The population has increased tenfold, and the wilderness is now laced with roads, new settlements and economic progress. The forest itself, impossibly rich and lush when Lovejoy first saw it, is changing.

For Lovejoy, who co-edited a pioneering 1992 book, "Global Warming and Biological Diversity," there is a deep sense of frustration. A crisis he and other scientists first sensed more than two decades ago is drifting toward us in what seems like slow motion, but fast enough that it may be impossible to mitigate the damage.

The best reporting of the non-news of climate change has come from Elizabeth Kolbert in the New Yorker. Her three-part series last spring lucidly explained the harbingers of potential disaster: a shrinking of Arctic sea ice by 250 million acres since 1979; a thawing of the permafrost for what appears to be the first time in 120,000 years; a steady warming of Earth's surface temperature; changes in rainfall patterns that could presage severe droughts of the sort that destroyed ancient civilizations. This month she published a new piece, "Butterfly Lessons," that looked at how these delicate creatures are moving into new habitats as the planet warms. Her real point was that all life, from microorganisms to human beings, will have to adapt, and in ways that could be dangerous and destabilizing.

So many of the things that pass for news don't matter in any ultimate sense. But if people such as Lovejoy and Kolbert are right, we are all but ignoring the biggest story in the history of humankind. Kolbert concluded her series last year with this shattering thought: "It may seem impossible to imagine that a technologically advanced society could choose, in essence, to destroy itself, but that is what we are now in the process of doing." She's right. The failure of the United States to get serious about climate change is unforgivable, a human folly beyond imagining.


Informant: Ethan X

Montag, 23. Januar 2006

Vote for renewable energy in the Philippines

The global power sector is the world's biggest climate polluter, being responsible for 37% of all man-made carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Yet rather than falling, CO2 emissions are massively increasing. In the Asia-Pacific region alone, they are projected to rise by 85% by 2025.

The PowerSwitch! campaign in the Philippines is now pushing for the passage of a Renewable Energy Bill, which supports the development of renewable energy such as wind, biomass, hydro, solar and geothermal.

This landmark legislation will enable the Philippines to choose clean energy for its energy security and a cleaner environment.

So far, more than 100,000 people have signed up to express their support for the bill. Join them now and show your support for a clean energy future!

http://passport.panda.org/campaigns/campaign.cfm?uNC=92998851&uCampaignId=1121
http://passport.panda.org/campaigns/action_epetition.cfm?uNC=00664104&uCampaignId=1121&uActionId=1841

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