GLOBALÝWARMINGÝNEWS
By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
BOSTON, MA (4/18/97) Recent satellite analysis shows an hitherto
unexpected increase in photosynthesis in the northern hemisphere associated
with a global warming trend, while ground observations in the tropics also
report disturbing meteorological trends.
Researchers
at Boston University base their findings on analyses of data from three
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather satellites.
The satellites measure light reflected from the Earth's surface. By comparing
the ratio of infrared to visible light, the researchers can estimate vegetation
growth in a given area. The studies suggest that Spring now
comes one week earlier than it did in the early 1970's.
Caption: Llamas ponder the shrinking ice-cap (click for larger version)
The period since 1980 has been the warmest in the past 200 years. The data
from the satellites revealed that, on average, photosynthesis between latitudes
45 degrees N and 70 degrees N increased by about 10% between 1981-91. This
area includes Boston, Bordeaux and Vladivostok. The data also showed that
snow was disappearing about a week earlier in these areas than previously.
Variations in the timing of the growing season are closely connected
with the seasonal cycle in carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere, a cycle that is superimposed on
a general long-term rise (and which is partly responsible for making
the underlying trend so hard to spot). This cycle is the result of
both plant growth and plant respiration and therefore strongly associated
with the seasonal cycle in surface temperature, the researchers note.
"Both the satellite data and the CO2 record indicate that the global
carbon cycle has responded to interannual fluctuations in surface air temperature
which, although small at the global scale, are regionally highly significant,"
said lead investigator Ranga B Myneni.
"It's a marvelously provocative article," says Inez Fung, a global
change scientist at the University of Victoria in British Columbia. "They
convinced me that there's a positive trend, but I'm not sure about the
magnitude ... 10% over a decade--that's a whopping number."
The study will certainly stimulate debate, Fung predicted. Satellite sensors
may be suspect, and the conclusions of this study represent extrapolations
from a very small observed change. Nonetheless, the data are compelling
and have yet to be disproved, noted Fung.
More evidence suggesting global warming was presented at the Association
of American Geographers in Fort Worth, TX. Ohio State University researchers
reported that some of the most compelling evidence yet for recent global
warming may be found in the tropics and subtropics, rather than in the
polar regions where early signs of warming are anticipated.
For example, ice caps in alpine regions throughout the tropics and subtropics
are melting at a phenomenal rate. Moreover, other scientists discovered
last year that the freezing point in the upper atmosphere has been gaining
altitude.
These findings, may be among the best evidence to date that the planet
is experiencing a recent and rapid warming, said Ellen Mosley-Thompson,
a professor of geography at Ohio State.
The reported evidence includes:
-
The edge of the Qori Kalis glacier that flows off the Quelccaya
ice cap high in the Peruvian
Andes Mountains was retreating at a rate of four meters (13 feet) annually
between 1963 and 1978. By 1995, that rate had grown to 30 meters (99 feet)
each year.
-
The freezing level in the Earth's atmosphere -- the height where the
air temperature reaches 0 degrees C -- has been gaining altitude since
1970 at a rate of 4.5 meters (nearly 15 feet) each year.
-
Ice cores taken from the Dunde
ice cap in eastern Tibet have shown that the last 50 years were the
warmest in recorded history. A similar ice core record from the Huascaran
ice cap in Peru has shown a strong warming over the last 200 years.
"Most of the evidence for warming that we see in these high alpine
ice caps is in regions that are already water stressed. These tropical
areas are where most of the planet's population lives and where subsistence
agriculture is incapable of feeding the population. And in the future,
the greatest increase in population will occur here, Mosley-Thompson said.
For years, scientists have argued whether the evidence for changes in world
climate were being hidden behind normal climate variations. The Ohio State
team now believes that the evidence is getting stronger at the same time
our ability to decipher it has improved dramatically.
They cited the loss of ice volume in the tropical and subtropical ice caps,
in the Antarctic Peninsula, and in the Russian Arctic, along with increased snowfall over East
Antarctica as further evidence of change.
"We're making massive changes to the climate on an unprecedented scale
in some parts of the globe," she said. "This kind of discussion
has to find its way into the general conversation."
There is wide disagreement currently on the topic of global warming. Another
recent study by scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric
Research (NCAR) questioned the use of temperature-measuring satellites
for measuring global climate change. Other critics have recently published
overviews on the potential limitations of using computer models that mimic
the earth's atmosphere for research on climate change.
Dr. Myneni's research appears in the April 17, 1997 issue of Nature. The
NCAR research appeared in the March 13, 1997 issue of Nature (Hurrell et
al.). The Association of American Geographers conference took place April
3, 1997.
Related information on the Internet
NOAA Climate Prediction Center
Atmosphere & Climate
Links
Scientific American,
5/97: The Coming Climate
Byrd Polar Research Center
AEÝActivity:
Gaia
Science Update: 2/14/97-
Global .Weather
Science Update:
4/96- CO2 Threat & Global Warming
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