Climate change accelerating death of Western forests

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DENVER — The iconic pine and aspen forests of the Rocky Mountains are dying off at an alarming rate thanks to conditions exacerbated by climate change — drought, insect infestations and wildfires — a new report says.

Colorado alone could lose 45% of its aspen stands over the next 45 years, says the report released Thursday by the Union of Concerned Scientists and the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization. Pine bark beetles alone have killed 46 million acres of trees across the west, an area nearly the size of Colorado.

“The wildfires, infestations and heat and drought stress are the symptoms; climate change is the underlying disease,” Jason Funk, the report’s co-author and a senior climate scientist at Union of Concerned Scientists, said in a statement.

Projections by the U.S. Forest Service that were included in the report, predict that if emissions of heat-trapping gases continue increasing at recent rates, by 2060 the area climatically suitable in the Rocky Mountains for lodgepole pine could decline by about 90%, for ponderosa pine by about 80%, for Engelmann spruce by about 66% and for Douglas fir by about 58%.

National forests and parks play a key role in the economies of Colorado, Wyoming and Montana. National parks in those states, including Yellowstone and Glacier, host about 11 million visitors annually, generating $1 billion in tourist spending, the report, Rocky Mountain Forests at Risk, said. If the landscapes significantly change, tourists may no longer visit those areas, it said.

The trees grow in different areas, depending on how cold the winters get and how warm the summers are. If climate change alters those levels, the trees won’t grow there anymore.

“So far, we have had relatively modest climate changes, but they have already jolted our forests,” said Stephen Saunders, report co-author and president of Rocky Mountain Climate Organization. “If we continue changing the climate, we may bring about much more fundamental disruption of these treasured national landscapes.”

Researchers are celebrating after an urgent global search turned up a female mate for a fish that is on the brink of extinction.


Mangarahara cichlid (Ptychochromis Insolitus). (c) ZSL 

   

In May, aquarists at ZSL London Zoo launched a worldwide appeal to find a female Mangarahara cichlid (Ptychochromis Insolitus), a fish that was feared to be extinct in its native habitat in Madagascar. At the time the only two known individuals — both male — resided at ZSL’s Aquarium. 

After the call went out, ZSL was contacted by hundreds of aquarium owners, fish collectors, and scientists offering advice. One of the respondents was a Madagascar businessman who said he’s seen the fish in northern Madagascar. ZSL explains what happened next:

      An exploratory expedition was arranged with vital support from HM Ambassador in the British Embassy of Madagascar, so that, along with aquarists from Toronto Zoo in Canada, Brian Zimmerman and Kienan Parbles from ZSL London Zoo could head off to Madagascar to search for the Mangarahara cichlid. 
      After days of searching empty streams, and rapidly losing hope of finding the cichlid, the team visited a tiny village built on the edge of a now-disconnected tributary from the Mangarahara River. 
    With help from local villagers, areas of water were cordoned off using nets to mark the search areas. Initially finding only other native species, the team were ecstatic when they finally found the first one of the last remaining Mangarahara cichlids in existence.

ZSL says its team was shocked to find the fish still surviving in its native habitat, which has been mostly destroyed. 

“We weren’t holding out much hope of finding any fish in the wild, as so much of the Mangarahara River now resembles the desert because of deforestation and intensive agricultural use,” said Zimmerman, the Zoo’s Aquarium Curator. “These cichlids have shown remarkable survival skills, and managed to find one of the very last remaining water sources to live in, but their numbers are tiny and the non-flowing water is not an ideal habitat for them. We’re now doing all we can to protect these remaining fish.” 


ZSL Fish Appeal Poster (left). Brian Zimmerman searching Malagasy rivers (right). Images © ZSL 

18 Mangarahara cichlids are now housed in a private aquaculture facility in Madagascar. ZSL is developing a conservation plan and captive-breeding program to bring the species back from the brink. 

But while the Mangarahara cichlid’s story may end up with a happy ending, the same can’t be said for many other of Madagacar’s endemic cichlids, which have gone extinct or are endangered due to habitat loss and the introduction of invasive species like the tilapia and the Nile perch. 

Read more at http://news.mongabay.com/2013/1220-mangarahara-cichlid.html#0TGMQYWgqRqJhetb.99

The Threat of the End of Photosynthesis

The Effect of Temperature on the Rate of Photosynthesis – By Bob Barber, eHow

Plants produce sugar and oxygen from carbon dioxide, water and sunlight. This process is called photosynthesis. Photosynthesis is a series of chemical reactions. Heat speeds up chemical reactions by adding kinetic energy to the reactants. Therefore, heat speeds up photosynthesis.

However, there is a wild card. Too much heat destroys enzyme. Once heat begins to destroy enzymes, photosynthesis drastically slows.

effect-temperature-rate-photosynthesis

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Photosynthesis_and_respiration_-_temperature_and_light_graph_(pl).png, Jiří Janoušek original image author, image modified by Bob Barber, English text, explanations added

Jewcology: Valuing Biodiversity

Jewcology: Valuing Biodiversity – The Jerusalem Post

torahAccording to the Talmudic sage Rav, “Of all the things that the Holy One, Blessed be He created in this world, nothing was created without a purpose.”
All creatures from humans to mice to rivers to sand are seen as a manifestation of God’s wisdom and glory. As UK Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks teaches, “the unity of God is to be found in the diversity of creation.”
For example, the Midrash (Oral tradition) teaches, “Even things which appear to you to be superfluous in this world, like flies, fleas and mosquitoes carry forth the will of the Holy One! Even the snake, the mosquito and the frogs!”