Spring Has Sprung
Climate changes shift springtime
A Europe-wide study has provided "conclusive proof" that the seasons are changing, with spring arriving earlier each year, researchers say.
Scientists from 17 nations examined 125,000 studies involving 561 species.
Spring was beginning on average six to eight days earlier than it did 30 years ago, the researchers said.
The study, published in the journal Global Change Biology, shows changes to the continent's climate were shifting the timing of the seasons, the scientists said.
One of the paper's lead authors, Tim Sparks from the UK's Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH), said the findings did not go as far as pointing the finger of blame at human-induced climate change.
"We can't tell that from our study but experts have already shown that there is a discernable human influence on the current climate warming."
But Dr Sparks said it did show that there was a direct link between rising temperatures and changes to plant and animal behaviour.
"We need to look at change over very large areas and we need to examine as many species groups as possible because there has been some mild criticism that people have cherry-picked the results they presented.
"We have gone for the most complete coverage possible that we could in Europe to try to see if there was still this effect," he said. "It is very conclusive that there is." The team examined 125,000 observational series of 542 plants and 19 animal species in 21 European countries from 1971 to 2000. The results showed that 78% of all leafing, flowering and fruiting records were happening earlier in the year, while only 3% were significantly delayed. Dr Sparks said horse chestnut trees, which grow all over the continent, were particularly good indicators. "It is a good example because it is easy to identify, and it has distinctive phases of leafing, flowering and producing conkers." He hoped the findings would now focus attention on the potential consequences of changes to the behaviour of plants and animals. "If you have species that are dependent on each other changing at different rates, that could just break down the food web. "For example, caterpillars feed on oak trees, and birds feed on the caterpillars. Unless these species remain synchronised, there could be problems for any one or more of those elements of the food web."
2 Comments:
This is frightening. With all the evidence that is mounting, at some point political leaders will have to acknowledge that we MUST change our ways vis-a-vis the environment. Hopefully we won't be crispy critters by then.
I keep thinking that is inevitable, that politicians must take action at some point in time. But it just doesn't happen. It will take a REVOLUTION.
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