. Medical and Hospital News .




EARTH OBSERVATION
Significant reduction in temperature and vegetation seasonality over northern latitudes
by Staff Writers
Cape Cod MA (SPX) Mar 12, 2013


File image.

An international team of authors from 17 institutions in seven countries, including the Woods Hole Research Center, have published a study shows that, as the cover of snow and ice in the northern latitudes has diminished in recent years, the temperature over the northern land mass has increased at different rates during the four seasons, causing a reduction in temperature and vegetation seasonality in this area.

The temperature and vegetation at northern latitudes increasingly resemble those found several degrees of latitude farther south as recently as 30 years ago.

The NASA-funded study, based on newly improved ground and satellite data sets, examines critically the relationship between changes in temperature and vegetation productivity in northern latitudes.

"The amplified warming in the circumpolar area roughly above the Canada-USA border is reducing temperature seasonality over time because the colder seasons are warming more rapidly than the summer," says Liang Xu, a Boston University doctoral student and lead co-author of the study.

As a result of the enhanced warming over a longer ground-thaw season, the total amount of heat available for plant growth in these northern latitudes is increasing-creating large patches of vigorously productive vegetation totaling more than a third of the northern landscape-over 9 million km2, which is roughly about the area of the USA.

A key finding of this study is an accelerating greening rate in the Arctic and a decelerating rate in the boreal region, despite a nearly constant rate of temperature seasonality diminishment in these regions over the past 30 years.

"Some areas of boreal forest will be negatively impacted by warming temperatures, from increased drought stress as well as insect and fire disturbance, but this work shows that in most high latitude regions we see increased productivity resulting from a reduced range of seasonal temperature variability," says co-author Scott Goetz, a senior scientist at the Woods Hole Research Center.

Dr. Goetz's research focuses on ecosystem responses to environmental change, including monitoring and modeling the linkages and feedbacks between forests and climate, land use change and disturbance.

The authors measured seasonality changes using latitude as a yardstick. They first defined reference latitudinal profiles for the quantities being observed and then quantified changes in them over time as shifts along these profiles.

"Arctic plant growth during the early 1980s reference period equaled that of lands north of 64 degrees north. Today, just 30 years later, it equals that of lands above 57 degrees north-a reduction in vegetation seasonality of about seven degrees south in latitude," says co-author Prof. Terry Chapin, Professor Emeritus, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. The change equates to a distance of approximately 480 miles southward.

Based on analysis of 17 state-of-the-art climate model simulations, diminishment of temperature seasonality in these regions could be more than 20 degrees in latitude by the end of this century relative to the 1951-1980 reference period.

These changes will affect local residents as change occurs in ecosystem services, such as in timber and traditional food production, as a result of warming temperatures. They will also impact the global community through changes in regulatory ecosystem services relating to emissions of greenhouse gases.

The study was published in the journal Nature Climate Change on the 10 March 2013 (10.1038/NCLIMATE1836:).

.


Related Links
Woods Hole Research Center
Earth Observation News - Suppiliers, Technology and Application






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle




Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

Get Our Free Newsletters
Space - Defense - Environment - Energy - Solar - Nuclear

...





EARTH OBSERVATION
GOCE: the first seismometer in orbit
Paris (ESA) Mar 12, 2013
Satellites map changes in Earth's surface caused by earthquakes but never before have sound waves from a quake been sensed directly in space - until now. ESA's hyper-sensitive GOCE gravity satellite has added yet another first to its list of successes. Earthquakes not only create seismic waves that travel through Earth's interior, but large quakes also cause the surface of the planet to vi ... read more


EARTH OBSERVATION
Fukushima victims sue Japan government, TEPCO

British business backs PM's foreign aid pledge

NASA Wallops Recovery Continues from Hurricane Sandy

Two years on, Fukushima suffers in nuclear shadow

EARTH OBSERVATION
China targeting navigation system's global coverage by 2020

Russian GLONASS space satellite group again at full strength

Tracking trains with satellite precision

USAF Awards Lockheed Martin Contracts to Begin Work on Next Set of GPS III Satellites

EARTH OBSERVATION
New study validates longevity pathway

Siberian fossil revealed to be one of the oldest known domestic dogs

Kirk, Spock together: Putting emotion, logic into computational words

After the human genome project: The human microbiome project

EARTH OBSERVATION
New report confirms almost half of Africa's lions facing extinction

For a little-known primate, a new understanding of why females outlive males

Lizards facing mass extinction

Three man-eating lions killed in Zimbabwe

EARTH OBSERVATION
Myanmar shelter offers refuge for HIV patients

Daily-dose HIV prevention fails for African women: study

HIV 'cure' in infancy, caution experts

Cambodia orders action to stop deadly bird flu

EARTH OBSERVATION
Petitioners seek rights as China parliament meets

Award-winning Tibetan writer denied China passport

Anger over attack on Hong Kong journalists in China

Tibetan self-immolators inspire Chinese painter

EARTH OBSERVATION
US court convicts Somali pirates in navy ship attack

Ukraine to join NATO anti-piracy mission

16 gunmen killed in Thai military base attack: army

Japan police arrest mobster in Fukushima clean-up

EARTH OBSERVATION
Walker's World: Euro crisis returns

S. America at risk from slow growth: Fitch

Australian central bank computers hacked

China says bank lending shrank in February




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement