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Page 1: What is the Greenhouse Effect?

What is the Greenhouse Effect?

Increases in greenhouse gases will lead to increases in global temperature

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Data from 2007 IPCC report

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Climate Change: Faster than expected in 1990s

• IPCC 4 (2007) was limited to science published by early 2006

• Subsequent research shows increasing rates of:

Global GHG emissions 3.3% in 2000s, vs 1.3% in 1990s

Temperature rise especially in polar regions

Ice melt (Arctic: 40% loss since 1980, accelerating 2006-07)

Sea-level rise

CO2 Concentration

Av Surface Temp

Sea Level Rise (cm)

Dashed lines = 1990s projections

Rahmstorf, Church, et al., Science 2007

Solid lines = observed

1975 1985 1995 2005

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IPCC Fourth Assessment Report (2007) was very conservative. Recent studies indicate accelerating change.

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What are the Consequences?Melting of glaciers and polar ice

Since 1850, glaciers in the European Alps have disappeared from more than 30-40% of their former range

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Globally averaged, the earth is ~0.75 C warmer than it was in 1860

What are the Consequences?Increased temperature and incidence of heat waves

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September 2008 sea ice = 4.67 (ice was thinner so volume was record low)

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What are the Consequences?Sea Level Rise

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Sea Level Rise

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Biological Impacts

• Extreme weather events cause rapid range contraction due to physiological tolerances being surpassed.

- You can see this in genetics – increase in heat tolerant genotypes seasonally, then decadally in fruitflies • Phenology changes• Abundance and community reassembly processes• Sea level rise - salinization• Ecosystem processes – decomposition, primary

productivity, etc.

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What are the Consequences?Melting of glaciers and polar ice

Polar bears need sea ice – seals and other marine mammals main food itemDocumented drop in female weight

1980 = 650lbs2004 = 507

Minimum weight needed to become pregnantUnprecedented numbers swimming and then found drowned.

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Global Warming

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Global WarmingGlobal coupled atmosphere-ocean-ice model

Hoegh-Guildberg (1999)

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Edith's Checkerspot Butterfly has been disappearing from the lower elevations and southern limits of its range.

What are the Consequences?Shifts in species ranges

Average shift = 35 miles north

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What are the Consequences?Shifts in biological activity

Toads, frogs, and newts spawning early. Spawning was 9 to 10 days earlier over a 17-year period.

Marmots are emerging from hibernation on average 23 days earlier than 20 years ago. This coincides with an increase in average May temperatures of about 1.8oF (1oC).