Showing posts with label Environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Environment. Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2011

Happy Earth Day!

Artwork below created for Sacramento Earth Day
Image courtesy the artist Dana Grey http://www.grayna.com/index.html


                 " I only went out for a walk and finally concluded to stay out till sundown,
                   for going out, I found, was really going in."
 ~John Muir, 1913, in L.M. Wolfe, ed., John Muir, John of the Mountains:
The Unpublished Journals of John Muir, 1938



Share/Bookmark


Thursday, October 15, 2009

TT Climate Change

Last week's TT was fun.  This is serious stuff.  I'm borrowing from an article embedded on The Political Carnival.  This covers our TT subject pretty darn well.  Take time to read, reflect and pray.

ANWR debate will heat up as caribou herds dwindle

EDITOR'S NOTE -- This is one of an occasional series of stories leading up to December's climate conference in Copenhagen, reporting on the impact, future and responses to climate change.
Click to enlarge
ON THE PORCUPINE RIVER TUNDRA, Yukon -- Here on the endlessly rolling and tussocky terrain of northwest Canada, where man has hunted caribou since the Stone Age, the vast antlered herds are fast growing thin. And it's not just here.
Across the tundra 1,000 miles to the east, Canada's Beverly herd, numbering more than 200,000 a decade ago, can barely be found today.
Halfway around the world in Siberia, the biggest aggregation of these migratory animals, of the dun-colored herds whose sweep across the Arctic's white canvas is one of nature's matchless wonders, has shrunk by hundreds of thousands in a few years.
From wildlife spectacle to wildlife mystery, the decline of the caribou -- called reindeer in the Eurasian Arctic -- has biologists searching for clues, and finding them.
They believe the insidious impact of climate change, its tipping of natural balances and disruption of feeding habits, is decimating a species that has long numbered in the millions and supported human life in Earth's most inhuman climate.
Many herds have lost more than half their number from the maximums of recent decades, a global survey finds. They "hover on the precipice of a major decline," it says.

SENSING TROUBLE

The "People of the Caribou," the Native Gwich'in of the Yukon and Alaska, were among the first to sense trouble, in the late 1990s, as their Porcupine herd dwindled. From 178,000 in 1989, the herd -- named for the river crossing its range -- is now estimated to number 100,000.
"They used to come through by the hundreds," James Firth, 56, of the Gwich'in Renewable Resources Board said as he guided two Associated Press journalists across the tundra.
Off toward distant horizons this summer afternoon, only small groups of a dozen or fewer migrating caribou could be seen grazing southward across the spongy landscape, green with a layer of grasses, mosses and lichen over the Arctic permafrost.
"I've never seen it like this before," Firth said of the sparse numbers.
More than 50 identifiable caribou herds migrate over huge wilderness tracts in a wide band circling the top of the world. They head north in the spring to ancient calving grounds, then back south through summer and fall to winter ranges closer to northern forests.
The Porcupine herd moves over a 100,000-square-mile range, calving in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge of northeast Alaska, where proposals for oil drilling have long stirred opposition from environmentalists seeking to protect the caribou.

GLOBAL WARMING EFFECTS
The global survey by researchers at the University of Alberta, published in June in the peer-reviewed journal Global Change Biology, has deepened concerns about the caribou's future.
Drawing on scores of other studies, government databases, wildlife management boards and other sources, the biologists found that 34 of 43 herds being monitored worldwide are in decline. The average falloff in numbers was 57 percent from earlier maximums, they said.
Siberia's Taimyr herd has declined from 1 million in 2000 to an estimated 750,000, as reported in the 2008 "Arctic Report Card" of the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The Taimyr is the world's largest herd, but Canada and Alaska have more caribou, and the Alberta study reported that 22 of 34 North American herds are shrinking. Data were insufficient to make a judgment on seven others.
In an interview, Liv Solveig Vors, the June report's lead author, summarized what is believed behind the caribou crash: "Climate change is changing the way they're interacting with their food, directly and indirectly."
Global warming has boosted temperatures in the Arctic twice as much as elsewhere, and Canadian researchers say the natural balance is suffering:
• Unusual freezing rains in autumn are locking lichen, the caribou's winter forage, under impenetrable ice sheets. This was the documented cause in the late 1990s of the near-extinction of the 50,000-strong Peary caribou subspecies on Canada's High Arctic islands.
• Mosquitoes, flies and insect parasites have always tormented and weakened caribou, but warmer temperatures have aggravated this summertime problem, driving the animals on crazed, debilitating runs to escape, and keeping them from foraging and fattening up for winter.
• The springtime Arctic "green-up" is occurring two weeks or more earlier. The great caribou migrations evolved over ages to catch the shrubs on the calving grounds at their freshest and most nutritious. But pregnant, migrating cows may now be arriving too late.
Vors said caribou are unlikely to adjust.
"Evolutionary changes tend to take place over longer time scales than the time scale of climate change at the moment," she said. Climatologists foresee northern temperatures rising several degrees more this century unless global greenhouse gas emissions are sharply reduced soon.

RADICAL DECLINES

Caribou herds have gone through boom-and-bust cycles historically, but were never known to decline so uniformly worldwide.
Leading Canadian specialist Don Russell, coordinator of a new global network formed to more closely monitor what's happening to the herds, said experts are focusing on "what has changed between this decline and previous declines."
"We've seen a number of areas where climate change is playing a big role, and we see some very dramatic trends," he said in an interview in Whitehorse, the Yukon territorial capital.
In neighboring Northwest Territories, the territorial government on Sept. 24 reported results of its aerial survey of the Bathurst herd: Its population has dropped to about 32,000, from 128,000 in 2006.
"The numbers are not getting better. There's no good news, no indication of recovery," J. Michael Miltenberger, the environment and natural resources minister, said by telephone from Yellowknife, the capital.
He said "there's a huge issue" with the Beverly herd, which numbered 276,000 in 1994, ranging over the Canadian tundra 1,000 miles due north of North Dakota.
"We've been flying north to south, east to west," Miltenberger said. "By our count, with the Beverly herd, they've all but disappeared."
Climate change is piling problem upon problem on the caribou, he said, including bogging them down in thawing permafrost and lengthening the wildfire season, burning up their food.
"The cumulative impact is bringing enormous pressure on the caribou," he said.
And that puts pressure on Canada's "first nations," who for at least 8,000 years have relied on the harvest of caribou meat for the winter larder, have settled along migration routes, have built their material culture around the animal -- using skin, bones and sinews for clothing, shelter, tools, thread, even their drums.
"There are probably ominous implications for communities relying on caribou," Russell said.
Such reliance is mirrored in Siberia and northern Scandinavia, where the Sami people make a hard living herding reindeer as livestock. Freezing rains there are reported to have forced Sami to buy fodder to substitute for ice-locked forage.

EASING HUNTS

Here in the timeless, silent beauty of Gwich'in country, his people may face "hard decisions," Firth acknowledged, perhaps to limit their hunt to ease the pressure. The Yukon government recently took a first step, restricting hunting to bulls, to spare reproducing cows.
"The future of the Gwich'in and the future of the caribou are the same," the Gwich'in often say. But even more may be at stake.
On this summer day above the Arctic Circle, binoculars found a group of caribou being stalked and circled by a hungry grizzly bear, a needy predator and another link in an intricate, interdependent natural web that may be unraveling, year by year and degree by degree, on the tundra.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Theme Thursday Earth


Wednesday, April 22nd is Earth Day. Perhaps that is why TT picked the theme to be "earth" just prior to its 39th anniversary. Hard to believe it's been 39 years. That would be 1970. I think I remember it but it is vague in my mind. Of course, everything from those days is vague in my mind.

In 1970 we were concerned about the environment but in a conservationist sort of way. We were still embroiled in Viet Nam and just becoming aware of environmental issues.

I serve on a local chamber of commerce Green Team steering committee. My initial interest stemmed from extended exposure to the environmental concerns of Southern California. We went through everything from severe droughts to mud slides, from gasoline shortages to the proliferation of the Honda Civic as a gas saver. That's what made them famous in the U.S. By the mid-Nineties we were reorganizing and recycling in earnest.

California is such a large and populous state. It's always going to experience the detrimental effects of overpopulation and pollution. I mean, what can you say about a state whose largest city, Los Angeles, is dependent on water coming from four other locations outside the city and state? They do not have any way to capture and recycle rain water. It all goes down the gutter. Mass trans in LA is a joke. Everybody drives their cars and sits in gridlock day after day.

A few years ago the debate was whether or not global warming was real or manufactured by the bleeding hearts and liberal Left. Now the debate is about how fast is it coming and whether or not we have time to save the planet and ourselves.

The Green Team is celebrating Earth Day with a Community Garden kickoff. We haven't had a community garden in our small town for a few years since the last one, a family farm coop, folded. Everyone is very excited. 47 people came to the initial meeting. Our group has succeeded in getting the land for the garden donated and we're now working on tools, vegetable and flower seeds. The soil has been tested and it's very healthy. We are psyched!

Just for the record, I do not think we are doomed. But we are on the precipice of a sea change. Before his transformation, Scrooge endorsed "reduce(ing) the surplus population." Of course, the only thing he had in mind was ridding the world of the needy who relied too much on the rich... kinda like the Bushies. But overpopulation and over development are at the root of much we now suffer.

Oh, and GREED.


Subscribe in a reader

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Where's the Beef?

This is my new mantra now that I've heard the Sarah Palin speech. Shakespeare's line, "it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury signifying nothing" made its way through my mind as I watched her.

I do not underestimate her nor the American people. She has just the right look and delivery to gather many followers. But ask yourselves, what is she really saying? What are her policies? What are her plans for the country? How is she going to help the middle class? Just because she came from a small town and terms herself a "Washington outsider" doesn't give her credentials to accomplish anything. She has to have an agenda and lay it out. None of us should vote with our emotions. Everyone needs to take a long hard look at the issues and decide which candidate is best suited to: revitalize the economy; deliver a health care plan affordable to all Americans; bring home our soldiers; provide environmentally friendly solutions to our energy crises,;fix our educational system...it's a disgrace; stop taxing the middle class and start taxing the top 1%; stop giving tax credits to major corporations; provide tax incentives to companies that DO NOT OUTSOURCE.

Let's get real. She and John McCain represent the same old story. There is NOTHING new in anything they say. She tried to use patriotism and love of country as a weapon against the Democratic ticket. That is, if you're a war hero and you believe in the war in Iraq, you're a patriot. If you're against the war, you're not. That is utter nonsense.

Stick to the issues and lay out your plans Sarah Palin. Then maybe we'll all have something concrete to discuss.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Look Out for Bears!

I live in a wild and untamed part of the country. If you don't think so, just read this sign!

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Warming Up

This will be short and sweet. Signs of Spring are finally here. It's going to hit 52 today and the snow is disappearing by degrees and I'm beginning to see grass on the exposed patches of dirt. I am so excited! Thank you God, Jesus and Mother Nature!