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In a pickle: Baltic herring threatened by warming sea

Even aged 84, Holger Sjogren nimbly untangles the knots in his herring net as it was lowered into the murky depths of the Baltic Sea......»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekNov 10th, 2023

The Panama Canal averts a crisis for now—but at a cost to drinking water

The Panama Canal has avoided the worst of a shipping crunch that threatened to upend the global economy—but at a cost to marine life and the Latin American country's supplies of drinking water......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 18th, 2024

Global warming may intensify the modulation of tropical cyclone genesis by summer intraseasonal oscillation

Global warming, the long-term warming of Earth's overall temperature, has greatly accelerated in the last 100 years due to human factors such as the burning of fossil fuels. Along with this trend, certain atmospheric phenomena have also changed, such.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 15th, 2024

Tropical birds could tolerate warming better than expected

Consider the globe, spinning silently in space. Its poles and its middle, the equator, remain relatively stable, thermally speaking, for the duration of Earth's annual circuit around the sun. The spaces between—Earth's temperate zones—experience.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 14th, 2024

Advances and challenges in understanding compound weather and climate extremes

In the context of global warming, many extremes, such as heat waves, heavy precipitation, and droughts, have become increasingly frequent and intense, as expected theoretically. Somewhat unexpectedly, these extremes have also exhibited tightened link.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 14th, 2024

First report on data collected by record-breaking rowers shows Great Britain"s warming seas

Sea surface temperature data collected by an all-female crew of rowers as they raced around Great Britain last summer has found that U.K. coastal seas were on average 0.39°C warmer in 2023, compared to 2022, according to a new report......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 13th, 2024

EU must adapt to warming continent: Officials

EU countries need to step up preparedness for global warming after 2023 burned its way into history books as the hottest year on record, European Commission officials said Tuesday......»»

Category: topSource:  informationweekRelated NewsMar 12th, 2024

Unprecedented Hauraki Gulf heat waves revealed by marine lab"s historic data set

A thermometer dipped in a bucket of sea water on New Year's Day in 1967 began a unique record that shows the dramatic intensification of warming in the Hauraki Gulf......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 12th, 2024

Range-shifting fishes are climate-change losers, according to new research

The warming of the Earth's oceans due to climate change is affecting where the world's fishes live, eat, and spawn—and often in ways that can negatively impact their populations. That's according to a new paper published in the journal Nature Ecolo.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 12th, 2024

Mars attracts: How Earth"s interactions with the red planet drive deep-sea circulation

Scientists from the Universities of Sydney and Sorbonne University have used the geological record of the deep sea to discover a connection between the orbits of Earth and Mars, past global warming patterns and the speeding up of deep ocean circulati.....»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsMar 12th, 2024

Rainforest"s next generation of trees threatened 30 years after logging

Rainforest seedlings are more likely to survive in natural forests than in places where logging has happened—even if tree restoration projects have taken place, new research shows. The work appears in Global Change Biology......»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsMar 12th, 2024

Europe is not prepared for rapidly growing climate risks, researchers say

Europe is the fastest-warming continent in the world and governments are too slow in taking action to reduce these climate risks. According to co-authors Robbert Biesbroek and Simona Pedde of Wageningen University & Research, many of these risks, whi.....»»

Category: topSource:  pcmagRelated NewsMar 11th, 2024

Study explores impacts of Arctic warming on daily weather patterns in the US

Arctic sea ice is shrinking as the world continues to warm, and a new study led by researchers at Penn State may provide a better understanding of how the loss of this ice may impact daily weather in the middle latitudes, including the United States......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 11th, 2024

Researchers see an increase in the number of extreme cold days in North China during 2003–2012

How extreme weather and climate events change is an intriguing issue in the context of global warming. As IPCC AR6 points out, cold extremes have become less frequent and less severe since the 1950s, mainly driven by human-induced climate change. How.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 8th, 2024

A better handle on the emissions budget for the Paris climate targets

A team of scientists from the University of Exeter, Met Office, and Imperial College have found a new way to calculate the total carbon emissions consistent with the Paris climate targets of 1.5°C and 2°C of global warming......»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 8th, 2024

Threatened in their homeland, feral Mexican parrots thrive on LA"s exotic landscaping

During a walk through the Huntington Botanical Gardens with her mother one morning, Brenda Ramirez was alarmed by the sudden squawks, warbles, and screeches of troops of parrots flying overhead at great speed in tight, precise formations......»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsMar 8th, 2024

Australia"s Great Barrier Reef in grip of "mass bleaching event"

A "mass bleaching event" is unfolding on Australia's famed Great Barrier Reef, authorities said Friday, as warming seas threaten the spectacular home to thousands of marine species......»»

Category: topSource:  marketingvoxRelated NewsMar 8th, 2024

Understanding wind and water at the equator are key to more accurate future climate projections: Study

Getting climate models to mimic real-time observations when it comes to warming is critical—small discrepancies can lead to misunderstandings about the rate of global warming as the climate changes. A new study from North Carolina State University.....»»

Category: topSource:  physorgRelated NewsMar 6th, 2024

Global warming may be behind an increase in the frequency and intensity of cold spells

Global warming caused by increased concentrations of greenhouse gases is already affecting our lives. Scorching summers, more intense heat waves, longer drought periods, more extended floods, and wilder wildfires are consequences linked to this warmi.....»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsMar 5th, 2024

In a dangerously warming world, the grim reality of Australia"s bushfire emissions must be confronted

In the four years since the Black Summer bushfires, Australia has become more focused on how best to prepare for, fight and recover from these traumatic events. But one issue has largely flown under the radar: how the emissions produced by bushfires.....»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsMar 5th, 2024

We know the Arctic is warming—what will changing river flows do to its environment?

Scientists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst recently combined satellite data, field observations, and sophisticated numerical modeling to paint a picture of how 22.45 million square kilometers of the Arctic will change over the next 80 year.....»»

Category: topSource:  theglobeandmailRelated NewsMar 5th, 2024