2024-12-10 22:10:38
Tired Earth
By The Editorial Board
Scientists have provided another reminder that, when it comes to climate change, we're all in this together. A study published last October in Nature Climate Change concluded that at least 85% of the world's population may already have been affected by climate change.
"It is likely that nearly everyone in the world now experiences changes in extreme weather as a result of human greenhouse gas emissions," Friederike Otto, a senior lecturer at the Grantham Institute for Climate Change and the Environment at Imperial College, told the Washington Post.
While we're all in it together, not everything is equal. Wealthier countries like the United States play an outsized role in pumping fossil fuels into the atmosphere, but less wealthy nations face the gravest risks. We also know far less about how climate change will affect poorer countries — much more research and resources have been dedicated to studying North America compared to Africa or South America, the study found.
These knowledge gaps don't just affect people, either. Countless species of plants and animals face a warming world. Researchers have found that rising temperatures and related impacts can force changes in behavior, reproduction, migration and foraging. Biologist Thor Hanson wrote in a recent book that 25% to 85% of species on the planet are already on the move because of climate change. What happens when new neighbors interact in these novel ecosystems is something we know little about so far because the ripple effects are far-reaching and numerous.
But the more scientists uncover about how plants and animals — and their habitats — may change, the more effective conservation measures will be.
The Revelator has been keeping tabs on the growing field of climate change biology. Here are five new findings that scientists have made recently about wildlife and climate change.
The hunt for climate refugia is another reminder of the benefits research can have on conservation, and why such scientific efforts need geographic parity so that some regions — and their biodiversity — aren't overlooked.
Source : patch.com
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