In central
And sneezes are coming earlier. On March 9, when allergist
Dr. Donald Dvorin set up his monitor in
Pollen is bursting. Critters are stirring. Buds are
swelling. Biologists are worrying. Thursday is the first day of spring in the
“The alarm clock that all the plants and animals are
listening to is running too fast,” said
Man-made change
Blame global warming.
The fingerprints of man-made climate change are evident in
seasonal timing changes for thousands of species on Earth, according to dozens
of studies and last year’s authoritative report by the Nobel Prize-awarded
international climate scientists. More than 30 scientists told The Associated
Press how global warming is affecting plants and animals at springtime across
the country, in almost every state.
What is happening is so noticeable that scientists can
track it from space. Satellites measuring when land turns green found that
spring “green-up” is arriving eight hours earlier every year on average since
1982 in the northeastern
Biological timing is called phenology. Biological spring,
which this year begins at 1:48 a.m. EDT Thursday, is based on the tilt of the
Earth as it circles the sun. The federal government and some university
scientists are so alarmed by the changes that late last year they created a
National Phenology Network at the U.S. Geological Survey to monitor the
changes.
The idea, said biologist and network director Jake
Weltzin, is “to better understand the changes, and more important what do they
mean? How does it affect humankind?”
There are winners, losers and lots of unknowns when global
warming messes with natural timing. People may appreciate the smaller heating
bills from shorter winters, the longer growing season and maybe even better
tasting wines from some early grape harvests. But biologists also foresee big
problems.
Cold snaps
The changes could push some species to extinction because
certain plants and animals are dependent on each other for food and shelter. If
the plants bloom or bear fruit before animals return or surface from
hibernation, the creatures could starve.
Also, plants that bud too early can still be destroyed by
a late freeze.
The young of tree swallows, which in upstate
The checkerspot butterfly disappeared from Stanford’s
Jasper Ridge preserve because shifts in rainfall patterns changed the timing of
plants on which it develops. When the plant dries out too early, the
caterpillars die, said University of Notre Dame biology professor Jessica
Hellmann.
— AP
http://www.hindu.com/2008/03/22/stories/2008032260152300.htm