31 August, 2018

Climate change could render many of Earth’s ecosystems unrecognizable

After the end of the last ice age — as sea levels rose, glaciers receded and global average temperatures soared as much as seven degrees Celsius — the Earth’s ecosystems were utterly transformed.
The Thomas Fire, shown here advancing toward
La Conchita, Calif., in December, burned more
than 250,000 acres in Southern California. More
 severe wildfires are among the ways climate
change will alter Earth's ecosystems, scientists say. 
Forests grew up out of what was once barren, ice-covered ground. Dark, cool stands of pine were replaced by thickets of hickory and oak. Woodlands gave way to scrub, and savanna turned to desert. The more temperatures increased in a particular landscape, the more dramatic the ecological shifts.

It’s about to happen again, researchers are reporting Thursday in the journal Science. A sweeping survey of global fossil and temperature records from the past 20,000 years suggests that Earth’s terrestrial ecosystems are at risk of another, even faster transformation unless aggressive action is taken against climate change.


Read The Washington Post story by Sarah Kaplan - “Climate change could render many of Earth’s ecosystems unrecognizable."

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