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http://news./s/ap/20071206/ap_on_sc/bali_animals_in_flux;_ylt=AtU1fAGMO\

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Global warming wreaks havoc with nature

 

 

By MICHAEL CASEY, AP Environmental Writer Wed Dec 5, 9:56 PM ET

 

BALI, Indonesia - More than 3,000 flying foxes dropped dead, falling

from trees in Australia. Giant squid migrated north to commercial

fishing grounds off California, gobbling anchovy and hake. Butterflies

have gone extinct in the Alps.

 

While humans debate at U.N. climate change talks in Bali, global

warming is already wreaking havoc with nature. Most plants and animals

are affected, and the change is occurring too quickly for them to evolve.

 

" A hell of a lot of species are in big trouble, " said Stephen E.

Williams, the director of the Centre for Tropical Biodiversity &

Climate Change at James Cook University in Australia.

 

" I don't think there is any doubt we will see a lot of (extinctions), "

he said. " But even before a species goes extinct, there are a lot of

impacts. Most of the species here in the wet tropics would be reduced

to ... 15 percent of their current habitat. "

 

Globally, 30 percent of the Earth's species could disappear if

temperatures rise 4.5 degrees Fahrenheit — and up to 70 percent, if

they rise 6.3 degrees Fahrenheit, a U.N. network of scientists

reported last month.

 

It wouldn't be the first time. There have been five major extinctions

in the last 520 million years, and four of them have been linked to

warmer tropical seas, according to a study published last month in the

Proceedings of the Royal Society B, a British scientific journal.

 

The hardest hit will include plants and animals in colder climates or

at higher elevations and those with limited ranges or little tolerance

for temperature change, said Wendy Foden, a conservation biologist

with the World Conservation Union, which catalogs threatened species.

 

Butterflies that lived at high altitudes in North America and southern

France have vanished, and polar bears and penguins are watching their

habitat melt away.

 

The carbon dioxide emissions that are a leading cause of global

warming also turn oceans more acidic, killing coral reefs and the

microscopic plankton that blue whales and other marine mammals depend

on for food.

 

" In the long run, every species will be affected, " Foden said.

 

A few will benefit, chiefly those that breed quickly, already exist in

varied climates and are able to adapt swiftly to changing conditions,

scientists said. Think cockroaches, pigeons and weeds.

 

The spread of a deadly fungus that thrives in warmer conditions has

decimated some frog populations in South America, Africa and Europe.

 

Then there are Australia's flying foxes.

 

More than 3,500 gray-headed and black flying foxes — huge bats — died

in 2002 after temperatures rose above 107 degrees Fahrenheit in New

South Wales, according to a report published last week in the Royal

Society B journal.

 

The rising temperatures are related to global warming, said the

author, Justin Welbergen of the University of Cambridge.

 

" It got really hot and suddenly started raining foxes from the trees, "

said Welbergen, who witnessed the die-off. " It was quite gruesome.

This colony had between 20,000 and 30,000 animals and about 10 percent

of those individuals died. "

 

In Australia's Queensland state, temperatures are projected to rise

5.4 degrees Fahrenheit, an outcome that could drive half the species

to extinction in a mountainous stretch of tropical rain forest,

Williams said.

 

Even a 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit increase would reduce by half the

habitat of the Thornton Peak nursery frog, golden bowerbird and the

spotted-tail quoll, a cat-like mammal.

 

" There are many species and plants that are restricted to the higher

altitude areas, " he said. " It doesn't take much of an increase in

temperature to push them off the mountain. They can't go anywhere. "

 

As temperatures rise, animals are seeking cooler climes. In a study of

more than 1,500 species, University of Texas biologist Camille

Parmesan concluded that 40 percent had shifted their ranges, mostly

toward the poles.

 

A dozen bird species have moved about 12 miles north in Britain, and

39 species of butterflies have shifted north by as much as 125 miles

in Europe and North America, according to another study that Parmesan

took part in.

 

Millions of Mediterranean jellyfish have turned up off Northern

Ireland and Scotland. The Humboldt squid, which can grow up to 7 feet

long, has moved up the California coast as ocean waters warmed.

 

" It's the latest in a long series of bad news for fishermen, " said

Stanford University's Lou Zeidberg, adding that squid have been found

as far north as Alaska in the past five years.

 

With warmer weather, 60 percent of plant and animal species are

migrating, breeding and blooming earlier in the spring, Parmesan said.

But not all are, and that could upset relationships between birds and

the insects they feed on as well as insects and the flowers they

pollinate.

 

" Frogs, birds and butterflies are responding more strongly to warming

winters and springs than are plants, " she said. " The concern is that

this will cause population declines for both plants and animals. "

 

With many species unable to evolve fast enough to adapt,

conservationists are considering the creation of natural corridors to

encourage animals to move and even relocating them to cooler places.

The latter is controversial.

 

" You are effectively playing God. You are effectively changing

evolution on purpose, " Foden said. " If our job as biologist is to

conserve species, then certainly we must move them. But if it's to

conserve natural evolutionary processes ... then we have to give them

corridors and let them do their thing. "

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