Fundamentalist Christianity On Amazon Becoming Desert
Hm�. After reading this article, we could be headed for serious
disaster much faster than I've been convinced into thinking lately. The
main question is, will the earth really become completely uninhabitable?
Or, will humans just be relegated to living in small tribes?
Geoffrey Lean and Fred Pearce
The Independent via Climater Ark via EnergyBulletin
The vast Amazon rainforest is on the brink of being turned into desert,
with catastrophic consequences for the world's climate, alarming
research suggests. And the process, which would be irreversible, could
begin as early as next year.
Studies by the blue-chip Woods Hole Research Centre, carried out in
Amazonia, have concluded that the forest cannot withstand more than two
consecutive years of drought without breaking down.
Scientists say that this would spread drought into the northern
hemisphere, including Britain, and could massively accelerate global
warming with incalculable consequences, spinning out of control, a
process that might end in the world becoming uninhabitable.
The alarming news comes in the midst of a heat wave gripping Britain and
much of Europe and the United States. Temperatures in the south of
England reached a July record of 36.3C on Tuesday. And it comes hard on
the heels of a warning by an international group of experts, led by the
Eastern Orthodox "pope" Bartholomew, last week that the forest
is rapidly approaching a "tipping point" that would lead to
its total destruction.
The research carried out by the Massachusetts-based Woods Hole centre in
Santarem on the Amazon river has taken even the scientists conducting it
by surprise. When Dr Dan Nepstead started the experiment in 2002 by
covering a chunk of rainforest the size of a football pitch with plastic
panels to see how it would cope without rain he surrounded it with
sophisticated sensors, expecting to record only minor changes.
The trees managed the first year of drought without difficulty. In the
second year, they sunk their roots deeper to find moisture, but
survived. But in year three, they started dying. Beginning with the
tallest the trees started to come crashing down, exposing the forest
floor to the drying sun.
By the end of the year the trees had released more than two-thirds of
the carbon dioxide they have stored during their lives, helping to act
as a break on global warming. Instead they began accelerating the
climate change.
As we report today on pages 28 and 29, the Amazon now appears to be
entering its second successive year of drought, raising the possibility
that it could start dying next year. The immense forest contains 90
billion tons of carbon, enough in itself to increase the rate of global
warming by 50 per cent.
Dr Nepstead expects "mega-fires" rapidly to sweep across the
drying jungle. With the trees gone, the soil will bake in the sun and
the rainforest could become desert.
Dr Deborah Clark from the University of Missouri, one of the world's
top forest ecologists, says the research shows that "the lock has
broken" on the Amazon ecosystem. She adds: the Amazon is
"headed in a terrible direction".
(28 July 2006)
Is this really how close we are to the brink? All the stories on climate
hadn't totally prepared me for the full impact of this one, which is one
of the reasons EB hasn't been updated the last few days. I had been
considering climate change as ultimately more important than Peak Oil,
but considered Peak Oil a more immediately acute problem. I see now that
the latter is sadly not the case.
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