63 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Climate and Fisheries: Costs and Benefits of Change
Many records provide the bases for a clearer understanding of the roles of climate regime shifts and short-term perturbations in ecosystem dynamics, hence fisheries responses. Too few have taken the long view of the role of humans in this "Grand Fugue". As one of many predators, it is imperative that humans begin to understand that our various activities are subject to basic ecological principles, such as the concepts of growth limitations imposed by scarcities and habitat debilitations. Most of human history (evolution, growth, colonizations, displacements, resource scarcity, competition for resources) are direct consequences of normal, natural climate fluctuations, and local, regional and global ecological responses. Early fisheries were subsistence levels, with some situations where fishing communities bartered or traded for goods from adjacent highlands or forest cultures. We have also become extremely vulnerable to any persistent climate changes. Following the Medieval Warm period (~900-1180), the onset of the Little Ice Age (LIA) brought changes in regional productivity, disease, and death that began the global transition from Feudal society to the "pay as you go" economics that now dominate the world's major economies. Over the recent two to three centuries humans have swarmed over the remaining terrain, and spread out onto the seas. Modern history relates the continuous growth, expansion and generalized superposition of industrial fisheries onto older coastal subsistence communities, initiating extensive competition, overexploitation, and with resultant dwindling resources and habitat destruction. I have started a Timeline of Fisheries Development that provides a framework of information upon which these facts are derived: I will continue to develop the Timeline, so that others might learn how humans resolve the issues of complex aquatic ecosystems, limited resource sharing, or not.KEYWORDS: Climate, Fisheries, History, Cultures, Economics, Ecosystems, Environment
Evidences for a quasi 60-year North Atlantic Oscillation since 1700 and its meaning for global climate change
The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) obtained using instrumental and
documentary proxy predictors from Eurasia is found to be characterized by a
quasi 60-year dominant oscillation since 1650. This pattern emerges clearly
once the NAO record is time integrated to stress its comparison with the
temperature record. The integrated NAO (INAO) is found to well correlate with
the length of the day (since 1650) and the global surface sea temperature
record HadSST2 and HadSST3 (since 1850). These findings suggest that INAO can
be used as a good proxy for global climate change, and that a 60-year cycle
exists in the global climate since at least 1700. Finally, the INAO ~60-year
oscillation well correlates with the ~60- year oscillations found in the
historical European aurora record since 1700, which suggests that this 60-year
dominant climatic cycle has a solar-astronomical origin
A shared frequency set between the historical mid-latitude aurora records and the global surface temperature
Herein we show that the historical records of mid-latitude auroras from 1700
to 1966 present oscillations with periods of about 9, 10-11, 20-21, 30 and 60
years. The same frequencies are found in proxy and instrumental global surface
temperature records since 1650 and 1850, respectively and in several planetary
and solar records. Thus, the aurora records reveal a physical link between
climate change and astronomical oscillations. Likely, there exists a modulation
of the cosmic ray flux reaching the Earth and/or of the electric properties of
the ionosphere. The latter, in turn, have the potentiality of modulating the
global cloud cover that ultimately drives the climate oscillations through
albedo oscillations. In particular, a quasi 60-year large cycle is quite
evident since 1650 in all climate and astronomical records herein studied,
which also include an historical record of meteorite fall in China from 619 to
1943. These findings support the thesis that climate oscillations have an
astronomical origin. We show that a harmonic constituent model based on the
major astronomical frequencies revealed in the aurora records is able to
forecast with a reasonable accuracy the decadal and multidecadal temperature
oscillations from 1950 to 2010 using the temperature data before 1950, and vice
versa. The existence of a natural 60-year modulation of the global surface
temperature induced by astronomical mechanisms, by alone, would imply that at
least 60-70% of the warming observed since 1970 has been naturally induced.
Moreover, the climate may stay approximately stable during the next decades
because the 60-year cycle has entered in its cooling phase.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
THE MIGRATION OF THE TECHNOGENOUS RADIONUCLIDES IN THE FOREST SOILS OF THE UKRAINIAN WOODED DISTRICT
For the first time, the laws of migration of the radionuclides in the soils of the forest biogeocenoses of the Ukrainian wooded district have been considered in details, and the main factors, influencing on the speed of redistribution of the radionuclides in the system solid-liquid phase of the soils under the natural conditions, have been shown. The role of the different processes in the migration of the radionuclides by the soil profile has been revealed, and some elements of balance of the radiocesium in the forest ecosystems have been determined. The obtained results widen the representations about the laws of migration of the radionuclides in the biosphere and serve as the base for the development of the mathematical models of the radionuclides behaviour in the ambient mediumAvailable from VNTIC / VNTIC - Scientific & Technical Information Centre of RussiaSIGLERURussian Federatio
Greenhouse trials on use of biochar versus peat for land reclamation purposes
Experimental testing has been conducted to determine the effect of amendment of soil with mineral
fertilizer, biochar, and peat on emergence, survival, establishment, and productivity of northern boreal
plant species grown on poor substrates in a controlled environment (in greenhouse). Four species (slender
wheatgrass, rocky mountain fescue, American vetch, and common yarrow) were grown in pots containing
poor sandy soil amended with mineral fertilizer and/or organic amendments (peat or biochar). The
greenhouse temperature, lighting and pot watering regimes simulated the conditions of vegetation
growing season in northern boreal forest. The trials showed that mineral fertilizer had a limited ability to
promote plant growth compared to peat and biochar. Both types of organic amendments had similar
positive effects on the establishment of two test species (American vetch and common yarrow) and on the
growth of three test species (slender wheatgrass, rocky mountain fescue and American vetch). Peat had a
stronger positive effect on emergence of slender wheatgrass and establishment of rocky mountain, while
biochar promoted the common yarrow growth better than peat.Non UBCUnreviewedOthe
Field trials on use of biochar versus peat for land reclamation purposes
Biochar application for revegetation purposes in northern Saskatchewan was studied to determine its
effectiveness as a soil amendment in establishing sustainable vegetative soil covers. The abandoned
Gunnar Mine Site, located on the northern shore of Lake Athabasca, served as a study area to test the
effectiveness of biochar as a soil amendment. Field trials were carried out to compare the effect of biochar
and peat application on the growth and establishment of native plant species. The field trials showed that
peat promotes vegetation cover establishment better than biochar. Biochar also had a positive effect on
vegetation recovery through both establishment of seeded plants and self-establishment of natural
invaders (plant species not seeded during the experiment). Peat and biochar had different effects as soil
amendments, depending on the plant species. It was shown that both peat and biochar can be used to
promote plant establishment and growth, but biochar effectiveness may vary depending on its properties.Non UBCUnreviewedOthe
- …