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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Hunter Cutting

Hunter Cutting

Emergency hospital admissions for stroke went up as daily highs increased - 0 views

  • This study evaluated the association between temperature variation and emergency admissions for stroke in Brisbane, Australia, over a 10-year period. For people under age 65, the risk of primary intracerebral hemorrhage in summer rose significantly-15% and 12%, respectively-for 1°C (1.8°F) increases in daily high and low temperature, after controlling for potential confounding effects of humidity and air pollutants.
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    A medical study in Brisbane. The increase in temperature highs is a hall mark of climate change, as otherwise one would expect the average temperature high to remain unchanged
Hunter Cutting

Nights getting warmer in India, cereal output may fall: Study - The Times of India - 0 views

  • In an ominous sign of climate change hitting home, India has seen accelerated warming in the past few decades and the temperature-rise pattern is now increasingly in line with global warming trends. The most up-to-date study of temperatures in India, from 1901 to 2007, has found that while it’s getting warmer across regions and seasons, night temperatures have been rising significantly in almost all parts of the country. The rise in night temperatures — 0.2 degrees Celsius per decade since 1970, according to the study — could have potentially adverse impact on yields of cereal crops like rice. The paper also finds that warming has been highest in post-monsoon and winter months (October to February).
  • ‘‘Until the late 1980s, minimum (or night) temperatures were trendless in India. India was an odd dot in the global map as most regions worldwide were seeing a rise in night temperatures in sync with growing levels of greenhouse gases. Our analysis shows the global trend has caught up with India,’’ said K Krishna Kumar, senior scientist and programme manager at Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Pune, and one of the authors.
  • The rising night temperatures are a major cause of worry. Said Jagdish K Ladha, principal scientist in the India chapter of International Rice Research Institute, ‘‘Minimum temperatures have a link with rice fertility. At higher than normal night temperatures, rice grains aren’t properly filled up, leading to a drop in yield.’’
Hunter Cutting

Massive moisture-driven extreme precipitation during warmest winter in record - 0 views

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    Climate Progress analysis of snowmaggedon
Hunter Cutting

Sea level rise maps - 0 views

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    Sea level rise maps published by DGESL :
Hunter Cutting

Allergies and asthma driven by season change due to global warming - 0 views

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    Late spring bursting with pollen, fueling misery - Allergies and asthma- msnbc.com
Hunter Cutting

Changing seasons - 0 views

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    An overview of how seasons are changing worldwide
Hunter Cutting

12% of Mexican spiny lizard populations lost to climate change - 0 views

  • Twelve percent of Mexico's spiny lizard population has been driven to extinction over the last quarter-century by increasing local temperatures, a phenomenon that is linked to global warming, researchers said Thursday.
Hunter Cutting

Greenland rapidly rising as ice melt continues: Science Daily - 0 views

  • Greenland's ice is melting so quickly that the land underneath is rising at an accelerated pace.
  • "What's surprising, and a bit worrisome, is that the ice is melting so fast that we can actually see the land uplift in response," he says. "Even more surprising, the rise seems to be accelerating, implying that melting is accelerating."
Hunter Cutting

Coffee crops affected by climate change: Reuters/International Coffee Organization - 0 views

  • Unpredictable rainfall patterns, excessive droughts, and hurricanes caused by climate change are already affecting coffee farmers from Kenya to Vietnam. Mexico and Guatemala are among the world's top ten coffee producers by volume, according to the International Coffee Organization
Hunter Cutting

Temperatures, precipitation rising in Lake Champlain Valley - 0 views

  • The study shows that temperatures have already risen in the Champlain Valley by roughly two degrees Fahrenheit since the 1970s. Increased precipitation has also raised the lake level by an average of a foot.
  • temperatures have already risen in the Champlain Valley by roughly two degrees Fahrenheit since the 1970s
Hunter Cutting

Oceans are becoming warmer - 0 views

  • the upper layer of Earth's global ocean has warmed since 1993, indicating a strong climate change signal.
  • study that analyzed nine different estimates of heat content in the upper ocean from 1993 to 2008
  • a warming ocean is a direct cause of global sea level rise, since seawater expands and takes up more space as it heats
Hunter Cutting

Salmon, trout populations fall in Wales following hot, dry summers - 0 views

  • salmon numbers fell by 50 percent and trout numbers by 67 percent between 1985 and 2004, with the fish hit hardest following hot, dry summers such as during 1990, 2000 and 2003.
  • findings suggest warmer water and lower river levels combine to affect both species. As both trout and salmon favor cool water, they face potentially major problems if climate warming continues as expected in the next two to three decades.
Hunter Cutting

Climate Change Affects Pets, Too | EcoSalon - 0 views

    • Hunter Cutting
       
      2nd test sticky note - how do you position a sticky note?
    • Hunter Cutting
       
      test sticky note
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    test comment - how does another bookmarker highlight text for the same entry?
Hunter Cutting

Montana farmers witness extreme climate fluctuations - 0 views

  • Baker farmer Wade Sikorski said he and other independent farmers from around Montana have seen declining snowfall and extreme temperature fluctuations in their lifetimes that will damage farm production beyond the point of profitability if changes continue. “There’s definitely a difference between what I’ve seen as a child and what I’m seeing now,” said Sikorski, 54. “As a child, I remember incredible winters in the 1960s, snow in the fall that didn’t thaw until spring. The melt would come in a rush and fill the irrigation project. That’s not happening this year.”
  • This year’s snowmelt didn’t wash the gullies, Sikorski said. Instead, the Eastern Montanan’s farm ground, which never got cold enough to freeze deeply, soaked up the melting snow.
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