macdoc
Philosopher
Easiest one of all - and "mild winters" is sophistry in an unstable climate regime - false springs and mid winter melts from unstable climates are damaging to many species
You can add maple trees to the damaging list
and no more wheat in the US mainland or Indian subcontinent.
But if your "thing" is Apline meadows there will indeed be more of those....sans glaciers in the alps.
http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2006/2006GL026319.shtml
Very "mild winters" indeed.
Climate excursions associated with AGW will NOT be pretty. But keep those rose coloured glasses handy...
I have some warm tundra for sale....built in methane supply
ENVIRONMENT: Climate-Driven Pest Devours Canada's Forests
By Am Johal*
Mountain pine beetles killed these lodgepole pine trees in Prince George, BC.
Credit:RadRafe
VANCOUVER, Jul 31 (IPS/IFEJ) - Environmentalists and researchers say that climate change is a significant factor in the pine beetle epidemic that has ravaged forests in the western Canadian provinces of British Columbia (BC) and Alberta.
In some areas of the BC interior, almost 80 percent of the lodgepole pines will have been devastated by the beetles within 10 years, resulting in widespread economic consequences, according to resource experts.
"The pine beetle infestation is the first major climate change crisis in Canada," Doug McArthur, a professor of public policy at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, told IPS.
"The pine beetle has survived the warmer winters due to global warming. The result is the rapid cut of forests to salvage the wood, which could, within seven or eight years, result in some communities being without a forestry industry which has sustained many regions for decades. The potential economic impact of this climate change issue is massive," he said.
A temperature of -40 degrees Celsius for a few days is needed in the winters to kill off the beetle adequately.
Ben Parfitt, a resource policy analyst with the BC chapter of the non-profit Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, told IPS, "To contextualise the magnitude of the devastation, it is probably the biggest landscape-level change since the ice age."
You can add maple trees to the damaging list
Sticky times for the maple tree
Its leaves are a riot of colour; its sap produces one of America's favourite delicacies. But the effects of climate change may soon drive the maple tree out of Vermont
By Rupert Cornwell
and no more wheat in the US mainland or Indian subcontinent.
But if your "thing" is Apline meadows there will indeed be more of those....sans glaciers in the alps.
Past, present and potential future glacier cover in the entire European Alps has been assessed from an integrated approach, combining in-situ measurements, remote sensing techniques and numerical modeling for equilibrium line altitudes. Alpine glaciers lost 35% of their total area from 1850 until the 1970s, and almost 50% by 2000. Total glacier volume around 1850 is estimated at some 200 km3 and is now close to one-third of this value. From the model experiment, we show that a 3°C warming of summer air temperature would reduce the currently existing Alpine glacier cover by some 80%, or up to 10% of the glacier extent of 1850. In the event of a 5°C temperature increase, the Alps would become almost completely ice-free. Annual precipitation changes of ±20% would modify such estimated percentages of remaining ice by a factor of less than two.
http://www.agu.org/pubs/crossref/2006/2006GL026319.shtml
Very "mild winters" indeed.
Climate excursions associated with AGW will NOT be pretty. But keep those rose coloured glasses handy...
I have some warm tundra for sale....built in methane supply


..what do you thing millions of dead trees represent....