Experts warn species in peril from climate change
"Much of the predictions are gloom and doom. The ray of hope, however, is that we have not lost our opportunity. We still have time if we act now," said Jean Brennan, a senior scientist with Defenders of Wildlife and co-recipient of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for her work on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
The three-day summit, sponsored by the Florida
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, assembled several
world-renowned climate change researchers with dozens of wildlife
experts to trade ideas on how to save species on a warming planet.
Florida has the lowest elevation of any state, the only living
coral barrier reef in North America, and the Everglades, a unique
wetland perilously close to collapse with at least 67 threatened or
endangered species. The state's population is expected to nearly double
to 32 million people by 2050, adding more pressure on shrinking
wildlife habitats.
The commission called the summit to learn how best to protect
Florida's wildlife and natural resources. Warming oceans and rising sea
levels threaten to inundate Florida's developed coastline and barrier
islands, kill its reef and decimate an economy based on tourism.
Experts noted that many plants and animals have
temperature-specific habitats. A change of only a few degrees can kill
them or send them seeking a better home.
"Species are moving to track what is the most ideal climate for
them," Brennan said, adding that many are "desperately trying" to find
their way through a maze of dams, development and other manmade
obstacles along their natural corridors.
Brennan and others said creating wildlife pathways so animals can
move freely northward as temperatures warm could mean the difference
between survival and extinction.
As the Earth's temperature rises, entire habitats will change, consumed by weather extremes, fires, pest outbreaks and invasions of nonnative species, said Virginia Burkett, a chief scientist at the U.S. Geological Survey.
Burkett, another co-recipient of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, said extensive die-offs of pinion pine trees in the West are being attributed to climate change. She added some animal species are already disappearing.
Burkett cited the decline of the American pika, a small mountain-dwelling mammal also known as a rock-rabbit that is typically found in the western U.S. and Canada. The rodent maintains a body temperature topping 100 degrees, but with just a few degrees of climate change, "this animal will die," Burkett said.
She said officials need to begin reducing the non-climate change related stressors, "stop draining the wetlands, damming rivers."
Nature, she said, is highly adaptable and can be its own best protector against the effects of climate change if it can function, well, naturally.
Coastal growth also must be controlled and limited to allow for "wetlands to migrate inland naturally as sea level rise accelerates, and they can't do that if there's a road or a condominium there," Burkett added.
Before Friday's close, summit participants also will hold workshops on coastal ecosystems, land use planning, invasive species and wildlife adaptation.
Source>>>http://www.physorg.com/news142104929.html