Coping with Climate Change

In Nepal, everything from religious rituals to the types of agricultural crops being grown will soon be altered by erratic rainfall, drought and floods.  It’s already happening.

So some farmers, such as the one featured in this story, have recently abandoned traditional crops like rice and maize for bananas.

The situation demands this kind of foresight, says one Nepalese social activist:

Climate change is a big threat to our country. We need to start building our coping capacity at the national level before we run out of time.


Category: climate change, Nepal

Keeping Tabs on Climate Change

As I wrote here several weeks ago, global warming is already changing South Florida’s ecology. The difficulty facing land managers and field biologists is determining the extent of the change and what actions to take.  After talking with a number of U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service staffers based in the southeast, I had the impression that their efforts would be hampered by a lack of hard data. It seemed to me that they were operating–for the moment–mostly on observation and gut feeling.

So this new program tracking the effects of climate change in South Florida has to be welcome news to federal biologists. The Miami Herald reports that a joint effort by the Univerisity of Florida and the U.S. Geological Survey “will monitor when flowers open and whether wetlands plants are being adversely impacted by drought conditions.”

Additionally,” monitoring stations” soon to be set up all around Florida

will keep tabs on whether plants that thrive in temperate areas — for example, the dogwood — are shifting their growth range north to escape rising temperatures.

Still, as the Miami Herald story documents,  there is increasing evidence of “ample change” to Florida’s diverse wildlife, from rising seas, warmer ocean temperatures, and storm surges. The debate over how to manage this shifting ecological landscape is sure to heat up soon.


Category: climate change, Fish & Wildlife Service, Florida