(Press-News.org) Governments and institutions should focus on developing adaption policies to address and mitigate against the negative impact of global warming, rather than putting the emphasis on carbon trading and capping greenhouse-gas emissions, argue Johannesburg-based Wits University geoscientist Dr Jasper Knight and Dr Stephan Harrison from the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom.
"At present, governments' attempts to limit greenhouse-gas emissions through carbon cap-and-trade schemes and to promote renewable and sustainable energy sources are prob¬ably too late to arrest the inevitable trend of global warming," the scientists write in a paper published online in the scientific journal, Nature Climate Change, on Monday, 14 October 2012.
The paper, entitled The Impacts of climate change on terrestrial Earth surface systems, is published in the Perspective section of Nature Climate Change and argues that much less attention is paid by policymakers to monitor, model and manage the impacts of climate change on the dynamics of Earth surface systems, including glaciers, rivers, mountains and coasts. "This is a critical omis¬sion, as Earth surface systems provide water and soil resources, sustain ecosystem services and strongly influence biogeochemical climate feedbacks in ways that are as yet uncertain," the scientists write.
Knight and Harrison want governments to focus more on adaption policies because future impacts of global warming on land-surface stability and the sediment fluxes associated with soil erosion, river down-cutting and coastal erosion are relevant to sustainability, biodiversity and food security. Monitoring and modelling soil erosion loss, for example, are also means by which to examine problems of carbon and nutri¬ent fluxes, lake eutrophication, pollutant and coliform dispersal, river siltation and other issues. An Earth-systems approach can actively inform on these cognate areas of environmental policy and planning.
According to the scientists, Earth surface systems' sensitivity to climate forcing is still poorly understood. Measuring this geomorphological sensi¬tivity will identify those systems and environments that are most vulnerable to climatic disturbance, and will enable policymakers and managers to prioritise action in these areas.
"This is particularly the case in coastal environments, where rocky and sandy coastlines will yield very different responses to climate forcing, and where coastal-zone management plans are usually based on past rather than future climatic patterns," they argue.
The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change special report on extreme events and disasters and the forthcoming fifth assessment report, due 2013, include more explicit statements of the role of Earth surface systems in responding to and influencing climate forcing.
"However, monitoring of the response of these systems to climate forcing requires decadal-scale data sets of instrumented basins and under different climatic regimes worldwide. This will require a con-siderable international science effort as well as commitment from national governments," Knight and Harrison urge.
INFORMATION:
Link to the paper: http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/nclimate1660.html
ABOUT DR JASPER KNIGHT
Dr Jasper Knight is a Senior Lecturer in Physical Geography in the School of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies at Wits University in Johannesburg, South Africa. As a geoscientist, Knight's research interests are on landscape responses to climate change during the last 15 000 years. He focusses on glaciers, coasts and mountains and their responses to climate change. Geographically, his focus is on the UK and Ireland, northwest USA, Australia, the European Alps, New Zealand, Spain and southern Africa.
INTERVIEWS:
Dr Jasper Knight
jasper.knight@wits.ac.za
Tel: +27 11 717 6508
Too late to stop global warming by cutting emissions
Scientists argue for adaption policies
2012-10-17
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Military safety is blowing in the wind
2012-10-17
A command doctrine used by the US military and NATO designed to warn personnel of Nuclear, Chemical and Biological (NBC) hazards could be overly conservative and degrade war fighting effectiveness or, under certain conditions, risk lives because it is susceptible to changes in wind direction and speed that happen in periods shorter than its two-hourly updates.
Writing in the International Journal of Environmental Pollution, Nathan Platt and Leo Jones of the Institute for Defense Analyses, in Alexandria, Virginia explain how "Allied Tactical Publication-45(C)" relies on ...
Pfizer Consumer Healthcare responds to PHS II findings with statement
2012-10-17
Pfizer Consumer Healthcare is very pleased that study investigators at Brigham and Women's Hospital, a teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School, chose Centrum® Silver® for the Physicians' Health Study II. The Centrum® multivitamins' quality, among other factors, led investigators to choose Centrum® Silver® for inclusion in the study. Centrum® Silver® multivitamins currently available in stores have since been updated and improved to reflect advances in nutritional science.
In response to the Physicians' Health Study II findings shared this morning, Pfizer Consumer ...
An epigenetic difference in twins explains different risk of breast cancer
2012-10-17
Monozygotic twins have the same genome, that is, the same DNA molecule in both siblings. Despite being genetically identical, both twins may have different diseases at different times. This phenomenon is called "twin discordance". But how can people who have the same genetic sequence present different pathologies and at different ages? The explanation partly lies in the fact that the chemical signals added in the DNA to "switch off" or "switch on" genes can be different. These signals are known as epigenetic marks.
The research team led by Manel Esteller, director of ...
Searching for a silver bullet: Measuring biodiversity to inform species conservation
2012-10-17
Athens, Ga. – Ecologists in the University of Georgia Odum School of Ecology have found that evolutionary diversity can be an effective method for identifying hotspots of mammal biodiversity. In a paper published Oct. 17 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, they report that evolutionary diversity can be an effective proxy for both the sheer number of species as well as their characteristics and ecological roles. Their findings could help conservation organizations better protect threatened species across the globe.
There are several measures of biodiversity, ...
New cobalt-graphene catalyst could challenge platinum for use in fuel cells
2012-10-17
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — There's a new contender in the race to find an inexpensive alternative to platinum catalysts for use in hydrogen fuel cells.
Brown University chemist Shouheng Sun and his students have developed a new material — a graphene sheet covered by cobalt and cobalt-oxide nanoparticles — that can catalyze the oxygen reduction reaction nearly as well as platinum does and is substantially more durable.
The new material "has the best reduction performance of any nonplatinum catalyst," said Shaojun Guo, postdoctoral researcher in Sun's lab and ...
Beyond Bieber: Twitter improves student learning
2012-10-17
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Twitter, best known as the 140-character social-networking site where Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga chit-chat with fans, has become a new literary format that is improving student learning, a new study argues.
Christine Greenhow, assistant professor of education at Michigan State University, found that college students who tweet as part of their instruction are more engaged with the course content and with the teacher and other students, and have higher grades.
"Tweeting can be thought of as a new literary practice," said Greenhow, who also studies ...
Study questions feasibility of entire genome sequencing in minutes
2012-10-17
Amsterdam, October 17, 2012 – The claim that nanopore technology is on the verge of making DNA analysis so fast and cheap that a person's entire genome could be sequenced in just minutes and at a fraction of the cost of available commercial methods, has resulted in overwhelming academic, industrial, and global interest. But a review by Northeastern University physicist Meni Wanunu, published in a special issue on nanopore sequencing in Physics of Life Reviews, questions whether the remaining technical hurdles can be overcome to create a workable, easily produced commercial ...
World science academies release report to promote research integrity
2012-10-17
AMSTERDAM, Netherlands, and TRIESTE, Italy — To encourage researchers around the world to adhere to universal science values and ethical behavior, a new report on responsible science has been issued by the InterAcademy Council and the IAP – the global network of science academies. The report is the first product of the IAC and IAP's project on scientific integrity, initiated in response to several major trends reshaping the research enterprise, including the increasingly global and interdisciplinary nature of science, its heightened role in policy debates, and the continued ...
New technique for sorting live cells may expedite biomedical research
2012-10-17
Researchers from North Carolina State University and University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have developed a new technique that uses sound waves to rapidly separate selected collections of cells for use in biomedical research.
"We think this is important because it will make it faster and easier for researchers to sort out the live cells they need for research ranging from disease study to drug development," says Dr. Xiaoning Jiang, an associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering and adjunct professor of biomedical engineering at NC State and co-author ...
Religious affiliation and residence in Muslim-majority nations influence sexual behavior
2012-10-17
WASHINGTON, DC, October 17, 2012 — Hindus and Muslims are less likely than Christians and Jews to have premarital sex, and Muslims are the least likely among people of these religious groups to have extramarital sex, according to a new study that analyzed data on premarital and extramarital sexual behaviors in over 30 developing countries around the world.
Co-authored by Amy Adamczyk, an Associate Professor of Sociology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and Brittany Hayes, a Ph.D. student in John Jay's Criminal Justice program, the study, "Religion and Sexual Behaviors: ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Placenta and hormone levels in the womb may have been key driver in human evolution, say researchers
BMJ finds inaccuracies in key studies for AstraZeneca’s blockbuster heart drug ticagrelor
Paper outlines more efficient organic photoredox catalysis system inspired by photosynthesis
Plastic bag bans: Study finds up to 47% drop in shoreline bag litter
Plastic bag policies are effective in reducing shoreline litter in the US
Current chemical monitoring data hinders global water risk evaluations
New method enables in vivo generation of CAR T cells to treat cancer and autoimmune disease
Decline in population data collection threatens global public policy
Ocean ‘greening’ at poles could spell changes for fisheries
No data, no risk? How the monitoring of chemicals in the environment shapes the perception of risks
More and more people missing from official data
Two transparent worms shed light on evolution
Environment: Offsetting fossil fuel reserves by planting trees faces ‘unsurmountable challenges’
Not one, but four – revealing the hidden species diversity of bluebottles
Different brain profiles, same symptoms: New study reveals subtyping patients provides key insights into depression's complexities
Researchers demonstrate precise optical clock signal transmission via multicore fiber
National Heart Centre Singapore and Mayo Clinic to advance cardiovascular care and research
2025 Warren Alpert Prize honors scientists whose discoveries culminated in novel HIV treatment
Here’s why migraine symptoms are worse in patients who get little sleep
Impact of co-exposure of bisphenol A and retinoic acid on brain development
Nanobody-based 3D immunohistochemistry allows rapid visualization in thick tissue samples
New study finds self-esteem surges within one year of weight-loss surgery
Study: Iron plays a major role in down syndrome-associated Alzheimer’s disease
Herpes virus plays interior designer with human DNA
Arctic peatlands expanding as climate warms
When Earth iced over, early life may have sheltered in meltwater ponds
Alps could face a doubling in torrential summer rainfall frequency as temperatures rise by 2°C
Fitness trackers for people with obesity miss the mark. This algorithm will fix that.
“The models were right”: Astronomers find ‘missing’ matter
UBC scientists propose blueprint for 'universal translator' in quantum networks
[Press-News.org] Too late to stop global warming by cutting emissionsScientists argue for adaption policies