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Chapter 21 Global Climate Change. Overview of Chapter 21  Introduction to Climate Change  Causes of Global Climate Change  Effects of Climate Change.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 21 Global Climate Change. Overview of Chapter 21  Introduction to Climate Change  Causes of Global Climate Change  Effects of Climate Change."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 21 Global Climate Change

2 Overview of Chapter 21  Introduction to Climate Change  Causes of Global Climate Change  Effects of Climate Change  Melting Ice and Rising Sea Level  Changes in Precipitation Patterns  Effects on Organisms  Effects on Human Health  Effects on Agriculture  Dealing with Global Climate Change

3 Climate Change Terminology  Greenhouse Gas  Gas that absorbs infrared radiation  Positive Feedback  Change in some condition triggers a response that intensifies the changed condition  Infrared Radiation  Radiation that has a wavelength that is longer than that of visible light, but shorter than that of radio waves  Greenhouse Effect  Increase of heat in a system where energy enters (often as light), is absorbed as heat, and released sometime later

4 Introduction to Climate Change  Evidence for Climate Change  14 warmest years since mid-1800s have occurred since 1990  Phenological spring in N. hemisphere now begins 6 days earlier  Warming is not due to natural causes  Human produced greenhouse gases are most plausible explanation

5 Introduction to Climate Change: Mean Annual Global Temperature 1960–2007

6 Causes of Climate Change  Greenhouse gas concentrations increasing

7 Causes of Climate Change  Increased concentration of CO 2 (right)  Burning fossil fuels in cars, industry and homes  Deforestation  Burning of forests

8 Greenhouse Effect

9 Pollutants That Cool the Atmosphere  Atmospheric Aerosols  Both human and natural sources  Tiny particles that remain in troposphere for weeks or months  Often contain sulfur  Complicates models of climate change

10 Climate Models  Climate affected by:  winds, clouds, ocean currents, and albedo  Used to explore past climate events  Advanced models can project future warming events  Models are only as good as the data and law used to program them  They have limitations

11 Climate Models

12 Effects of Global Climate Change  Wildfire in California

13 Effects of Global Climate Change: Melting Ice and Rising Sea Levels  Sea level rise caused in 2 ways  Thermal Expansion  Melting of land ice  Melting has positive feedback  Increased melting decreases ice, which decreases albedo leading to further warming

14 1957 1998 Glacier National Park Melting Ice and Rising Sea Levels

15 Case-In-Point Impacts in Fragile Areas  Eskimo Inuit live traditional life dictated by freezing climate  Climate change is altering their existence  Wildlife displaced  Reduced snow cover and shorter river ice seasons  Thawing of permafrost (right)

16 Effects of Global Climate Change: Changing Precipitation Patterns  Some areas will get more water, some areas will have greater droughts

17 Effects of Global Climate Change: Effects on Organisms  Zooplankton in parts of California Current have decreased by 80% since 1951  Effecting entire food chain  Decline in krill around Antarctica  Species have shifted their geographic range  Migrating birds are returning to summer homes earlier

18 Effects on Organisms: Coral Reefs  Coral reefs can be bleached (right) due to increase in water temperature  Affects coral symbiotes and makes them more susceptible to diseases

19 Effect on Organisms: Vegetation

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21 Effects on Human Health  Increased number of heat-related illnesses and deaths

22 Effects on Agriculture  Difficult to anticipate  Productivity will increase in some areas and decrease in others  Rise in sea level will inundate flood plains and river valleys (lush farmland)  Effect on pests is unknown  Warmer temperatures will decrease soil moisture- requiring more irrigation  Location (i.e. elevation and altitude) where certain crops can be grown may have to change

23 International Implications of Climate Change  Developed vs. Developing countries  Differing self- interests  Differing ability to meet the challenges of climate change

24 Dealing with Global Climate Change  Two ways to manage climate change  Mitigation: Limiting greenhouse gas emissions to moderate global climate change  Adaptation: Learning to live with environmental changes and societal consequences brought about by global climate change

25 Relationship Between Mitigation and Adaptation

26 Dealing with Global Climate Change: Mitigation  Locate/invent alternative fuels to fossil fuels  Increase efficiency of cars and trucks  Carbon Capture and Storage  Plant and Maintain trees to naturally sequester carbon

27 Dealing with Global Climate Change: Adaptation  Rising sea levels and coastal populations  Move inland  Construct dikes and levees  Adapt to shifting agricultural zones  NYC sewer line

28 International Efforts to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emission  Kyoto Protocol  Legally binding  Provides operational rules on reducing greenhouse gases  US and Australia have not sign it - it will be difficult to implement without US backing


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