Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label climate change. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Sustainability Day at Fresno State campus today, Oct 21, 2009

Many campuses across the US are celebrating tomorrow, Oct 21, 2009 as Campus Sustainability Day. There is even a webcast you can join in via the Society for College and University Planning. If you prefer more direct human contact, and happen to be in the Fresno State vicinity tomorrow, why not check out our campus' First Annual Sustainability Day event - see full announcement below the fold. You might even to win a cool bicycle! I'm glad our campus is finally joining this event in its 7th year - better late than never, eh?



FRESNO STATE'S 1st ANNUAL
CAMPUS SUSTAINABILITY DAY
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 21, 2009

10:00 A.M. TO 2:00 P.M.


USU BALCONY


Don't forget to come out this Wednesday and learn about how your fellow Bulldogs are "Going Green". Various departments and student groups from the university, as well as businesses, organizations and programs in the surrounding communities of Fresno and Clovis will be there. Featured participants include:

  • Fresno State Recycling Club
  • City of Fresno Department of Waste & Recycling
  • The Green Issue (Fresno State)
  • Department of Risk Management & Sustainability (Fresno State)
  • Center of Irrigation Technology
  • Fresno State Organic Farm
  • Fresno Metropolitan Flood Control District
  • Fresno Council of Governments
  • Bulldog Pantry
  • GRID Alternatives
  • ...and more!


There will be a raffle for a brand new bike available to those who attend!


In the evening, Director of the Department of Pesticide Regulation and Fresno State Alum Mary-Ann Warmerdam will be guest lecturing at Alice Peters Auditorium at 7:00 p.m. A reception will be held at 6:00 p.m. in the Alice Peters lobby. Enjoy the free food made from produce provided by the Fresno State Farm Market. The lecture is free of charge and open to all students, faculty, and members of the general public! Please encourage your students and colleagues to attend. A sign-up sheet will be at the lecture for any students needing to show proof of attendance!


Alaia Howell
Risk Management & Sustainability
California State University Fresno
559.278.8787
ahowell@csufresno.edu

Fresno State: Powering the New California
   -- Please save a tree: Don't print this message --



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Thursday, October 15, 2009

Blogging about climate change on Blog Action Day 2009

As some of you may know, today, Oct 15, 2009, is Blog Action Day - a global effort to get the blogsphere to act collectively to highlight a single issue. This year's topic is Climate Change, and as of this writing, 8170 blogs are participating worldwide. Here's a short video about it from the site:



Instead of inflicting my own rather lengthy contribution upon you readers here, I invite interested readers to visit my main blog, Reconciliation Ecology, where I have just posted some thoughts on climate change.


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Thursday, October 23, 2008

On glaciations, climate change, and pleistocene isolated fish

ResearchBlogging.orgRaj Kotagiri offers his perspective on a Biogeography class discussion.



This is a review of our discussion several weeks ago about the Glaciation and Pleistocene periods. There were four major periods in the history of Earth during glaciation period and probably the most important of these is the second period that occurred some millions of years ago between 850 Ma to 635 Ma during the late Proterozoic Age. It was suggested that during this age Earth was covered completely in ice and then led to the Cambrian Explosion which has been responsible for diversification of multi-cellular life during this era.



The current period of constant glaciations in Pleistocene epoch from 1.8 million years to 10,000 years BP where the present continents were positioned and the plates on which these continents rested have not rotated more than 100 km since the start of this period. Repeated glacial cycles have described the climate of Pleistocene period pushed to 40th parallel in some places. 30% of the surface of the Earth has been covered by ice at its highest extent. Also, there was a zone of permafrost that extended from southern edge of glacial sheet of North America to Eurasia. The average annual temperatures of the ice and permafrost were -6˚C and 0˚C respectively.


One of the papers we discussed in class was “Global heat budget, plate tectonics and climate change” (Harris, 2002). This paper stimulated curiosity and discussion among the students in class. We arrived to the following conclusions about climate change on Earth from the paper and discussion.



  1. The Earth’s surface temperature has fluctuated since past 2000 Ma.
  2. Individual locations on Earth have undergone long-term change in temperature at different times and in different places.
  3. We discussed new evidences concerning the difference in heat absorption by land and water; such as, the transport of excess heat pole ward from the tropics and the change in distribution of land and sea resulting from plate tectonics. These evidences explain the major fluctuation in the geological record-setting temperatures measured during last 350 Ma. However, these evidences create confusion since they are not supported by sufficient background data.
  4. he paper also dealt with various controls which resulted in the climate change on the Earth’s surface.
    1. First control dealt with changes in the distribution of land and sea due to plate tectonics. This explains the major temperature fluctuation (>25˚C) around the globe in the last 350 Ma.
    2. Second order control was large scale changes in ocean currents and thermohaline circulation (15-25˚C).
    3. Third order control was Milankovitch orbital cycle producing variations in the air temperature by order of 10˚C.
    4. Fourth order control was massive volcanic eruptions and how changes in carbon dioxide production caused minor perturbations (<5˚C).

The take home message of our discussion was: the Earth's climate change was influenced by many factors; some of which act independently, while others acted interdependent with each other. The process of climate change was a gradual process which took many millions of years to see any significant change in climate. This change in temperature and climate, at different locations of the Earth, resulted in the geological distribution of various types of habitats on Earth.



The second paper we discussed in class was “Pleistocene isolation in the northwestern pacific marginal seas and limited dispersal in marine fish, Chelon haematocheilus (Temminck and Sclegel, 1885)” (Liu et al, 2007). This paper deals with three marginal seas: the Sea of Japan, East China Sea and South China Sea. During the period of Pleistocene glaciation when the whole earth was mostly covered by ice, the populations of living organisms were isolated in the seas.


We discussed the hypothesis that the rise of post glacial sea level resulted in the homogenization of the population by high disperse potential. To test this hypothesis, researchers used Chelon haematocheilus as the model organism. This fish belongs to the Mugilidae family, and is present in shallow coast water as well as freshwater regions in north Japan through the Korean Peninsula, and to the coast of China South. The early life history characteristics indicate that potential larval dispersal of C. haematocheilus is high. If C. haematocheilus larvae could travel on the currents, the connectivity should be high among populations within this region. The distribution and biological characteristics of C. haematocheilus make it a good subject to test the homogenization hypothesis.



Molecular analysis revealed three lineages which might have diverged in the three marginal seas during Pleistocene low sea level. Analysis of molecular variance and population statistics revealed significant differences in genetic structure among populations of the marginal seas. The outcome of the above analysis revealed that gene flow in C. haematocheilus is far more restricted spatially than predicted by the potential dispersal capabilities of this species. These results provide evidence for strong genetic divergence among these fishes in the marginal seas of the Northwestern Pacific, which coincides with expected pattern of vicariance due to sea level changes during the Pleistocene.



In order to support the above hypothesis further investigation should be done on other species of the same region.




Stuart A. Harris (2002) Global Heat Budget, Plate Tectonics and Climatic Change. Geografiska Annaler. Series A, Physical Geography, 84:1-9


JIN-XIAN LIU, TIAN-XIANG GAO, SHI-FANG WU, and, YA-PING ZHANG. (2007) Pleistocene isolation in the Northwestern Pacific marginal seas and limited dispersal in a marine fish, Chelon haematocheilus (Temminck & Schlegel, 1845). Molecular Ecology 16:275-288. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2006.03140.x



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Monday, May 5, 2008

Framing Global Warming @ Café Scientifique tonight

Just a quick reminder that tonight we have another meeting of the Central Valley Café Scientifique:


How the News Media Frame Global Warming: A Harbinger of Human Extinction or Endless Summer Fun?


Dr. Andrew Jones, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, CSU-Fresno


Monday, May 5, 2008, 6:30-8:30 PM @ Lucy’s Lair.


Read more about it on the cafe website, and please join us for another fun evening!



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Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Penguin migrating with astonishing new abilities

And this new discovery suggests that perhaps these penguins will survive the ongoing changes in the Antarctic due to global warming (or even future cooling episodes) easily enough without too much help from us. So that's one less thing to worry about; now let's double our efforts to save those polar bears next, shall we?



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