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July
31, 2007 Catastrophic
forest fire outbreaks in In Professor Balzter
said, “Last century a
typical forest in Siberia had about 100 years after a fire to recover
before it
burned again. But new observations by Russian scientist Dr. Kharuk have
shown
that fire now returns more frequently, about every 65 years. At the
same time
annual temperatures in Global warming
leads to warmer springs and
causes plants to green up earlier. This has already been observed for
the The scientists
observed 18 years of satellite
images of the region, and estimated the timing of the onset and end of
the
growing season, when the snow has melted and the plants take up carbon
from the
air during plant growth. From 1982 to 1999 almost all Siberian
ecosystems
showed an earlier onset of spring. The strongest advance of spring was
observed
in Urban areas (0.74 days advance per year), Deciduous Broadleaf Forest
(0.46 days
advance per year), “ In the continental
parts of “Planet
Earth is always more complicated than
you think,” says Professor Balzter. “The
lengthening of the growing season that
has been described in the scientific literature is a non-linear
phenomenon. It
is influenced by feedbacks between the atmosphere and the forest, which
responds to rising greenhouse gas levels and higher
temperatures.” ##
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