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(Barents Observer, 22 October 2009) --
New research has
uncovered a significant clue in solving one of the lingering mysteries
in climate change: what is causing the significant increase in Arctic
tundra productivity detected by satellites since the early 1980s?
Groundbreaking research, led by Bruce Forbes, professor at the Arctic Centre, University of Lapland in Rovaniemi, has been able to pinpoint what has long been suspected but never quantified (the release).
By studying the annual growth rings of a common and widespread
willow species, an international team of researchers has determined
that deciduous, or leafy, tundra shrubs closely track Russian Arctic
warming and ‘greening’. A regional increase in shrub cover has
important implications for future climate due to feedbacks between the
ground surface and earth’s atmosphere.
The researchers have been studying the areas on the tundra in the
Nenets Autonomous Okrug in the northern part of the Barents Region. "In the earliest stages of this research I had information from
Nenets reindeer herders, who are indigenous to the area, that shrubs
seemed to have increased in height during their lifetime," explains lead
author Bruce Forbes, who did his field research in Russia’s Nenets
Autonomous Okrug, about 20 km inland from the coast of the Barents Sea.
According to meteorological observation, the temperature in the
Arctic is rising two times faster than the world’s average temperature, reports Bellona web with
reference to Murmansk Hydro-Meteorological Centre. 2007 was the warmest
year in the region since 1961. According to Yelena Siekkinen of the
Murmansk Hydro-Meteorological Centre, observations of the temperature
in the region show a 0.7 degree Celsius rise every decade since 1976.
In other words, the temperature in Russia’s Arctic region has risen more than 2 degrees Celsius over the last 30 years.
Posted by Amanda Graham – 26 October 2009; 10:18:12 PM – Permalink
Tagged: Arctic, News, Polar research: Reports and findings
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