Witnessing climate change: what have you seen

by Actual News Geezer | December 18, 2006 at 12:19 pm
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Alexander van Ufford and The WWF (the wildlife fund, not wrestling) have a great idea: get ordinary folk to report on what they see happening in their neck o' the woods in terms of weird weather, strange animal behavior, tropical plants growing in northern latitudes, etc.


We're gonna help Alexander and the WWF: everything we collect from you, we'll turn over to them.

So you can start right now: next time you walk around the block,  head for the hills, or jog along the beach, let us know if you see anything strange, anomalous. Maybe this will grow into its own channel.  In the meantime, have a boo at the latest dispatch from Climate Change Witnesses:


The number of polar bear populations in decline has increased from one in 2001 to five in 2006, WWF warned today. There are only 19 polar bear populations in the world, so this decline represents more then a quarter of the species’ populations.

Declining populations of polar bears indicate that the entire Arctic is under immense stress as a result of climate change. With the Arctic warming at more than twice the rate of the rest of the world, and sea ice over the Arctic projected to disappear in summer before the end of this century, polar bears face serious trouble, especially as they depend on sea ice to live, hunt and breed.

“The polar bear’s powerful grip on the Arctic is slipping," said Stefan Norris, head of conservation with the WWF International Arctic Programme.

“We need to stop run-away warming. Climate change is melting the ice-bear’s toe-hold on life. This bad news for polar bears is also bad news for other arctic species, and for the indigenous peoples whose traditional ways of life depend on them.”

According to a newly-published report by the World Conservation Union’s (IUCN) Polar Bear Specialist Group, the two best studied polar bear sub-populations in the world, the western Hudson Bay population in Canada, and the southern Beaufort Sea population (USA/Canada), have declined by 22 per cent and 17 per cent respectively over the past two decades.

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