Which «could have profound implications for pest management during
future climatic warming.»
Not exact matches
The calculations are in line with estimates from most climate models, proving that these models do a good job of estimating past
climatic conditions and, very likely,
future conditions in an era of climate change and global
warming.
You essentially use the past and present
climatic and social response to global
warming to predict problems the world is likely to encounter in the
future.
N. Y. Times (Aug. 8, 08)- We are much more likely to experience global freezing than we are global
warming in the
future but who cares about facts - please check out Earth's geological and
climatic history before reachin any conclusions - g
They reported that «no catastrophic hurricane of category 4 or 5 intensity has made landfall in the Western Lake [northern Florida] area during the last 130 year documentary record» but «If
future climatic changes, whether or not related to the anticipated greenhouse
warming, lead to a return of a «hyperactive» hurricane regime characteristic of the first millennium A.D., then the northeastern Gulf Coast is expected to experience a dramatic increase in the frequency of strikes by catastrophic hurricanes.»
«Even if one assumes that the relationships between
climatic variables and mortality used in this study are valid,» Goklany concludes, «considering the cumulative effect of the shortcomings noted above, the methodologies and assumptions used by the WHO inevitably exaggerate the
future mortality increases attributed to global
warming, perhaps several-fold.»
Several years ago, global
warming for the
future was all the rage; now it has quickly shifted to
climatic instability.
This certainly justifies
climatic evaluations of older, concluded
warm interglacial cycles such as the last interglacial (LIG), i.e., Marine Isotope Stage (MIS) 5e (Eemian), lasting from about 130 to 115 ka and often proposed as a possible analog for our near -
future climatic conditions on Earth11, 12.
But scientists say that crop failures related to
climatic events will be inevitable in the planet's
warmer future.
The dynamics of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and its influence on climate is hotly debated and evidence for its behaviour during the Last Interglacial may have potential in determining how ocean circulation and related
climatic effects may alter in a
future warming world.
Uncertainty about the
future climatic effect of carbon dioxide emissions consists of two parts: the
future carbon dioxide concentration given current levels of emissions, and the amount of
warming that can be expected from a given carbon dioxide concentration.