«We see that climate and
temperature have dramatic effects on their parasites.»
Not exact matches
Ecologist Gian - Reto Walther of the University of Hanover in Germany thinks rising
temperatures may
have already
had dramatic effects.
It is known that water evaporates faster at higher
temperature than lower
temperature, and it
has been demonstrated through data analyses that cloud cover is slightly greater at higher
temperatures than at lower
temperatures; some regional
effects are
dramatic, such as the greater cloud cover throughout upstate New York in the daytime than the night time in summer.
Furthermore, if aerosols did
have such a
dramatic cancelling
effect at the onset of WWII and during the following decades, is aerosol cooling part of the
temperature models?
Global
temperature not rising over the next few decades
would do it, barring supervolcanoes or anything with a
dramatic cooling
effect happening.
I
would suggest that tropospheric convective circulation
has a
dramatic effect on tropospheric
temperatures.
It seems to me, few people
would claim this
would have an immediate
effect [within 10 years] and it
would be
dramatic in terms of
temperature or sea level.
«Looking at the average difference in
temperature between every grid cell in the city and the adjacent rural area, cool roofs
had a more
dramatic effect during heat waves,» Millstein said.