Have you ever noticed that, among other things,
the weather triggers our food cravings?
Not exact matches
Steven Syrop, DDS, diplomate at the American Board of Orofacial Pain and section chief of the TMD facial pain service at Weill Cornell Medical Center, adds that other possible
triggers include stress, yawning («Going past a certain point is going to aggravate everything, so I always advise people to cushion a yawn»), eating very crunchy or chewy
foods, and potentially even
weather.
Those same
triggers — stress, hard - to - eat
foods,
weather changes, teeth grinding, or other habits — may be to blame.
Its redness comes and goes, usually in response to
triggers like sun exposure, stress, hot
weather, wind, hot baths, and spicy
foods.
These tipping points could be ice sheets on Greenland and Antarctica melting permanently, global
food shortages and widespread crop failures with more extreme
weather, rising ocean temperatures and acidity reaching
triggering a crash in global coral reef ecosystems, and warming oceans push the release of methane from the sea floor, which could lead to runaway climate change, etc..
Freak
weather patterns will not only affect agricultural output and
food security, but will also lead to water shortages and
trigger outbreaks of water and mosquito - borne diseases such as diarrhea and malaria in many developing nations.
Parmesan and her colleagues argued that CO2 warming had
triggered cold events, which disrupted the «synchrony» between the
weather, the butterflies and their
food plants.
World grain reserves are so dangerously low that severe
weather in the United States or other
food - exporting countries could
trigger a major hunger crisis next year, the United Nations has warned.