Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumPurdue Study; Tropics May Be Uninhabitable As Warming Grows; They Were During PETM
New research out of Purdue University finds that a global warming event called the PETM made parts of the tropics too hot for living organisms to survive. And though the PETM happened many millions of years ago, these new scientific revelations are pertinent to the present day. The reason is that human activity in the form of fossil fuel burning is now rapidly causing the globe to heat up. And such warming, if it continues, could well turn large sections of the tropics into a dead zone.
PETM Warm-up Sparks Global Upheaval, Extinction
The PETM was a big global warm up that happened 56 million years ago as the Paleocene epoch passed into the Eocene. It is numbered as one of many hothouse extinctions occurring in the geological record. And it is generally thought to have been one of the milder such events especially when compared to the biosphere wrecking ball that was the Permian.
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(NASA tool shows that business as usual greenhouse gas emissions would force average maximum July temperatures over large sections of the world to warm to 40-45 C [104-113 F] by the 2090s. For many regions, such a high degree of heat is incompatible with crops and human habitability. In the deep past, hothouse events were found, in recent research, to render large sections of the tropics uninhabitable to most forms of life. Image source: NASA.)
During the PETM, global temperatures jumped by 5 degrees Celsius above an already warm base-line over the course of about 6,000 years. And research indicates that the resulting heat stress set off massive wildfires, forced land animal species to move pole-ward, and killed off a big chunk of the oceans bottom dwelling foraminifera. However, past scientific consensus held that the tropics still managed to support life during the PETM due to a kind of thermostat-like heat regulation preventing the equatorial region from becoming too warm. Temperatures were thought to have remained within a range that would have continued to support life in this lower latitude zone. So it was only thought that the tropics experienced die-offs during ancient and more intense warming events like the Permain of 250 million years ago.
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During the present day, about half the human population, a good chunk of the worlds life forms, and a considerable amount of global farming occupies the tropics. However, according to recent research by the Max Planck Institute, parts of the tropical zone could be rendered basically uninhabitable to human beings by mid Century as the Earth heats up due to fossil fuel burning. And already, the critical region of Equatorial Africa and the adjacent Middle East are experiencing record droughts, water stress, and instances of hunger, famine and related food insecurity as global temperatures rise to 1 C or more above 1880s averages.
(Climate zone habitability is a function of what forms of life can exist in a given region at a given range of temperatures. Warming in the tropics is expected to impact human habitability by mid Century. Warming, however, is also expected to impact crop yields well into the middle latitudes. U.S. food production is therefore likely to be negatively impacted by rising global temperatures. Video source: Peter Carter.)
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https://robertscribbler.com/2017/03/09/new-research-shows-global-warming-could-turn-tropics-into-a-sweltering-dead-zone/#comments
caroldansen
(725 posts)office????
MFM008
(19,776 posts)Trying to relieve herself of her destructive parasites....
Us.
NickB79
(19,110 posts)Between the crop failures, famine, livestock dying off, water shortages and subsequent collapse of society, humanity will flee these doomed lands by the hundreds of millions.
If anyone things the current refugee crisis we're seeing now from the Syrian conflict is bad, just wait until this shitstorm hits.
hunter
(38,264 posts)... but there will soon be places here on Earth where many thousands will perish whenever the power goes out.
We humans can cope with cold, but what happens when human life depends upon the air conditioners working?