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Rising temperatures threaten to kill forests

climate-changeWoodlands at risk as mercury climbs http://www.theage.com.au/environment/climate-change/woodlands-at-risk-as-mercury-climbs-20141223-124s2a.html December 24, 2014 – Peter Hannam

Trees – even Australia’s hardy eucalypts – can take only so much heat, writes Peter Hannam. Trees are dying from heat stress in the forests of Europe, Asia and North America and it is inevitable rising temperatures will start to damage even Australia’s hardy woodlands, says Derek Eamus, a plant physiologist at the University of Technology, Sydney.

“At 50 degrees, you just start to see massive mortality in the canopy, even in the eucalyptus,” Eamus says.

Many studies have focused on how vegetation initially benefits from increases in carbon dioxide – a plant food – provided adequate water and soil nutrients are available. Less understood, though, is how trees cope with higher temperatures, particularly when humidity drops. That gap is partly because humidity conditions have been difficult to replicate at large scale.

“Stomata of all plants respond to decreased humidity by closing their apertures so they can reduce the amount of water they have to spend,” Eamus says. Less transpiration, though, means ambient temperatures are hotter.

Droughts will make the problem worse as eco-systems are already under stress. “The incoming solar radiation can’t evaporate the water from soil and leaves, [so] it heats the canopy, ground and air,” he says.

Some species are less adapted to rising temperatures than others, so the biodiversity balance will shift. Eamus predicts alpine forests – which are forecast to see some of the biggest temperate increases – “are going to be first ones to keel over”.

December 24, 2014 Posted by | 2 WORLD, climate change | Leave a comment

Suppression of the media in South Korea

Conservative Abe’s secrecy law doesn’t hold a candle to Seoul’s press suppression BY MAKIKO SEGAWA AND MICHAEL PENN THE JAPAN TIMES For people concerned with the weakening of press freedoms under the government of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, its criticism of the liberal Asahi Shimbun and the new state secrets law, there should still be a sense of relief that media suppression in Japan has not quite reached the levels now being seen in South Korea.

Like Japan, South Korea is currently governed by a decidedly conservative regime — that of President Park Geun-hye and her Saenuri Party, known until early 2012 as the Grand National Party……..http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2014/12/22/national/conservative-abes-secrecy-law-doesnt-hold-candle-seouls-press-suppression/#.VJfnHfDA

December 24, 2014 Posted by | general | Leave a comment