Global ecological tipping point: Difference between revisions

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Past these tipping points, scientists recon there is no way back<ref>https://illuminem.com/energyvoices/80df1713-3292-4626-911f-48decadc37ae?fbclid=IwAR1mTkC2LAoJy92kIninjXbu0ULxIOLGqymTzD7tbxfnENdlDBuqKjn-0bA</ref>.
Past these tipping points, scientists recon there is no way back<ref>https://illuminem.com/energyvoices/80df1713-3292-4626-911f-48decadc37ae?fbclid=IwAR1mTkC2LAoJy92kIninjXbu0ULxIOLGqymTzD7tbxfnENdlDBuqKjn-0bA</ref>.


*'''The Arctic''': we have lost the frozen Arctic.
*'''The Arctic''': the average temperature of the Arctic has increased 2.3°C since the 1970s. Ice dependent species such as narwhals, polar bears, and walruses are at increasing risk with shrinking sea ice cover. By 2100, polar bears could face starvation and reproductive failure even in far northern Canada.
*'''West Antarctic sea ice''': we could lose this within ten years, and if so, sea levels will eventually rise three metres because of it.
*'''West Antarctic sea ice''': we could lose this within ten years, and if so, sea levels will eventually rise three metres because of it.
*'''Amazon Rainforest''': the current projection is that we have five to ten years before the rainforest tips into a new state, that of a savannah.
*'''Amazon Rainforest''': the current projection is that we have five to ten years before the rainforest tips into a new state, that of a savannah.
*'''Greenland ice sheet''': we could lose this in 20 to 25 years, and if so, sea levels will eventually rise seven metres because of it.
*'''Greenland ice sheet''': we could lose this in 20 to 25 years, and if so, sea levels will eventually rise seven metres because of it.
'''References'''
'''References'''

Revision as of 05:40, 28 May 2022

Past these tipping points, scientists recon there is no way back[1].

  • The Arctic: the average temperature of the Arctic has increased 2.3°C since the 1970s. Ice dependent species such as narwhals, polar bears, and walruses are at increasing risk with shrinking sea ice cover. By 2100, polar bears could face starvation and reproductive failure even in far northern Canada.
  • West Antarctic sea ice: we could lose this within ten years, and if so, sea levels will eventually rise three metres because of it.
  • Amazon Rainforest: the current projection is that we have five to ten years before the rainforest tips into a new state, that of a savannah.
  • Greenland ice sheet: we could lose this in 20 to 25 years, and if so, sea levels will eventually rise seven metres because of it.

References

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