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Human prints on the poles

Gillett.JPGHumans are at fault for warming at both the Earth’s poles: so say unique findings published in Nature Geoscience today.

With stories of dwindling sea ice and collapsing ice shelves already saturating the media, this at first may hardly sound like news. But in fact, researchers had never formally pinned the Arctic’s rapid warming on humans, because limited data were swamped by great natural variability. Down south, where warming on the Antarctic Peninsula contrasts with cooling in some other regions of the continent, the IPCC’s 2007 assessment report concluded: “Anthropogenic influence has been detected in every continent except Antarctica (which has insufficient observational coverage to make an assessment)”.

In the new study, Nathan Gillett of the University of East Anglia and colleagues found a way to squeeze clear results from those sparse data. Their method was based on state-of-the-art models of the polar climates that either incorporated anthropogenic as well as natural influences on variability, or included natural factors only. (Human influences include greenhouse gases that cause warming and a cooling effect from depletion of stratospheric ozone; natural ones are solar variation and volcanic eruptions.) This type of study, pioneered by Peter Stott and co-authors in 2000, has greatly boosted the IPCC’s confidence that humans are causing climate change globally. The new Gillett et al. study - co-authored by Stott - gave the technique an important tweak, say Andrew Monaghan and David Bromwich in an accompanying News and Views article, by focusing on model results for only those places with observational temperature records:

By this restriction, the group is able to perform an ‘apples with apples’ comparison of model simulations and polar near-surface temperature records during the twentieth century. Their analysis implies that the models can simulate trends better than previous studies had suggested.

In the records since 1900 put together by Gillett et al., the average temperature across monitoring stations has risen at both poles. And the models match these trends only when they factor in all influences, including human hands (producing the line labelled ALL in the above figure).

“We detected the human fingerprint in both the Arctic and Antarctic regions,” says Gillett. The familiar litany of impacts - balding Arctic summer sea ice, ecological and human displacements, sea level rise - are likely down to us too, the authors say. Stott adds that the results make the poles’ future all the bleaker, since “the human component isn’t going to let up anytime soon.”

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More for the annals of climate misinformation

I’m all for a website that distills climate science papers into something easily understood by the general public, especially if it avoids the hype and hysteria all too often employed by headline news.

Such is the claim of CO2 Science, a weekly newsletter published by the not for profit Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change, with issues that include editorials, book and media reviews, and mini-reviews of the recent peer-reviewed literature.

But rather than its promise of “separating reality from rhetoric in the emotionally-charged debate that swirls around the subject of carbon dioxide and global change”, on the contrary CO2 Science twists the most recent science, ever so subtly, to suggest that there is no link between carbon dioxide levels and climate change.

For a case in point, check out the feature entitled “Medieval Warm Period Record of the Week”. This showcases records of temperature or environmental changes during the Medieval Warm Period (aka the Medieval Climate Anomaly). The conclusion is that if the MWP was warmer than present – still debated – obviously CO2 isn’t driving current warming. There is even a list of 576 scientists who have found evidence for the MWP – the thinly veiled conclusion being that they agree that an increase in CO2 isn’t behind the recent climate change.

FYI scientists – if you’ve ever compiled a climate record for the past 2,000 years, your name is probably there. These folks are thorough.

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The global warming signal minus the El Niño noise

Andrew Revkin of the New York Times has been wondering whether climatologists could help turn down the “rhetorical noise” on recent temperature trends:

Given how much yelling takes place on the Internet, talk radio, and elsewhere over short-term cool and hot spells in relation to global warming, I wanted to find out whether anyone had generated a decent decades-long graph of global temperature trends accounting for, and erasing, the short-term up-and-down flickers from the cyclical shift in the tropical Pacific Ocean known as the El Niño - Southern Oscillation, or ENSO, cycle.

He queried Gavin Schmidt at RealClimate, who’s pondered how to reduce the noise (and beat the rhetoric) on climate trends before. Schmidt thought of the recent Nature paper in which David Thompson et al. removed ENSO fluctuations from the sea surface temperature record (and uncovered an abrupt 1945 temperature drop that they traced to buckets used to collect seawater after World War II).

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Immediate impacts of a warming world

climate.2008.28-i1

Nearly 30,000 phenomena in the natural world - from the timing of plant flowering to the rate of ice melting - are being influenced by human-induced global warming, according to the first study to formally link trends in biological and physical systems to rising greenhouse gas emissions.

Led by Cynthia Rosenzweig of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York, the analysis, published in this week's Nature, brings together data from numerous different studies stretching back to 1970 to gain a big picture view of how climate change is impacting the planet.

Although the latest report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded that human-induced climate warming is "likely" to have had a discernible effect on physical and biological systems, attributing such changes in natural systems to specific causes in notoriously difficult, as highlighted in the related News and Views article by Francis Zweirs and Gabriele Hegerl, both IPCC panelists.

Rosenzweig and collaborators made this link first by mapping changes in global average suface temperature between 1970 and 2004. They then looked at whether changes in natural phenomena in each region were consistent with warming or inconsistent with warming e.g. earlier blooming of flowers would be expected in a warmer climate.

In more than 90% of cases where there was a trend, it was consistent with the predicted effects of a warming world. As Emma Marris points out in an online news story, the bulk of the data come from Europe and several hundred more come from elsewhere in the world, but Africa, Australia and Latin America are poorly represented.

Olive Heffernan

Image credit: David Inouye

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