ARCTIC WARMING SEES MORE POLAR BEAR POPULATIONS THREATENED


Environmental Panorama
International
July of 2009


Posted on 07 July 2009 - WWF's work with polar bears The world’s top experts have just confirmed that Arctic warming is continuing its ravages of polar bear populations. The Polar Bear Specialist Group of the International Union of the Conservation of Nature has added to its list of declining polar bear populations.

“There is a disturbing downward trend apparent in world polar bear populations,” says Geoff York, polar bear coordinator for WWF International’s Arctic Programme. “In 2005, there were five declining populations – now there are eight. The experts have clearly identified climate change as the major culprit, but they are also optimistic that these trends can be reversed, given timely and effective action on greenhouse gas emissions.”

The main effect of warming on the bears is that their hunting is restricted by a lack of sea ice. The bears use the ice as a platform from which they can hunt seals, their favourite prey. Research has shown a definite link between the time the bears have to stay on land, and a decline in health, and in the numbers of cubs that survive.

At a meeting in Norway earlier this year, representatives of the countries that are home to polar bears agreed to refer the climate change problem to the UN-sponsored climate negotiations. WWF continues to push those countries to live up to the treaty they signed in 1973, obliging them to protect polar bear habitat.

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Kamchatka geyser’s sudden eruption a peculiar challenge for scientists

Posted on 07 July 2009 - The new geyser – dubbed “Prikolny” or “Peculiar” in English – has appeared in the Kronotsky Nature Reserve, in Uzon Caldera, 14 kms away from the world-renowned Valley of Geysers.

A reserve ranger was the first person to see the geyser – a column of boiling liquid shooting three meters high. A short while later, one of the observers said “Prikolny!” leading to the geyser’s naming, which will now appear on maps of the region.

Research on the geyser’s sudden appearance is ongoing, although scientists already have presented theories on its origin, including that serious changes affecting the entire Uzon thermal field caused its appearance, or that it was created from rising water levels in the field’s spring.

“Some theorize that Prikolny Geyser evolved from a pulsating hot spring,” said Valery Droznin, a senior researcher in Kronotsky Nature Reserve. “The process of a spring transforming to a geyser is not unknown to science.”

Currently, scientists are measuring the temperature of the water, the periodicity of its cycle, its diameter, the depth of its underground structure and its exact geographical position to better understand the Prikolny Geyser.

“The new geyser functions near one of the reserve’s ranger stations and can be easily viewed from a tourist boardwalk,” said Tikhon Shpilenok, Director of the Kronotsky Nature Reserve. “The geyser erupts every 6 to 20 minutes, so is very convenient for observations.”

A geyser is a hot spring characterized by intermittent discharges of water ejected turbulently and accompanied by a vapor phase (steam), and are generally found in volcanic areas. Geyser activity is marked by periodical repetitions of phases of rest, water ejection, erupting of a water-steam mixture, and ending in calm exhalation until ceasing entirely.

The Prikolny Geyser is unique because it uses the same water over and over again. Water from the five meter fountain gets back into the funnel and then it "spits out" the same water again.

In Kamchatka, a large geyser field – the only in Eurasia – was discovered in 1941 in the Geyser River valley (Valley of the Geysers) near Kikhpinich volcano. Altogether Kamchatka had 100 geysers (20 of them of significant size) before a mudslide covered them in June 2007.

There are four large geysers fields in the world: in Iceland, New Zealand, the US and Kamchatka. The last time a new geyser appeared on Kamchatka was in the 1960s, and in the United States’ Yellowstone National Park in the early 20th century.

WWF has worked in Kamchatka for years in efforts to preserve the region’s unique volcanoes and thermal springs, which also houses a large population of polar bears. Kamchatka’s rich natural resources face threats from poaching, destructive tourism, and potential oil developments.

“In June 2007, a mudslide wiped out half of Russia’s geysers in the Valley of the Geysers, but in June of this year a new miracle has appeared in another part of the reserve,” said WWF’s Alexandra Filatkina. “We have the rare opportunity to witness these natural processes as they become history.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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