Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 9 – As a result
of global warming, the taiga is moving north at a rate of more than three
kilometers a year, cutting into the size of Russia’s tundra areas and threatening
the environment there because destructive insects are moving north even faster
than trees and other useful plans, according to a study conducted by Tyumen and
Helsinki scholars.
There has not been anything like
this during the last 7,000 years for which researchers have established a
record, Viktor Gennadinik of Tyumen State University says; and consequently,
its impact remains uncertain but it is beyond any doubt going to be dramatic (nauka.tass.ru/nauka/7652797).
The
scholars say that what is particularly striking is that different species of
plants and animal life are moving northward at different rates, thus creating
environments which are different than those which existed further south rather
than simply extending them northward as many had expected.
Many
kinds of trees appear to be advancing northward at the rate of approximately a
kilometer each year while insects and some other animals are moving that way
two, three or even more kilometers a year, imposing changes on the tundra
ecology even before the trees arrive and make it part of the taiga forests.
And
because the animals are all part of an integrated food chain, the movement of
some northward more rapidly than others means that some species will increase in
number rapidly while others may be at risk of extinction in these new zones,
the Russian and Finnish scholars say.
Some
of these changes may benefit human inhabitants of these regions; but others
will threaten their way of life.
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