Nature notices the SH cold: global warming blamed

The money quote:

“With such extreme climatic events potentially becoming more common due to climate change…”

Maybe next week Nature will notice La Nina:


Cold empties Bolivian rivers of fish

Antarctic cold snap kills millions of aquatic animals in the Amazon.

Anna Petherick

dead fish
The San Julián fish farm in the Santa Cruz department of Bolivia lost 15 tonnes of pacú fish in the extreme cold. Photo: Never Tejerina

With high Andean peaks and a humid tropical forest, Bolivia is a country of ecological extremes. But during the Southern Hemisphere’s recent winter, unusually low temperatures in part of the country’s tropical region hit freshwater species hard, killing an estimated 6 million fish and thousands of alligators, turtles and river dolphins.

Scientists who have visited the affected rivers say the event is the biggest ecological disaster Bolivia has known, and, as an example of a sudden climatic change wreaking havoc on wildlife, it is unprecedented in recorded history.

“There’s just a huge number of dead fish,” says Michel Jégu, a researcher from the Institute for Developmental Research in Marseilles, France, who is currently working at the Noel Kempff Mercado Natural History Museum in Santa Cruz, Bolivia. “In the rivers near Santa Cruz there’s about 1,000 dead fish for every 100 metres of river.”

With such extreme climatic events potentially becoming more common due to climate change, scientists are hurrying to coordinate research into the impact, and how quickly the ecosystem is likely to recover.

The extraordinary quantity of decomposing fish flesh has polluted the waters of the Grande, Pirai and Ichilo rivers to the extent that local authorities have had to provide alternative sources of drinking water for towns along the rivers’ banks. Many fishermen have lost their main source of income, having been banned from removing any more fish from populations that will probably struggle to recover.

The blame lies, at least indirectly, with a mass of Antarctic air that settled over the Southern Cone of South America for most of July. The prolonged cold snap has also been linked to the deaths of at least 550 penguins along the coasts of Brazil and thousands of cattle in Paraguay and Brazil, as well as hundreds of people in the region.

Water temperatures in Bolivian rivers that normally register about 15 ˚C during the day fell to as low as 4 ˚C.

Hugo Mamani, head of forecasting at Senamhi, Bolivia’s national weather centre, confirms that the air temperature in the city of Santa Cruz fell to 4 ˚C this July, a low beaten only by a record of 2.5 ˚C in 1955.

Read the entire story at Nature News

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August 28, 2010 10:26 pm

Here is an article that tells a tale of not just weather, but economics.
Imagine how these companies might have survived if cap and trade had passed.
These companies would not have just suffered setbacks.. they would have been crippled.
http://www.newsnet5.com/dpp/weather/weather_experts/coldest-winter-in-a-half-century-in-the-southern-hemisphere

Michael
August 29, 2010 12:48 am

What you people fail to realize is there is One Trillion Dollars/Year on the line promoting the AGW scam. LMAO at the people who are now not going to make that money on the scam.

August 29, 2010 3:20 am

kfg: August 28, 2010 at 3:49 pm
But she’s curiously shy about letting just anybody know what that recorded history is.
“There are some things Man was not meant to know…”

Annei
August 29, 2010 3:54 am

“The prolonged cold snap has also been linked to the deaths of at least 550 penguins along the coasts of Brazil and thousands of cattle in Paraguay and Brazil, as well as hundreds of people in the region.”
Funny that the penguins are mentioned in such a way that leaves one with the impression that the penguins are more important than the people (or the cattle, for that matter).

Pamela Gray
August 29, 2010 7:40 am

Woke up this morning to snow on the peaks (and there are plenty of folks up there on the trails). This means that we have had snow somewhere in Wallowa County every month throughout the summer. And I am not counting hail. Just the flaky stuff. Maybe the folks who study extreme cold events could come to our place and study our extreme event. I’m sure the folks around here would welcome warmers.

Kitefreak
August 29, 2010 8:48 am

kadaka (KD Knoebel) says:
August 28, 2010 at 2:03 pm
Nice rant!
People do need to AT LEAST get angry about being lied to, manipulated, exploited and taken for complete idiots, before anything has a chance of changing.

kfg
August 29, 2010 11:03 am

#
Bill Tuttle says: “There are some things Man was not meant to know…”
I find myself unable to reply with anything that is a) humorous and b) within my own bounds of decency.

rbateman
August 29, 2010 12:52 pm

Buried in your car’s AC repair costs?
Here’s the Money back guaranteed Climate Change fix:
Just turn on the heater and eventually the anomaly outside will be less than the anomaly inside.
Then, after you are thoroughly cooked, roll down the windows. Feel that anomalously cooler air?
See… auto warming causes auto cooling.
We’re better now, Ollie.

Bruce Cobb
August 29, 2010 1:42 pm

“With such extreme climatic events potentially becoming more common due to climate change, scientists are hurrying to coordinate research into the impact, and how quickly the ecosystem is likely to recover.”
The weasel word, of course is “potentially”. The obfuscation is the use of the phrase “climate change” to mean “manmade climate change”. As far as “hurrying to coordinate research into the impact” I’d like to think that’s just scientese for assessing the damage, but it sounds suspiciously like “we need to get our story straight on this”. As for “how quickly the system is likely to recover”, I suppose they mean “let’s just run some playstation models, already conveniently programmed with the usual carbonastrophic suppositions and see what we get”. Dollars to donuts it will be “much worse than we thought”.
Typical mind-numbing post-normal pseudoscience.

peterhodges
August 29, 2010 6:44 pm

here is news video report of the disaster…
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FWIzUwZ1Spk&fs=1&hl=en_US]

August 29, 2010 7:20 pm

La Nina? I don’t see no stinking La Nina! 😉
http://img705.imageshack.us/img705/9523/sstanom82910.gif

August 29, 2010 7:21 pm

peterhodges,
the video is unbelievable

PhilJourdan
August 30, 2010 8:51 am

Dr. John M. Ware says:
August 28, 2010 at 1:28 pm

I had to mentally go through possive pronouns to realize the truth of your “English Teacher” remark. I wish I had had English teachers that would have at least made the rules as simple as you did!