2006年VOA标准英语-Alaska Feeling Impact of Global Warming(在线收听) |
By Brian Padden
------- "There are a few bits of the Portage glacier that are here in front of us. This is the kind of proximity that the glacier front was to the visitor center that was built here 15 to 20 years ago. Today now all we have are these small little remnants that we see directly here in front of the glacier. While the glacier itself is over a mile, a mile and a half away now."
Ecologist Ed Berg with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Alaska digs below the earth's surface to put this period of global warming into historical context.
These scientists are not just documenting that the Earth is warmer than is has ever been in recorded history. They are also warning that the impact of global warming -- being felt first and foremost in the fragile arctic and sub-artic eco-systems -- could dramatically change life on Earth. Ed Berg says, while beetles are responsible ravaging much of the spruce forests in Alaska and Canada, the real culprit is global warming. "In 1987 we went into overdrive essentially and had an 11-year run of warm summers and that we think is unprecedented in the last 250 years. It allowed the beetles to grow and grow and essentially eat themselves out of house and home." Ecologist Sue Mauger says that if temperatures continue to rise, Alaskan salmon will be threatened by parasites that thrive in warmer climates. "The predictions are that our air temperatures here in sub-arctic Alaska will increase as much as three to five degrees centigrade. And if the water temperatures increase that same amount, we are going to be seeing a much less healthy fish population." He says while Alaska is not responsible for creating hurricanes, it is indicative of the consequences of warmer terrestrial habitats and warmer ocean systems. ----- Note: It should also be noted that not all scientists agree that global warming is connected to extreme weather or that rising temperatures will have catastrophic effects. They dispute the rate of rising temperatures and sea levels and say the scientific community should refrain from making premature and alarmist predictions. See our other reports in this series. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/8/33952.html |