
IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN AFRICA
Date: Sunday, November 26, 2006 @ 23:16:14 UTC Topic: General
Africa is the continent that will suffer most under global warming. Past history
gives us lessons on the likely effects of future climate change. Of greatest
concern are the 'large infrequent disturbances' to the climate as these will
have the most devastating effects.
In a remarkable study from the Kenyan Tsavo National Park published today in the African Journal of Ecology,
Dr Lindsey Gillson uncovers evidence for a drought that coincided with
the harrowing period of Maasai history at the end of the 19th century
termed "Emutai" meaning to wipe out.
"Severe disturbance events and rapid environmental change tend to occur
infrequently, but can have a lasting effect on both environment and
society" says Dr Gillson. This was no-where more evident than in the
case of the Maasai "Emutai". The period 1883-1902 was marked by
epidemics of bovine pleuropneumonia, rinderpest and small pox. The
rains failed completely in 1897 and 1898. The Austrian explorer Dr
Oscar Baumann, who travelled in Maasailand in 1891, wrote chilling
eye-witness accounts of the horror experienced during a large
ecological disturbance:
"There were women wasted to skeletons from whose eyes the madness
of starvation glared ... warriors scarcely able to crawl on all fours,
and apathetic, languishing elders. Swarms of vultures followed them
from high, awaiting their certain victims." (Baumann 1894, Masailand)
Ecological shocks such as that experienced by the Maasai are
predicted to be a feature of global warming. "It is important to use
long-term historical and palaeoecological data to try to understand the
frequency and effects of extreme events, and the way societies and
ecosystems respond to them" Lindsey Gillson explains. Her work involved
analysing sediments from the famous Tsavo National Park. Age of the
sediments was obtained using radiocarbon dating and analysis of the
pollen and charcoal fragments enabled a picture of environmental
changes to be built up. "It is painstaking work, but the results were
clear" says Dr Gillson "at the time of the Emutai there was a drought,
an increase in burning and soil erosion: indicators of a large
infrequent disturbance".
Dr Jon Lovett, who has been researching the impacts of climate change
on Africa, says that we must learn from history and be prepared "Events
like this are going to become more common in the future, and we need to
be ready for them" he says. "Lindsey's work is important because it
shows what has happened in the past, we are now forewarned. But the big
question remains – will policy makers take any notice?"
Source: Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Article reproduced from: http://www.physorg.com/news83678030.html
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