Sunday, August 27, 2006

Global Warming

I am posting an article sent to be by my photographic mentor. I think it is worth considering.

Global warming alarmists aren't upset enough

Richard Lasker, director of Brabant Research Inc. in Bent Mountain.

I recently learned from the "Captains of Industry," specifically Stanley
Lewandowski, Intermountain Rural Electric Association's general manager, that
those who believe that global warming is a man-made occurrence are "alarmists."
What I guess this means is that pointing out an observational scientific
situation that counters industrial or business special interests is not "real"
science but "chicken-little" science. Hence, "alarmist."
This made us at Brabant Research sit down and take a stronger look at this
"alarmist" thing. Here is what we've learned:
Where are the alarmists? No, I don't mean the environmentalists; I don't mean
the "do-gooders" or "hippies." What I mean is: Where are the real alarmists?
What we are seeing in the global warming picture is record heat and
less-than-average rains, especially across North America. But, at Brabant Research
Inc., we do biological and botanical research, primary research, (that means we
actually do all the analytical testing as well as the field and lab research
work), and we've been looking at the global warming picture since 1995 from an
analytical and plant physiology viewpoint. All that experience makes us wonder,
where are the real alarmists? Let me explain:
An increase of 5 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit doesn't just mean it's warmer. It
means that plants, especially temperate climate plants (not tropical plants),
have to keep cool by increasing the rate of transrespiration, moving water
throughout the plant. That's how plants "keep cool."
But an increase in daytime temperatures of 10 degrees Fahrenheit equates to a
50 percent increase in transrespiration in most temperate climate plants,
less in some, more in others. The water doesn't circulate in the plant, go up
then down and all around, it comes out of the leaf stomas (openings) as water
vapor. That's part of what humidity is, plant sweat.
Now, with 50 percent of the U.S. currently in one form or another of drought,
and plants needing an increase of roughly 50 percent of water movement,
doesn't this mean that the plants are using the ground water at half again the
normal rate? And, we've established, the ground water (rain) replenishment rate is
at drought levels, yes?
That's my point here: Most plant physiologists, most botanists, most
biologists know these simple plant facts. Where are they in this "debate" about global
warming?
Where are the real alarmists who should be shouting at the tops of their
lungs that a major calamity is scheduled to befall the North American continent
unless global warming is brought to a halt now. Not 10 years from now, not five
years from now. Now!
Allow me to be the alarmist. At the current rate of rainfall, coupled with
the current rate of transrespiration, North America will start losing major
areas of vegetation in the next two years. Yes, two years. Anyone who knows the
climatic history of the Sahara Desert or Spain or Italy can tell you that once
you strip or lose the trees and grasses, you do not get the rainfall back.
To be clear, these three examples were all man-made occurrences: The Sahara
was stripped for wood for Egypt and Carthage. In Spain, forests were clearcut
for wood for the Spanish Armada. In Italy, it was for wood for the Roman
Empire.
Spanish people tell me that prior to the Spanish Armada deforestation, a
monkey could cross Spain from tree to tree and never touch the ground. Rain fell
in excess of 36 inches a year. Today? A few inches at best in the most of
Spain, and in some places it hasn't rained in decades.
You have to give water, (from the ground through the plants) to get water.
Uprising hot ground water from plants "seeds" the passing fronts and makes rain.
With no plant "sweat," with no ground moisture, the passing water-laden
weather fronts just evaporate; no rain. Gee, sound familiar?
And I haven't even started with what happens to a plant with an increase of
10 degrees Fahrenheit at night.
So, where are the rest of the plant "experts" and why aren't they sounding
the alarm? Well, I think you've already deduced that answer on the cover of the
Aug. 6 Horizon section of The Roanoke Times, in an article titled: "The best
minds money can buy."
So, I will be the alarmist: America, wake up, this is no joke. It's not just
warmer. It's not just unpleasant. It's the beginning of a very real problem if
someone, many someones, don't start making intelligent decisions and put
greed behind survival. Soon.
Real soon.

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