Telstra has revealed the addition of almost one million new mobile services in the six months to December 2011, but Sensis revenues plummeted 24 percent in 12 months.
Melting Arctic sea ice may have reached a tipping point triggering global climate change according to a new University of Colorado at Boulder study. The climate change could reach into Earth's temperate regions.
Scientists have postulated for years that
dwindling sea ice in both the Artic and Antarctic regions caused by
higher concentrations of greenhouse gases is leading to a negative
feedback effect on Earth's climate, leading to increased global
warming. Melting sea ice, unlike land ice melt, does not increase sea
levels. However, it decreases the salinity of oceans and creates a
greater surface area of ocean that absorbs rather than reflects solar
radiation, both of which reinforce the global warming trend.
Mark Serreze, a senior research scientist at CU-Boulder's National Snow
and Ice Data Center who led the study synthesizing results from recent
research, said the Arctic sea-ice extent trend has been negative in
every month since 1979, when concerted satellite record keeping efforts
began. The team attributed the loss of ice, about 38,000 square miles
annually as measured each September, to rising concentrations of
greenhouse gases and strong natural variability in Arctic sea ice.
"When the ice thins to a vulnerable state, the bottom will drop out and
we may quickly move into a new, seasonally ice-free state of the
Arctic," Serreze said. "I think there is some evidence that we may have
reached that tipping point, and the impacts will not be confined to the
Arctic region." A review paper by Serreze and Julienne Stroeve of
CU-Boulder's NSIDC and Marika Holland of the National Center for
Atmospheric Research titled "Perspectives on the Arctic's Shrinking Sea
Ice Cover" appears in the March 16 issue of Science.
The loss of Arctic sea ice is most often tied to negative effects on
wildlife like polar bears and increasing erosion of coastlines in
Alaska and Siberia, he said. But other studies have linked Arctic sea
ice loss to changes in atmospheric patterns that cause reduced rainfall
in the American West or increased precipitation over western and
southern Europe, he said.
The decline in Arctic sea ice could impact western states like
Colorado, for example, by reducing the severity of Arctic cold fronts
dropping into the West and reducing snowfall, impacting the ski
industry and agriculture, he said. "Just how things will pan out is
unclear, but the bottom line is that Arctic sea ice matters globally,"
Serreze said.
Because temperatures across the Arctic have risen from 2 degrees to 7
degrees F. in recent decades due to a build-up of atmospheric
greenhouse gases, there is no end in sight to the decline in Arctic sea
ice extent, said Serreze of CU-Boulder's Cooperative Institute for
Research in Environmental Sciences. Arctic sea ice extent is defined as
the total area of all regions where ice covers at least 15 percent of
the ocean surface.
"While the Arctic is losing a great deal of ice in the summer months,
it now seems that it also is regenerating less ice in the winter," said
Serreze. "With this increasing vulnerability, a kick to the system just
from natural climate fluctuations could send it into a tailspin."
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, shifting wind patterns from the
North Atlantic Oscillation flushed much of the thick sea ice out of the
Arctic Ocean and into the North Atlantic where it drifted south and
eventually melted, he said. The thinner layer of "young" ice that
formed it its place melts out more readily in the succeeding summers,
leading to more open water and more solar radiation being absorbed by
the open ocean and fostering a cycle of higher temperatures and earlier
ice melt, he said.
"This ice-flushing event could be a small-scale analog of the sort of
kick that could invoke rapid collapse, or it could have been the kick
itself," he said. "At this point, I don't think we really know."
Researchers also have seen pulses of warmer water from the North
Atlantic entering the Arctic Ocean beginning in the mid-1990s, which
promote ice melt and discourage ice growth along the Atlantic ice
margin, he said. "This is another one of those potential kicks to the
system that could evoke rapid ice decline and send the Arctic into a
new state."
The potential for such rapid ice loss was highlighted in a December
2006 study by Holland and her colleagues published in Geophysical
Research Letters. In one of their climate model simulations, the Arctic
Ocean in September became nearly ice-free between 2040 and 2050.
"Given the growing agreement between models and observations, a
transition to a seasonally ice-free Arctic Ocean as the system warms
seems increasingly certain," the researchers wrote in Science. "The
unresolved questions regard when this new Arctic state will be
realized, how rapid the transition will be, and what will be the
impacts of this new state on the Arctic and the rest of the
globe."
David Bass
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