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How to protect Mumbai from future cyclones


How to protect Mumbai from future cyclones
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Mumbai’s infrastructure that monitors weather systems also failed when called upon the most. The western coast has five doppler radars to track atmospheric developments one each in Mumbai, Panjim, Bhuj, and two in Kerala, primarily to track the onset of the monsoon winds over mainland India.
Agencies
Increased prevalence of such cyclones originating in the Arabian Sea is attributed global warming, which warms oceans alone by 93%.
Cyclone Tauktae, India’s first cyclone this year, swept up 168 lives barelling through the western coast in Karnataka, Goa, Maharastra and Gujarat, besides damaging property worth crores. ....

Arabian Sea , India General , Jason Nicholls , Michael Osland , Indian Ocean , Ken Krauss , Roxy Mathew Koll , India Meteorological Department , Wildlife Trust Of India , Indian Institute Of Tropical Meteorology , Cyclone Tauktae , Tamil Nadu , Cyclone Man , Indian Institute , Tropical Meteorology , Oxford University Backed , Wildlife Trust , Monsoon Winds , Weather Systems , அரேபியன் கடல் , இந்தியா ஜநரல் , ஜேசன் நிக்கோல்ஸ் , மைக்கேல் ஒஸ்லண்ட் , இந்தியன் கடல் , கேன் க்ராஸ் , ராக்ஸி மேத்யூ கோல் ,

Lake County News,California - Tropical species are moving northward as winters warm


Tropical species are moving northward as winters warm
Robert Sanders
18 April 2021
As winters become warmer, tropical mosquitoes like Aedes aegypti move northward, possibly increasing the spread of diseases such as dengue, yellow fever and Zika. Photo by Muhammad Mahdi Karim photo.
Notwithstanding February s cold snap in Texas and Louisiana, climate change is leading to warmer winter weather throughout the southern U.S., creating a golden opportunity for many tropical plants and animals to move north, according to a new study in the journal Global Change Biology.
Some of these species may be welcomed, such as sea turtles and the Florida manatee, which are expanding their ranges northward along the Atlantic Coast. ....

United States , United Kingdom , British Columbia , San Francisco International Airport , New Mexico , San Francisco , New Orleans , Michael Osland , Muhammad Mahdi Karim , Katie Marshall , Caroline Williams , University Of California , University Of British Columbia , Us Geological , Global Change , Florida Everglades , West Nile , Climate Change , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , பிரிட்டிஷ் கொலம்பியா , சான் பிரான்சிஸ்கோ சர்வதேச விமான , புதியது மெக்ஸிகோ , சான் பிரான்சிஸ்கோ , புதியது ஆர்லீயந்ஸ் , மைக்கேல் ஒஸ்லண்ட் ,

Coastal News Today | USA - Parts of US's Southernmost States will "Tropicalize" as Climate Changes

Coastal News Today | USA - Parts of US's Southernmost States will "Tropicalize" as Climate Changes
coastalnewstoday.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from coastalnewstoday.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United States , New Mexico , Michael Osland , Global Change Biology , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , புதியது மெக்ஸிகோ , மைக்கேல் ஒஸ்லண்ட் , உலகளாவிய மாற்றம் உயிரியல் ,

Parts of US's Southernmost States will "Tropicalize" as Climate Changes


Parts of US’s Southernmost States will “Tropicalize” as Climate Changes
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Cold-sensitive plants, animals moving north due to fewer, weaker winter freezes
As climate change reduces the frequency and intensity of killing freezes, tropical plants and animals that once could survive in only a few parts of the U.S. mainland are expanding their ranges northward, a new U.S. Geological Survey-led study has found. The change is likely to result in some temperate zone plant and animal communities found today across the southern U.S. being replaced by tropical communities.
These changes will have complex economic, ecological and human health consequences, the study predicts. Some effects are potentially beneficial, such as expanding winter habitat for cold-sensitive manatees and sea turtles; others pose problems, such as the spread of insect-borne human diseases and destructive invasive species. ....

United States , University Of Arizona , United Kingdom , New Mexico , San Francisco , University Of California Santa Cruz , New Orleans , Michael Osland , Space Administration , University Of California Berkeley , National Oceanic , National Aeronautics , Atmospheric Administration , University Of British Columbia , Louisiana State University , Wildlife Conservation Commission , Global Change Biology , Florida Fish , California Berkeley , California Santa Cruz , British Columbia , West Nile , North America , Climate Change , Climate Zones , Extreme Cold ,