Rising temperature create a greener Arctic

Rising temperature create a greener Arctic
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Rising temperatures seem to be having a positive effect in the Arctic region making it greener as discovered by scientists using 29 years of data from satellite imageries.

​Washington: Rising temperatures seem to be having a positive effect in the Arctic region making it greener as discovered by scientists using 29 years of data from satellite imageries.

In a changing climate, almost a third of the land cover is looking more like landscapes found in warmer ecosystems, the researchers said. Temperatures are warming fast in the Arctic which has led to longer seasons for plants to grow in and changes to the soils.

With 87,000 images taken from Landsat satellites, the researchers found that western Alaska, Quebec and other regions became greener between 1984 and 2012. Landsat is a joint NASA/US Geological Survey programme that provides the longest continuous space-based record of the Earth's land vegetation in existence.

"It shows the climate impact on vegetation in the high latitudes," said one of the researchers Jeffrey Masek from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

Overall, the scientists found that 29.4 percent of the region greened up, especially in shrublands and sparsely vegetated areas, while 2.9 percent showed vegetation decline.

With computer programs that track each individual pixel of data over time, researchers can see if an area is greening -- if more vegetation is growing, or if individual plants are getting larger and leafier. If, however, the vegetation becomes sparser, the scientists would classify that area as browning.

Source:IANS

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