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Many Pennsylvanians remain blissfully unaware that every decade for the past 40 years has been warmer than the previous decade. And 2015 was the hottest year since recorded weather history began.
So it’s no coincidence that almost every day we witness vivid news reports about destructive and costly hurricanes, tornadoes, floods, forest fires and droughts here in the United States and around the globe.
While humans might have the ability to adapt to the adverse effects of a warming climate, many wildlife species don’t have that luxury. Climate change is quickly altering critical habitats for native wildlife species that have survived for millenniums.
The latest report from the National Wildlife Federation, titled “Big Climate Challenges Facing Small Mammals,” documents how a warming world is harming even the smallest of critters all across America.
For example, the snowshoe hare is uniquely adapted to survive by altering the color of its fur coat from brown to white as summer sun gives way to winter snows. Unfortunately for the hare, this biannual wardrobe change is linked to the amount of daylight, not by the amount of snowfall. So as the number of days with snow cover decreases, their vulnerability to predation increases.
The snowshoe hare is listed as a “species of concern” in Pennsylvania. Due to the declining numbers of hares, the state Game Commission reduced the daily bag limit for them in recent years. If these population trends continue, wildlife biologists fear the snowshoe hare’s range will retreat north out of Pennsylvania.
But the snowshoe hare is not the only species in trouble. Our state bird (the ruffed grouse), our state fish (the brook trout) and our state tree (the eastern hemlock) are predicted to largely disappear from Pennsylvania by the turn of the century.
Brook trout are so closely dependent on the cooling shade provided by streamside hemlock trees that at one time they were called hemlock trout. Sadly, an invasive insect known as the woolly adelgid is slowly but surely killing our majestic hemlocks.
In the past, cold winters kept the adelgid confined to the southern U.S. Today this destructive pest has spread all the way to New England. As the hemlocks disappear, so do our priceless cold-water streams.
If you hunt ruffed grouse, you’re painfully aware of their declining numbers as well. A recent report by the Northeast Upland Game Bird Technical Committee warns the future is indeed grim for our state bird. While the loss of early successional forest habitat is a significant factor, a changing climate will eventually eliminate its preferred tree species from the Keystone State. On top of that, warmer winters frequently bring rain instead of snow, thereby reducing fledgling survival.
Even though many environmental factors can impact wildlife populations, scientific evidence points to climate change becoming the proverbial straw that breaks the camel’s back.
All these abnormal changes to wildlife habitat are occurring with just a 1 degree globally averaged temperature increase over the last century. Imagine what future generations will face if the temperature rises the 7 to 9 degrees that climate scientists forecast.
President Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan is focused on reducing greenhouse gas pollution from all the major emitters. But as he wisely leads our country toward a clean energy future, too many of our elected officials are working just as hard to make sure we stay wedded to the fossil fuel industry.
Like you, I want future generations to have the same fishing, hunting and many other outdoor opportunities that we enjoyed in our lifetimes. But that won’t happen unless we elect leaders who represent the will of the people instead of bowing to the fossil fuel industry.