Here Are the Charges Nick Reiner Faces in the Deaths of Rob and...
Trump Administration Just Made a Huge Move Against Drug Cartels
Dear New York Times: Jane Austen Does Not Need ‘X-Rated’ Help to Endure
Australia Dropped the Gun Control Ball With the Bondi Beach Terrorist
Are Democrats Getting Desperate About Epstein?
Why Johnny Can't Read
U.S. Military Strikes Three More Narco-Terrorist Vessels in the Eastern Pacific
Trans-Marine Veteran Arrested in Connection to New Years Eve Terror Plot: Said He...
President Trump Orders a Full Blockade of Sanctioned Venezuelan Oil Tankers
You Won't Believe What the Minneapolis Police Chief Invoked to Defend Illegal Immigrants
18 States Sue Trump Administration Over $100K H-1B Visa Fee, Calling It 'Unlawful'
These RINO Senators Backed a Bill Seeking to Overturn Trump Executive Order on...
Bondi Beach Horror Sparks Fiery Criticism From Holocaust Survivor’s Daughter, Injured in T...
Jewish Couple Killed Trying to Stop Gunman: The First Victims of the Antisemitic...
HHS Opens Investigation Into Minnesota Fraud
Tipsheet

A New Incovenient Truth?

It seems the planet has an uncanny ability to adapt to changing climate conditions, and that humanity may have a much harder time killing Mother Earth than the alarmists warn:

Advertisement

World's forests can adapt to climate change, study says

Water shortages as a result of rising temperatures will not do as much damage as feared, evidence from ancient trees suggests

It is generally acknowledged that a warming world will harm the world's forests. Higher temperatures mean water becomes more scarce, spelling death for plants – or perhaps not always.

According to a study of ancient rainforests, trees may be hardier than previously thought. Carlos Jaramillo, a scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI), examined pollen from ancient plants trapped in rocks in Colombia and Venezuela. "There are many climactic models today suggesting that … if the temperature increases in the tropics by a couple of degrees, most of the forest is going to be extinct," he said. "What we found was the opposite to what we were expecting: we didn't find any extinction event [in plants] associated with the increase in temperature, we didn't find that the precipitation decreased."


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos