Global warming devastating native Alaskans
Independent Online - South Africa
Anchorage, Alaska - Anyone who doubts the gravity of global warming should
ask Alaska's Eskimo, Indian and Aleut elders about the dramatic changes to their land and the animals on which they depend.
Native leaders say that salmon are increasingly susceptible to warm-water parasites and suffer from lesions and strange behaviour. Salmon and moose meat have developed odd tastes and the marrow in moose bones is weirdly runny, they say.
Arctic pack ice is disappearing, making food scarce for sea animals and causing difficulties for the Natives who hunt them. It is feared that polar bears, to name one species, may disappear from the Northern hemisphere by mid-century.
As trees and bushes march north over what was once tundra, so do beavers, and they are damming new rivers and lakes to the detriment of water quality and possibly salmon eggs.
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http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?click_id=143&art_id=qw1082275922684B251&set_id=1-----
See***The "Everything You Are Afraid To Know About Climate Change" thread:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=115x6973