| Big swaths from the Frosty tundra is going to be comfortable    sufficient to aid luxurious plant life as well as trees and shrubs through    2050, indicates a brand new research. Higher temperatures will    lessen snow cover, according to the study, which is detailed in the March 31    issue of the journal Nature Climate Change.    That, in turn, will decrease the sunlight reflected back into the atmosphere    and increase warming. About half the areas will see vegetation change, and    areas currently populated by shrubs may find woody trees taking their place. "Substitute the    snowy surface with the darker surface of a coniferous tree, and the darker    surface stores more heat," said study co-author Pieter    Beck, a vegetative ecologist at the Woods Hole    Research Center in Massachusetts. "It's going to exacerbate    warming." Warming Arctic The Arctic climate    affects the world: Changes in sea ice affect ocean circulation, which, in    turn, affects atmospheric circulation that then impacts the globe, said Bruce Forbes, a geographer at the Arctic Center at    the University of Lapland in Finland, who was not involved in the study.  Past research suggested    that warming has already brought later winters and earlier springs to the    Arctic. And fossil    forests reveal the Arctic was once green as well. To find out exactly how    much greening Arctic warming would bring, the team used a model that    projected how temperature changes would affect snow cover, vegetation, and    the increased evaporation and transpiration from plants in the Arctic. Transformed    tundra The team found that at    least half of the tundra would see changes in the plant types it supported by    2050. In addition, they found more than a 50 percent increase in how much    woody greenery — such as coniferous trees —    would populate the Arctic. The tree line would also shift north, with coniferous    forests sprouting where shrubs once grew. Most of the greening was    driven by the loss of reflectivity, or albedo, from snow    cover. With less snow to reflect heat back into the atmosphere and more    dark trees, the Earth gets warmer, "just like a dark car gets hotter in    a warm parking lot than a light car does," Beck told LiveScience. That warmth supports more    tree and shrub growth, creating a positive feedback cycle to the warming,    Beck said. Real effect The findings match    forecasts for Arctic greening predicted by various other methods, and they    foreshadow effects that will strike closer to home later, Forbes said. "What's happening    now in the Arctic is a faster version of what will be happening at lower latitudes,"    Forbes told LiveScience. That could worsen extreme    weather events like Hurricane Sandy in the future. "The snowstorms in    Washington, D.C., and New York, and the flooding and the freezing on the    River Thames — the extreme weather will continue to be extreme but it won't    be so uncommon," Forbes said. Source:LiveScience, | 
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