SOME LIKE IT HOT
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IS WILDLIFE REVEALING CLIMATE CHANGE? ROGER TABOR Thank you very much to Martin Sanford for inviting me along to talk and to chair this conference as well. The conference is called ‘Some Like it Hot’, and current climate change indicators seem to point to Global Warming as a reality. The last 15 years in the UK have been exceptionally warm. The outlook is certainly not encouraging and the further the prognostications go the worse it appears. For many the only consolation is encapsulated in: “it may not be too bad for my lifetime but heaven help the next generation”. However, the precept underlying this conference can be realised in another phrase: “every cloud has a silver lining!” We were asked as speakers to try to reflect that counterbalancing reality, for some species will certainly benefit with changing conditions. The Guardian recently published some pictures created to look at what the paper suggested could be Britain in 2020. They showed South American parrots flying from palm trees across the Cam, with crocodiles below beside punting students. However, Tim Sparks quite rightly pointed out that bridge would probably not be at today’s level as shown, because by the time the flora and fauna have changed that much the water level in East Anglia, and specifically in Cambridge, is going to have risen dramatically! The Fens and the Broads would have a different appearance to today. I am chairman of The British Naturalists Association (BNA), the national body for naturalists. It was founded 100 years ago by E. K. Robinson who also started our continuing Phenological Survey. The BNA’s centennial conference was held at Cressing Temple in May and the diversity of opinion on how we interpret Global Warming was clearly demonstrated by the differing viewpoints of Bill Oddie and David Bellamy who both spoke about the issues. That conference was held in the Cressing Temple Barns in conditions that seemed almost as cold as it could be in an English May, that is until Global Warming changes and we suddenly lose the Gulf Stream. In such circumstances Britain could become colder while the rest of Europe becomes hotter. We could find ourselves very cold while everybody else is very hot. Our geographical position makes it harder to predict with certainty climate outcomes. However, climate change does not occur in isolation, and other factors are significant at the same time. The future is looking really gloomy for specialist species, because even without further Global Warming anything that causes disruption can cause problems where their habitat is fragmented. For example, the tiger with very specific requirements is finding it difficult to survive while the generalist domestic cat which has gained distribution around the world by our movement over time has less specific requirements. For most species oceans have been barriers. One alarming trend for the future is tied to our global mobility. The number of species that we introduce, such as Oxford ragwort, has escalated and will continue to do so as climate changes as we change our gardening habits as it gets hotter. There will be more species that can migrate into the countryside. Scorpions may not stay on the Central Line platform at Ongar, but may go inter-city! Not all introduced species are as charming as grey squirrels (even though they supplant the red Trans. Suffolk Nat. Soc. 42 (2006)