Global Warming Images
 

 
IMG_4136_oil tank.jpg A storage tank painted with White Storks, to show the areas importance to wildlife in Isla Major, a town in the Coto Donana, Andalucia, Spain, one of the most imortant wetland wildlife sites in Europe.
 
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IMG_4138_white stork.jpg A storage tank painted with White Storks, to show the areas importance to wildlife in Isla Major, a town in the Coto Donana, Andalucia, Spain, one of the most imortant wetland wildlife sites in Europe.
 
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IMG_4146_flamingo.jpg An arrow painted with Flamingoe's, to show the areas importance to wildlife in Isla Major, a town in the Coto Donana, Andalucia, Spain, one of the most imortant wetland wildlife sites in Europe.
 
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IMG_4148_arrow.jpg An arrow painted with Flamingoe's, to show the areas importance to wildlife in Isla Major, a town in the Coto Donana, Andalucia, Spain, one of the most imortant wetland wildlife sites in Europe.
 
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IMG_4151_Coto Donana.jpg A house wall painted with a Grey Heron, to show the areas importance to wildlife in Isla Major, a town in the Coto Donana, Andalucia, Spain, one of the most imortant wetland wildlife sites in Europe.
 
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IMG_4153_wildlife.jpg A house wall painted with a Grey Heron, to show the areas importance to wildlife in Isla Major, a town in the Coto Donana, Andalucia, Spain, one of the most imortant wetland wildlife sites in Europe.
 
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IMG_4156_heron.jpg A house wall painted with a Grey Heron, to show the areas importance to wildlife in Isla Major, a town in the Coto Donana, Andalucia, Spain, one of the most imortant wetland wildlife sites in Europe.
 
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IMG_4157_water tower.jpg A water storage tank painted with a Kingfisher to show the areas importance to wildlife in Isla Major, a town in the Coto Donana, Andalucia, Spain, one of the most imortant wetland wildlife sites in Europe.
 
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IMG_8729_contaminated.jpg A dead pigeon floating in the Leeds Liverpool canal.
 
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IMG_8732_polluted.jpg A dead pigeon floating in the Leeds Liverpool canal.
 
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IMG_9607_oil spillage.jpg A Guillemot (Uria aalge) covered in oil on a black sand volcanic beach at Vik, on Iceland's south coast.
 
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IMG_8503_goldfinch.jpg Forsythia bushes flowering in spring and a Goldfinch
 
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366W3100_goldfinch.jpg Oilseed rape growing in a field in Cheshire and a Goldfinch.
 
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IMG_0774_tern.jpg Icebergs from the Jacobshavn glacier or Sermeq Kujalleq drains 7% of the Greenland ice sheet and is the largest glacier outside of Antarctica. It calves enough ice in one day to supply New York with water for one year. It is one of the fastest moving glaciers in the world at up to 40 metres per day (19 metres per day before 2002) and has also receeded rapidly (40 km since 1850) due to human induced climate change as temperatures have risen in Greenland by 9 degrees fahrenheit in the last 60 years. An underwater moraine at the mouth of the fjord grounds the largest icebergs causing a backlog of ice completely blocking the entire length of the fjord with ice.
 
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IMG_7681_Mallard.jpg A male Mallard on ice at Martin Mere bird reserve near Ormskirk, Lancashire, UK.
 
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IMG_7766_coot.jpg Eurasian Coot on ice at Martin Mere bird reserve near Ormskirk, Lancashire, UK.
 
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366W3263_tern.jpg Ratcliffe on Soar a massive coal powered power station in Nottinghamshire UK that is responsible for huge carbon dioxide emmissions
 
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366W6261_tern.jpg Funafuti atol Tuvalu on the front line of the battle against global warming Only 15 feet above sea level at the highest point with many parts of the island lying at or barely above current sea levels rising sea levels are increasingly putting the island population of 10 000 Tuvaluans at risk It seems likely that this island nation will be the first country to disapear completely as a result of climate change global warming Sea levels in the Pacific have risen slowly over the last 20 years and the rate of rise seems likely to increase as ice sheets and glaciers melt more rapidly with ever warming temperatures Tuvalu is the smallest country in the world only 26 Km2 and most vulnerable to sea level rise It lies close to the equator and virtually on the international date line Ever rising seas threaten to make the island uninhabitable Already during the highest tides sea water is forced up through the porous coral atol and floods many low lying areas of the island during the highest tides This salt water incursion poisons the thin soils and makes growing crops increasingly difficult leaving the Tuvaluans increasingly dependant on expensive imports As well as sea level rise the weather patterns are altering with a shift in the cyclone period by a month and an increase in stormy weather The stormy weather is creating greater wave erosion and many parts of the island are suffering land loss as palm trees are washed into the sea as the island is undercut by wave action
 
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IMG_7835_migration.jpg Whooper Swans at Martin Mere in Lancashire, UK. These winter visitors to the UK from Iceland are starting to adapt their migration patterns to adapt to climate change.
 
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IMG_7838_whooper swan.jpg Whooper Swans at Martin Mere in Lancashire, UK. These winter visitors to the UK from Iceland are starting to adapt their migration patterns to adapt to climate change.
 
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IMG_7980_martin mere.jpg Whooper Swans at Martin Mere in Lancashire, UK. These winter visitors to the UK from Iceland are starting to adapt their migration patterns to adapt to climate change.
 
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IMG_8032_Whooper swan.jpg Whooper Swans at Martin Mere in Lancashire, UK. These winter visitors to the UK from Iceland are starting to adapt their migration patterns to adapt to climate change.
 
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IMG_8039_feeding.jpg Whooper Swans at Martin Mere in Lancashire, UK. These winter visitors to the UK from Iceland are starting to adapt their migration patterns to adapt to climate change.
 
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IMG_8053_conservation.jpg Whooper Swans at Martin Mere in Lancashire, UK. These winter visitors to the UK from Iceland are starting to adapt their migration patterns to adapt to climate change.
 
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IMG_8061_swans.jpg Whooper Swans at Martin Mere in Lancashire, UK. These winter visitors to the UK from Iceland are starting to adapt their migration patterns to adapt to climate change.
 
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IMG_8077_flock.jpg Whooper Swans at Martin Mere in Lancashire, UK. These winter visitors to the UK from Iceland are starting to adapt their migration patterns to adapt to climate change.
 
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366W4574-2_red.jpg Palm fronds in Tropical rainforest with a male Eclectus Parrot.
 
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366W4586_leaf.jpg Tropical rainforest plants with a male Eclectus Parrot.
 
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IMG_6383_canopy.jpg A tropical palm tree in the Daintree Rainforest, Queensland, Australia, with a male Eclectus Parrot. Rainforest habitat is a vital carbon sink and the lungs of the planet, but is being chopped down all across the planet.
 
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IMG_6398_parrot.jpg A tropical palm tree in the Daintree Rainforest, Queensland, Australia, with a male Eclectus Parrot. Rainforest habitat is a vital carbon sink and the lungs of the planet, but is being chopped dwon all across the planet.
 
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IMG_7770_Coot.jpg Eurasian Coot on ice at Martin Mere bird reserve near Ormskirk, Lancashire, UK.
 
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IMG_6539_ice feather.jpg Ice feathers formed during a hard frost, when temperatures fell below minus 10 during the December 2010 cold snap, Ambleside, UK.
 
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