Global Warming Images
 

 
IMG_5292_wood theft.jpg A sign about trees that have been chopped down and stolen in a remote area of Bowland, Lancashire, UK. As fuel prices rise more people are heating their homes with wood burning cast iron stoves, leading to an increased demand for timber.
 
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IMG_5294_crime.jpg A sign about trees that have been chopped down and stolen in a remote area of Bowland, Lancashire, UK. As fuel prices rise more people are heating their homes with wood burning cast iron stoves, leading to an increased demand for timber.
 
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IMG_2924_palm tree.jpg A palm tree growing in Stromness in the Orkney Isles, Northern Scotland, UK. The Orkney Isles lie on a similar latitude as Bergen in Norway and to southern Alaska, amazing then that palm trees grow. The only reason they do is because of the Gulf Stream which bathes the Orkneys in relatively warm water from further south, making the islands mainly snow and frost free. Climate change is slowing the Gulf Stream, as more fresh water from melting glaciers pours into the north Atlantic.
 
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IMG_2925_palm.jpg A palm tree growing in Stromness in the Orkney Isles, Northern Scotland, UK. The Orkney Isles lie on a similar latitude as Bergen in Norway and to southern Alaska, amazing then that palm trees grow. The only reason they do is because of the Gulf Stream which bathes the Orkneys in relatively warm water from further south, making the islands mainly snow and frost free. Climate change is slowing the Gulf Stream, as more fresh water from melting glaciers pours into the north Atlantic.
 
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IMG_4441_p.jpg Trees killed by drought near Lake Eucumbene, New South Wales, Australia and a wind pump.
 
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IMG_5108_p.jpg Beech trees in early autumn in Ambleside, Cumbria, UK.
 
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IMG_5752_p.jpg A toilet block with solar panels on the roof in the Daintree rainforest in the North of Queensland, Australia, which is the oldest continuously forested rainforest area on the planet.
 
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IMG_5754_p.jpg A toilet block with solar panels on the roof in the Daintree rainforest in the North of Queensland, Australia, which is the oldest continuously forested rainforest area on the planet.
 
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IMG_5757_p.jpg A toilet block with solar panels on the roof in the Daintree rainforest in the North of Queensland, Australia, which is the oldest continuously forested rainforest area on the planet.
 
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IMG_5758_p.jpg A toilet block with solar panels on the roof in the Daintree rainforest in the North of Queensland, Australia, which is the oldest continuously forested rainforest area on the planet.
 
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IMG_5760_p.jpg A toilet block with solar panels on the roof in the Daintree rainforest in the North of Queensland, Australia, which is the oldest continuously forested rainforest area on the planet.
 
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IMG_5764_p.jpg A toilet block with solar panels on the roof in the Daintree rainforest in the North of Queensland, Australia, which is the oldest continuously forested rainforest area on the planet.
 
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IMG_5967_p.jpg A solar powered light in the Daintre rainforest, Queensland, Australia.
 
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IMG_5974_p.jpg Solar powered wildlife cruise on the Daintree River, Queensland, Australia.
 
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IMG_5975_p.jpg Solar powered wildlife cruise on the Daintree River, Queensland, Australia.
 
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IMG_7224_p.jpg A toilet block with solar panels on the roof in the Daintree rainforest in the North of Queensland, Australia, which is the oldest continuously forested rainforest area on the planet.
 
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IMG_3555_sunlight.jpg Traditional agriculture, with small fields growing cereal, intersperesed with fruit trees, in La Calahorra, Andalucia, Spain, in evening light.
 
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IMG_3559_poppy.jpg Traditional agriculture, with small fields growing cereal, intersperesed with fruit trees, in La Calahorra, Andalucia, Spain, in evening light.
 
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IMG_3568_traditional farming.jpg Traditional agriculture, with small fields growing cereal, intersperesed with fruit trees, in La Calahorra, Andalucia, Spain, in evening light.
 
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IMG_3370_cocoon.jpg Nests of the Pine Processionary Caterpiller (Thaumetopoea pityocampa) in pine trees in the Sierra Nevada mountains of southern Spain. These moth caterpillars attack and eat the pine needles, damaging the trees. They are responding to climate change by surviving at ever higher altitudes in the mountains as temperatures rise, allowing them to damage more trees. These caterpillars have a very effective defence mechanism. They are covered in thousands of tiny poisonous hairs called Trichomes. If handled these minute hairs cause irritation. They even release these trichomes into the air if the nest is approached.
 
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IMG_3414_pine processionary moth.jpg Nests of the Pine Processionary Caterpiller (Thaumetopoea pityocampa) in pine trees in the Sierra Nevada mountains of southern Spain. These moth caterpillars attack and eat the pine needles, damaging the trees. They are responding to climate change by surviving at ever higher altitudes in the mountains as temperatures rise, allowing them to damage more trees. These caterpillars have a very effective defence mechanism. They are covered in thousands of tiny poisonous hairs called Trichomes. If handled these minute hairs cause irritation. They even release these trichomes into the air if the nest is approached.
 
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IMG_3556_agriculture.jpg Traditional agriculture, with small fields growing cereal, intersperesed with fruit trees, in La Calahorra, Andalucia, Spain, in evening light.
 
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IMG_2719_cherry.jpg Cherry trees in an orchard near Villena, Murcia, Spain.
 
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IMG_2721_cherry.jpg Cherry trees in an orchard near Villena, Murcia, Spain.
 
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IMG_2724_cherry.jpg Cherry trees in an orchard near Villena, Murcia, Spain.
 
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IMG_2728_cherry.jpg Cherry trees in an orchard near Villena, Murcia, Spain.
 
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IMG_4445_food.jpg Cherry trees in an orchard near Villena, Murcia, Spain.
 
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IMG_4453_cherry.jpg Cherry trees in an orchard near Villena, Murcia, Spain.
 
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IMG_3363_moth.jpg Nests of the Pine Processionary Caterpiller (Thaumetopoea pityocampa) in pine trees in the Sierra Nevada mountains of southern Spain. These moth caterpillars attack and eat the pine needles, damaging the trees. They are responding to climate change by surviving at ever higher altitudes in the mountains as temperatures rise, allowing them to damage more trees. These caterpillars have a very effective defence mechanism. They are covered in thousands of tiny poisonous hairs called Trichomes. If handled these minute hairs cause irritation. They even release these trichomes into the air if the nest is approached.
 
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IMG_3366_cocoon.jpg Nests of the Pine Processionary Caterpiller (Thaumetopoea pityocampa) in pine trees in the Sierra Nevada mountains of southern Spain. These moth caterpillars attack and eat the pine needles, damaging the trees. They are responding to climate change by surviving at ever higher altitudes in the mountains as temperatures rise, allowing them to damage more trees. These caterpillars have a very effective defence mechanism. They are covered in thousands of tiny poisonous hairs called Trichomes. If handled these minute hairs cause irritation. They even release these trichomes into the air if the nest is approached.
 
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IMG_3376_pest.jpg Nests of the Pine Processionary Caterpiller (Thaumetopoea pityocampa) in pine trees in the Sierra Nevada mountains of southern Spain. These moth caterpillars attack and eat the pine needles, damaging the trees. They are responding to climate change by surviving at ever higher altitudes in the mountains as temperatures rise, allowing them to damage more trees. These caterpillars have a very effective defence mechanism. They are covered in thousands of tiny poisonous hairs called Trichomes. If handled these minute hairs cause irritation. They even release these trichomes into the air if the nest is approached.
 
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IMG_3385_damage.jpg Nests of the Pine Processionary Caterpiller (Thaumetopoea pityocampa) in pine trees in the Sierra Nevada mountains of southern Spain. These moth caterpillars attack and eat the pine needles, damaging the trees. They are responding to climate change by surviving at ever higher altitudes in the mountains as temperatures rise, allowing them to damage more trees. These caterpillars have a very effective defence mechanism. They are covered in thousands of tiny poisonous hairs called Trichomes. If handled these minute hairs cause irritation. They even release these trichomes into the air if the nest is approached.
 
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