The business of climate change
A UN assessment published this week on the progress made in stemming the global loss of species made depressing reading. Not one of the 20 targets adopted by 196 countries in a convention on biodiversity in 2010 has been met. And the latest biennial Living Planet Report from the WWF, an environmental group, found that animal populations worldwide shrank by an average of two-thirds between 1970 and 2016. The falls were greatest in the tropics. In Latin America and the Caribbean animal populations fell by 94%, on average, during the period. It is some comfort that around the world biodiversity and climate change have become big political issues. In Australia koala bears have almost brought down a state government.
(www.economist.com, 18.09.2020.)
A) criticism about the 20 targets adopted in a convention.
B) bad news concerning biodiversity loss.
C) interesting ideas on biodiversity preservation to be followed.
D) an encouraging climate perspective.
E) a discussion about political views on global heating.
Analise o mapa para responder à questão.
A) manner.
B) graduality.
C) confirmation.
D) denial.
E) frequency.
Analise o mapa para responder à questão.
A) Ecuador.
B) Colombia.
C) Peru.
D) French Guiana.
E) Bolivia.
Analise o mapa para responder à questão.
A) precede a abertura de estradas para o escoamento de madeira ilegal.
B) ocorre em entradas perpendiculares após a construção de estradas.
C) provoca a morte de peixes em rios e igarapés próximos.
D) provoca desertificação nas regiões que margeiam as estradas.
E) toma forma de espinha de peixe ao longo das margens de rios.
De acordo com o cartum,
A) o desmatador certamente atenderia à solicitação da menina se retirasse seu equipamento.
B) os desmatadores apenas cumprem ordens.
C) os ambientalistas não apresentam argumentos convincentes.
D) os desmatadores não ouvem os argumentos dos ambientalistas.
E) as crianças são mais sensíveis ao mundo natural.
When will the Amazon hit a tipping point?
Scientists say climate change, deforestation and fires could cause the world’s largest rainforest to dry out. The big question is how soon that might happen. Seen from a monitoring tower above the treetops near Manaus, in the Brazilian Amazon, the rainforest canopy stretches to the horizon as an endless sea of green. It looks like a rich and healthy ecosystem, but appearances are deceiving. This rainforest — which holds 16,000 separate tree species — is slowly drying out.
Over the past century, the average temperature in the forest has risen by 1-1.5 ºC. In some parts, the dry season has expanded during the past 50 years, from four months to almost five. Severe droughts have hit three times since 2005. That’s all driving a shift in vegetation. In 2018, a study reported that trees that do best in moist conditions, such as tropical legumes from the genus Inga, are dying. Those adapted to drier climes, such as the Brazil nut tree (Bertholletia excelsa), are thriving.
At the same time, large parts of the Amazon, the world’s largest rainforest, are being cut down and burnt. Tree clearing has already shrunk the forest by around 15% from its 1970s extent of more than 6 million square kilometres; in Brazil, which contains more than half the forest, more than 19% has disappeared. Last year, deforestation in Brazil spiked by around 30% to almost 10,000 km2 , the largest loss in a decade. And in August 2019, videos of wildfires in the Amazon made international headlines. The number of fires that month was the highest for any August since an extreme drought in 2010.
(www.nature.com, 25.02.2020. Adaptado.)
O cartum ilustra que o aumento de temperatura, também citado no texto,
A) causa mudanças substanciais apenas em climas frios.
B) deve interromper a evaporação das águas e levar a chuvas ou secas intensas.
C) irá causar grande impacto ambiental, climático e ecossistêmico.
D) contribui indiretamente para a expansão de grandes biomas.
E) pode postergar o aumento do nível dos rios e oceanos.
When will the Amazon hit a tipping point?
Scientists say climate change, deforestation and fires could cause the world’s largest rainforest to dry out. The big question is how soon that might happen. Seen from a monitoring tower above the treetops near Manaus, in the Brazilian Amazon, the rainforest canopy stretches to the horizon as an endless sea of green. It looks like a rich and healthy ecosystem, but appearances are deceiving. This rainforest — which holds 16,000 separate tree species — is slowly drying out.
Over the past century, the average temperature in the forest has risen by 1-1.5 ºC. In some parts, the dry season has expanded during the past 50 years, from four months to almost five. Severe droughts have hit three times since 2005. That’s all driving a shift in vegetation. In 2018, a study reported that trees that do best in moist conditions, such as tropical legumes from the genus Inga, are dying. Those adapted to drier climes, such as the Brazil nut tree (Bertholletia excelsa), are thriving.
At the same time, large parts of the Amazon, the world’s largest rainforest, are being cut down and burnt. Tree clearing has already shrunk the forest by around 15% from its 1970s extent of more than 6 million square kilometres; in Brazil, which contains more than half the forest, more than 19% has disappeared. Last year, deforestation in Brazil spiked by around 30% to almost 10,000 km2 , the largest loss in a decade. And in August 2019, videos of wildfires in the Amazon made international headlines. The number of fires that month was the highest for any August since an extreme drought in 2010.
(www.nature.com, 25.02.2020. Adaptado.)
A) perdeu mais de 50% da cobertura vegetal na área localizada no Brasil.
B) tem apresentado uma desaceleração contínua, porém insuficiente, no ritmo de desmatamento.
C) teve uma redução de cerca de 15% da extensão que tinha nos anos 1970.
D) perdeu 30% de sua área desde 2019 devido a queimadas e incêndios.
E) enfrentou o mais longo período de queimadas e incêndios em 2010.
When will the Amazon hit a tipping point?
Scientists say climate change, deforestation and fires could cause the world’s largest rainforest to dry out. The big question is how soon that might happen. Seen from a monitoring tower above the treetops near Manaus, in the Brazilian Amazon, the rainforest canopy stretches to the horizon as an endless sea of green. It looks like a rich and healthy ecosystem, but appearances are deceiving. This rainforest — which holds 16,000 separate tree species — is slowly drying out.
Over the past century, the average temperature in the forest has risen by 1-1.5 ºC. In some parts, the dry season has expanded during the past 50 years, from four months to almost five. Severe droughts have hit three times since 2005. That’s all driving a shift in vegetation. In 2018, a study reported that trees that do best in moist conditions, such as tropical legumes from the genus Inga, are dying. Those adapted to drier climes, such as the Brazil nut tree (Bertholletia excelsa), are thriving.
At the same time, large parts of the Amazon, the world’s largest rainforest, are being cut down and burnt. Tree clearing has already shrunk the forest by around 15% from its 1970s extent of more than 6 million square kilometres; in Brazil, which contains more than half the forest, more than 19% has disappeared. Last year, deforestation in Brazil spiked by around 30% to almost 10,000 km2 , the largest loss in a decade. And in August 2019, videos of wildfires in the Amazon made international headlines. The number of fires that month was the highest for any August since an extreme drought in 2010.
(www.nature.com, 25.02.2020. Adaptado.)
A) the expansion of trees adapted to drier climate conditions.
B) the reduction of nut tree population hit by three severe droughts.
C) adaptation of vegetable species to longer months of dry season.
D) alteration of tree locations, like growing closer to rivers.
E) substantial decrease of Inga and Brazil nut trees.
When will the Amazon hit a tipping point?
Scientists say climate change, deforestation and fires could cause the world’s largest rainforest to dry out. The big question is how soon that might happen. Seen from a monitoring tower above the treetops near Manaus, in the Brazilian Amazon, the rainforest canopy stretches to the horizon as an endless sea of green. It looks like a rich and healthy ecosystem, but appearances are deceiving. This rainforest — which holds 16,000 separate tree species — is slowly drying out.
Over the past century, the average temperature in the forest has risen by 1-1.5 ºC. In some parts, the dry season has expanded during the past 50 years, from four months to almost five. Severe droughts have hit three times since 2005. That’s all driving a shift in vegetation. In 2018, a study reported that trees that do best in moist conditions, such as tropical legumes from the genus Inga, are dying. Those adapted to drier climes, such as the Brazil nut tree (Bertholletia excelsa), are thriving.
At the same time, large parts of the Amazon, the world’s largest rainforest, are being cut down and burnt. Tree clearing has already shrunk the forest by around 15% from its 1970s extent of more than 6 million square kilometres; in Brazil, which contains more than half the forest, more than 19% has disappeared. Last year, deforestation in Brazil spiked by around 30% to almost 10,000 km2 , the largest loss in a decade. And in August 2019, videos of wildfires in the Amazon made international headlines. The number of fires that month was the highest for any August since an extreme drought in 2010.
(www.nature.com, 25.02.2020. Adaptado.)
A) might eventually dry out due to climate change, deforestation and fires.
B) has already regenerated itself since it looks green and healthy.
C) has lost over 16 thousand tree species over last decade.
D) appears large and resilient, so deforestation and fires will have a mild impact.
E) has already reached a state that makes it difficult to recover from fires and deforestation.
A) Biggest political choices are made by analyzing the most important commands issued in Washington.
B) Real life politics is ruled by powerful local governments rather than central decision-making Presidents.
C) Texas and California have similar ways to deal with laws, taxes, immigrants and political challenges.
D) The author defends that real life politics should be closer to the cable-news version.
E) Because California and Texas have opposite management beliefs, Texafornia will never come true.
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