-
Paul battles past Burruchaga to win ATP Houston title
-
Major sponsors drop Kanye West London gigs as PM voices concern
-
Inter close in on Serie A title by thumping Roma
-
Trump makes foul-mouthed threat to Iran after US airman rescued
-
Monaco sink Marseille for seventh Ligue 1 win in a row
-
Inter thump Roma to extend Serie A lead to nine points
-
Lebanon's Christians mark Easter in solidarity with war-hit south
-
Leeds beat West Ham in shoot-out to reach FA Cup semis for first time in 39 years
-
Pegula romps to WTA Charleston Open victory
-
David six-hitting spree powers Bengaluru to IPL win
-
Union draw leaves St Pauli stranded in Bundesliga drop zone
-
UK police arrest protesters near base used by US
-
Trump issues foul-mouthed threat to Iran after US airman rescued
-
Alcaraz plans to play full clay-court season, get 'socks dirty'
-
'Super Mario Galaxy' blasts off in N. America box office debut
-
Artemis astronauts begin fifth day on historic Moon mission
-
Bielle-Biarrey sparkles as Bordeaux-Begles cruise in Champions Cup
-
Trump draws criticism with fiery Easter message on Iran
-
OPEC+ hikes oil production quotas, issues warning
-
British PM slams London event for booking Kanye West, sponsor quits
-
Pogacar wins joint-record third Tour of Flanders
-
Trump threatens 'hell' for Iran over Strait of Hormuz
-
Shami, Pant help Lucknow beat Hyderabad in nervy IPL clash
-
What we know about the race to rescue downed US airman in Iran
-
US commandos went deep into Iran to rescue downed airman: media
-
Liberated McIlroy eyes more Masters magic after career Slam
-
Van Dijk apologises for Liverpool thumping by Man City
-
British PM slams London festival for booking Kanye West
-
'Choose peace': Pope marks first Easter under cloud of Mideast war
-
British royals attend Easter service without Andrew
-
US media says commandos probed deep into Iran to rescue downed airman
-
Revellers parade giant penises to dash stigma in Japan's fertility festival
-
Artemis astronauts glimpse Moon's 'Grand Canyon' ahead of historic lunar flyby
-
Middle East war hits Britain's fish and chip shops
-
Artemis astronauts to study the Moon's surface using mainly their eyes
-
Second US airman downed over Iran 'SAFE and SOUND': Trump
-
Indonesia lays to rest peacekeepers killed in Lebanon
-
Pharmaceutical logistics in demand as war rattles supply chains
-
Messi marks new stadium with goal but Miami held by Austin
-
Afghan mother seeks justice after Pakistani bombing kills hundreds
-
UK royal family's dilemma over Andrew's daughters
-
Pope marks first Easter under cloud of Mideast war
-
AI at war: Five things to know about Project Maven
-
In the online 'maxxing' era, what's the deal with fiber and protein?
-
At Met Opera, life after a school shooting takes center stage
-
Taiwan opposition leader to make 'peace' visit to China, first in 10 years
-
McIlroy seeks rare Masters repeat in wide-open Augusta fight
-
Israel says will strike Lebanon-Syria border crossing
-
Global Energy Shift Accelerates: Surging Gas Prices Drive Mass EV Adoption - Elektros Advances Patented Technology Aimed at Transforming Charging Efficiency
-
Paul topples Tiafoe to book Houston ATP final against Burruchaga
Chile's distant paradise where scientists study climate change
Hidden inside pristine forests in Chile's deep south, known as the end of the world, lie potential early warning signs of climate change.
Puerto Williams on Navarino island, which is separated from the South American mainland by the Beagle Channel, is the world's southern-most town.
Far from the pollution that blights major urban and industrial centers, it is a paradise that provides unique conditions to study global warming.
"There is nowhere else like it," Ricardo Rozzi, director of the Cape Horn International Center for global change studies and bio-cultural conservation in Puerto Williams, told AFP.
It is "a place that is especially sensitive to climate change" as average temperatures do not rise above five degrees Celsius.
This cold and windy area is the last inhabited southern frontier before reaching the Antarctic.
The ethnobotanical Omora park is home to an immense variety of lichens, mosses and fungi that scientists study by crouching down onto their knees with magnifying glasses.
In the crystal clear Robalo river, minuscule organisms act as sentinels of the changes produced by global warming.
In both the park and river, the alarm bells are ringing.
- Moss and lichen on the move -
At this latitude -- 55 degrees south -- climate change has an exponential effect on flora that react by seeking out low temperatures, said Rozzi, 61.
"The most obvious aspect of climate change is the rising temperatures," he said.
"These lichens cannot survive" if a certain threshold is passed.
To escape the higher temperatures, they move.
"In the case of (mosses) we've noticed that they have moved. Before they were between 50 and 350 (meters above sea level) and now they are between 100 and 400," said Rozzi.
He says Omora has more diversity per square meter of lichens and mosses than anywhere else in the world.
They also help to absorb carbon dioxide.
Another aspect is the elevational diversity gradient, an ecological pattern in which biodiversity changes with elevation.
The 700-meter high Bandera hill's biodiversity changes every 200 meters and there is a mammoth 1.5 degrees Celsius difference in temperature between top and bottom.
"We can see what changes happen in the high mountains and in the area close to the sea in a very short distance, and we can see how the temperature affects the biodiversity that lives in this river," Tamara Contador, 38, a biologist at the Cape Horn International Center, told AFP.
She studies the gradients themselves.
If the height difference between gradients rises or falls on the mountain, scientists can determine whether there has been a global change in temperature.
They say there has been.
- Avoiding 'extermination' -
"On a global level, the polar and subpolar ecosystems are the most affected by climate change, so we are in a place where climate change has a much bigger effect on biodiversity than other places," said Contador.
River organisms also form part of the alert system.
"The organisms that live here are also indicators of water quality and global environmental change," added Contador.
River organisms move about and have already increased their reproductive cycle, says Rozzi. This confirms there has been a small change to the climate in the area that could have been much greater elsewhere on the planet.
"Some insects that have an annual eggs to larvae to adulthood cycle are now having two cycles because the temperature has risen," said Rozzi.
By studying these organisms and learning from them "we can avoid crossing the threshold that brings us to the extermination of humanity and other life forms," he added.
D.Johnson--AT