Green Experts Ring Alarm Bells for Climate Change in the Northeast – News2IN
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Green Experts Ring Alarm Bells for Climate Change in the Northeast

Green Experts Ring Alarm Bells for Climate Change in the Northeast
Written by news2in

Agartala: Ahead of CO Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, environmental lovers have increased alarms for changes in the pattern of rainfall visible and other climate indicators in the northeast, which convincingly associated with Fallout Global Warming.
This conference is scheduled to be held from October 31 to November 12.
The latest studies from the Center for Science and Environment (CSE) based in Delhi (CSE) revealed that October had emerged as one of the hottest months ever recorded so far in the Northeast.
The most common glacier rivers have turned into rivers that are given rain and rainy season rain are the main source of water flow in northeastern rivers.
This report shows that the rainfall pattern, especially during the monsoon, has changed, mostly produced in the area dried.
Referring to the Data Department of the Indian Meteorology (IMD), the report states that in the 20th of the rainy season 22 years, rainfall has been below normal and more than one collection of data from the Seabad shows the trend decreases in many northeastern states.
In the past 30 years, northeastern state unless Sikkim has shown a decrease in monsoon rainfall trends that are associated with local climate change at micro levels that depend on many factors such as geography and forest cover.
Mountain Springs, which is the main water source in the region, dries almost everywhere, so it affects the availability of drinking water, research is revealed.
But the researchers also observed that climate change had affected the change in biodiversity and was found that mangoes began to grow in cold weather in the afternoon over Arunachal Pradesh.
The study found as many as 27% of villages in the northeast watered directly by spring or natural flow but the effects of eternal water sources have had an impact on agriculture, horticulture, fishing and animal arrests.
This climate change, especially the rainfall pattern, has a trickle-down effect in the cultivated rice varieties in the region.
The overall diversity of rice varieties has fallen, new pests and insects witnessed in several places such as the top afternoon in Arunachal Pradesh and Wokha in Nagaland, this study was underlined.

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