What are the reproduce mentling
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Answer:The effect of global warming is most evident in the Arctic than in any other region on the Earth. Besides experiencing extreme warming, the region is also facing retreating snow-cover — a phenomenon that has completely paralysed the ability of Arctic plants and animals to reproduce, according to a new study.
While individual species have had poor reproduction before, this is the first time such poor reproduction occurred across all levels of the ecosystem, according to the study published in the journal PLOS Biology on October 15, 2019.
The snow precipitation was higher in most of the Arctic region in 2018 and did not melt fully until late summer — particularly in Northeast Greenland and at the research station of Zackenberg.
This resulted in complete reproductive failure ever encountered, showed the study. Only few plants and animals were able to reproduce due to the extremely changing weather events — abundant and late-melting snow.
Around 45 per cent of the landscape was covered in snow, till the end of July, when plant growth and animal reproduction usually peak. As a result, only few of the migratory shorebirds and the predatory long-tailed skua (Stercorarius longicaudus) occupied territories.
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