The Värriö research station clearly shows signs of northern climate change. The climate at the research station in Salla is similar today to what it was 300 kilometres to the south just over 40 years ago.
Signs of climate change are most evident in the Arctic and the northern coniferous forest belt.
– The pace of change is so rapid here and there is no end in sight at the moment, so there is nothing to do but worry, says Mikko Sipilä at Värriö research station.
The atmospheric scientist bases his concerns on international studies and observations made at Värriö research station over the past 50 years, among other things.
– The temperature has risen here in December by four degrees in about 50 years, and the tree line has been getting higher and higher. The snow-covered period has shortened by three weeks in the last 40 years, Sipilä lists the changes in the climate of the Värriö area.
Finland’s expertise in atmospheric research is of an internationally high standard and has received worldwide recognition. At the Center for Atmospheric Science, very sensitive measuring devices have been developed, and researchers’ research articles have been published in a large number of prestigious scientific journals in the field.
The Värriö research station is located near the Russian border. In the picture, the opposite Nuorttitunturi is crossed by a border fence, with Russia on the right and Finland on the left. In the lower right corner you can see the measuring towers of the research station. …
According to data compiled by the city, there were nearly 130 000 overnight stays in accommodation establishments between May and July. That’s more than 3 000 more than a year ago.
According to data compiled by the city, Lappeenranta’s accommodation establishments had nearly 130 000 overnight stays in May and July. Illustration. …
Seiska appeared in the midst of the 1990s recession and offered Finns an escape from reality with its wild celebrity gossip. Social media has not taken away the editorial work.
Seiska, the celebrity gossip magazine, offers its readers an escape from everyday life. In August, the website once again set new records for visitor numbers. …
In some places, more sightings have been reported than last year. However, they only give an indication of the number of ticks. Lyme disease and tick-borne encephalomyelitis, on the other hand, have so far been much less frequent than last year.
– I never thought there could be so many.
When he lived in Vaasa, Uhlgren didn’t come across many ticks. During his eight years in Turku, he has been bitten by them in fifteen summers.
The warm late summer kept the ticks active, and the Punkkilive.fi website, run by the University of Turku and pharmaceutical company Pfizer, received almost 3 000 sightings from the Turku region in August alone.
However, overall there are clearly fewer entries from the Turku region and the capital region than last year.
On the other hand, further north in the Vaasa, Kokkola and Oulu regions, more sightings have accumulated than last year.
According to him, it’s because we’ve learned to live with ticks: vaccinations have also been taken outside of Uusimaa, Northern Finland and Åland, and tick checks, tick removal and monitoring of symptoms are familiar.
Field surveys confirm the findings
More than 74,000 tick sightings have been recorded throughout the country so far.
Last year, September was a busy reporting month, and observations were still made in November. Researchers are also interested in how long the ticks’ active season is.
– Inevitably, there is a connection between things, but tick life also correlates with the population, meaning that a lot of observations come from places where there are a lot of people.
Field surveys, however, seem to confirm what the observation map tells. For example, many sightings have been reported in Kumpula, Helsinki, but only a few in Seurasaari. Field surveys have given similar results regarding the number of ticks.
The chief administrative physician Heikki Kaukoranta from Vaasa also believes that the number of ticks can vary greatly locally, but remain in the dark on the map.
– Maalahti, with 5,500 inhabitants, may have the same number of ticks as Vaasa, with 66,000 inhabitants, but there are fewer notifiers.
On the other hand, both Sormunen and Uhlgren believe that some people have lost the urge to report their findings.
– How much do the people living in the archipelago even report, because the tick is already like a mosquito – a part of everyday life? ponders Uhlgren.
Do some attract ticks more than others?
Arttu Uhlgren does a lot of boating, and woodpeckers are always welcome from the archipelago. He got his first tick in Mariehamn, and then it was still terrible.
– I got a bit of a feeling that this is where it will die now. Now I’m already used to ticks, but such a number (57) is disturbing, says Uhlgren.
An exceptional tick avalanche hit Jungsfruskär, near Åland. There were two friends and a dog on the nature trail; their balance is a couple of ticks per man and five in the dog.
Uhgren has experience over the years that punks don’t seem to care about others.
– I have a strange way of attracting ticks. If you and your spouse are in a mushroom, I also collect ticks.
Only once has Uhlgren had to take a course of antibiotics, when one tick had managed to avoid the daily inspection. The tick situation still does not limit his movement.
Even long trousers don’t always help, but the ticks will crumble from the legs to the bottom of the boat after the trip, describes Arttu Uhlgren. …
Cultural guest, writer Tommi Kinnunen considers himself first and foremost a teacher. He returned to his work after exhaustion. In the novel that was just published, he wrote a lot of his own experiences, because the book is about a tired teacher.
Tommi Kinnusen’s working days are long. In addition to teaching, lessons must be planned and assignments must be checked in the evenings. Actually, he doesn’t have time to rest at his workplace at Turku Luostarivuori Lyseo high school, where the pictures were taken. …
The best film award at the Venice Film Festival was awarded to All the Beauty and the Bloodshed, a documentary about the opioid epidemic in the United States.
Film director Laura Poitras accepts the Golden Lion award for best film at the Venice Film Festival. …
Queen Elizabeth was not only a model of strict royal protocol, but she also knew how to wit and surprise. For decades, the Queen was one of the brightest stars in popular culture.
In the opening video of the London Olympics, secret agent James Bond picks up the Queen from Buckingham Palace. …
There are various types of flying squirrel posts in several places around Finland, but there is no evidence that any flying squirrel has ever used them.
The wood grab of the crane truck grabs a 15-meter high impregnation wood post on Kuitinmäentien in Espoo. However, this is no ordinary electricity pole. At the end of the post there are two cross-beams of just under a meter for flying squirrels.
In Finland and the capital region as well, there are already quite a variety of implementations for flying squirrel poles.
– There are such design versions and some consultants even suggest metal poles. In Espoo’s Laajalahti, there are real pines like that, which have been stuck upright to grow, Lundgren lists.
The poles that are being erected now aim to connect the Finnoo bird wetland from the south and the northern side of the seashore to the Friisinkallio nature reserve and the Espoo Central Park. The area is an official provincial ecological connection, even at the provincial level.
Five poles are needed along the Länsiväylä and three poles along the Kuitinmäentie. In addition, several trees will be planted in the area. …