Earth Day 2013: The Face of Climate Change
      
      Climate change has many faces.
      
      A man in the Maldives worried about relocating his family as sea      levels rise, a farmer in Kansas struggling to make ends meet as      prolonged drought ravages the crops, a fisherman on the Niger River      whose nets often come up empty, a child in New Jersey who lost her      home to a super-storm, a woman in Bangladesh who can’t get fresh      water due to more frequent flooding and cyclones…
      
      And they’re not only human faces.
      
      They’re the polar bear in the melting arctic, the tiger in India’s      threatened mangrove forests, the right whale in plankton-poor parts      of the warming North Atlantic, the orangutan in Indonesian forests      segmented by more frequent bushfires and droughts…
      
      These faces of climate change are multiplying every day.
      
      For many, climate change can often seem remote and hazy – a vague      and complex problem far off in the distance that our grandchildren      may have to solve. But that’s only because they’re still fortunate      enough to be insulated from its mounting consequences. Climate      change has very real effects on people, animals, and the ecosystems      and natural resources on which we all depend. Left unchecked,      they’ll spread like wildfire.
      
      Between now and Earth Day,      we’ll collect and display Earth Day pictures      of people, animals, and places directly affected or threatened by      climate change – as well as images of people stepping up to do      something about it. We’ll tell the world their stories. But we need      your help. We need you to be climate reporters. So, send us your      pictures and stories that show The Face of Climate Change.    
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