Sentences with phrase «nature climate change reports»

The paper published today in the journal Nature Climate Change reports on the steady increase in international and domestic tourism - related emission between 2009 and 2013.
The number of very hot days have soared in the past 15 years, according to a study in the journal Nature Climate Change reports.

Not exact matches

The report in Monday's edition of the journal Nature Climate Change dents many governments» hopes that recession can at least bring the consolation of a sharp contraction in greenhouse gas emissions.
The Massachusetts Climate Change Adaptation Report (September 2011) sets the stage for developing a statewide, comprehensive, quantifiable adaptation plan that protects the health, welfare and nature of Massachusetts.
As the Columbia Journalism Review noted, the report helped to shift the nature of the climate change story in the media.
As we recently reported in Nature Climate Change, significantly expanding sugarcane or lipidcane production in Brazil could reduce current global carbon dioxide emissions by up to 5.6 percent.
The area of wildfires in Borneo during drought years turns out to be ten times larger than during non-drought years, an international research team reports in Nature Climate Change of this week.
This phenomenon, almost certainly the result of climate change, is the first modern record of river piracy caused by a melting glacier, researchers report online April 17 in Nature Geoscience.
The results of this study, published this week in the Nature Publishing Group Scientific Reports, allow us to know the effects of climate change on past biodiversity.
Reporting this week in the journal Nature Climate Change Dr Hogg and Dr Gudmundsson, examine the events leading up to this dramatic natural phenomenon and discuss how calving of huge icebergs affects the stability of Antarctic ice shelves.
These findings from University of Melbourne Scientists at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate System Science, reported in Nature Climate Change, are the result of research looking at how Australian extremes in heat, drought, precipitation and ocean warming will change in a world 1.5 °C and 2 °C warmer than pre-industrial condiChange, are the result of research looking at how Australian extremes in heat, drought, precipitation and ocean warming will change in a world 1.5 °C and 2 °C warmer than pre-industrial condichange in a world 1.5 °C and 2 °C warmer than pre-industrial conditions.
Satellite measurements and a model of how efficiently maize converts that light to mass, reveal that solar brightening, an increase in the sunlight penetrating the atmosphere and reaching Earth, accounted for 27 % of the yield increase U.S. Corn Belt farmers have observed between 1984 and 2013, researchers report today in Nature Climate Change.
A report in the last issue of Nature finds that between April 2002 and April 2006, the rate at which southern Greenland's ice liquefied jumped by 250 percent — supporting the idea that the Greenland ice sheet responds quickly to slight changes in climate.
In associated commentaries published online this week in Nature Reports Climate Change, several scientists criticize the precise thresholds set, although they laud the effort.
Rising global temperatures, ice field and glacial melting and rising sea levels are among the climatic changes that could ultimately lead to the submergence of coastal areas that are home to 1.3 billion people today, according to the report, published online today by the journal Nature Climate Change.
A study, published today in the journal Nature Climate Change, has for the first time analysed how Twitter, TV and newspapers reported the IPCC's climate evClimate Change, has for the first time analysed how Twitter, TV and newspapers reported the IPCC's climate evclimate evidence.
Results of the study, which was funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), are reported this week in the journal Nature Climate Change.
Climate simulations suggest that that upwelling has generally cooled Earth's climate, stifling about 0.1 °C to 0.2 °C in warming that would have occurred by 2012 if winds hadn't been inordinately strong, the researchers reported online yesterday in Nature Climate Climate simulations suggest that that upwelling has generally cooled Earth's climate, stifling about 0.1 °C to 0.2 °C in warming that would have occurred by 2012 if winds hadn't been inordinately strong, the researchers reported online yesterday in Nature Climate climate, stifling about 0.1 °C to 0.2 °C in warming that would have occurred by 2012 if winds hadn't been inordinately strong, the researchers reported online yesterday in Nature Climate Climate Change.
In landscapes that are highly fragmented from human activity like development and agriculture, the end could come as early as 2050, the researchers report today in Nature Climate Change.
It's not quite that simple, scientists report online today in Nature Climate Change.
In a study published today in the journal Nature Climate Change, the researchers report that increased ocean acidification by 2100 will spur a range of responses in phytoplankton: Some species will die out, while others will flourish, changing the balance of plankton species around the world.
But a new study published in the journal Nature Scientific Reports reinforces this idea that climate change is altering the world's weather - making wind conveyor belts in a way that favors extreme and long - lasting weather anomalies.
The results, reported in the journal Nature Geoscience, have consequences for many fields of science, including the study of ocean circulation and past climate change.
As acknowledged in an Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics report on climate change scenarios, also released on Monday, there are still considerable scientific uncertainties surrounding the nature and extent of future climate change.
A new study reported in the journal Nature Climate Change questions fears that Europe and North America will experience more days of cold weather over...
While the Nature Climate Change paper reports on European results, the overall effort is a part of a worldwide monitoring programme being coordinated out of the University of Vienna, Austria that extends over more than 90 mountain sites on 5 continents.
Two recent reviews of research on warming and the oceans in Nature Reports / Climate Change have stressed just how unlikely those high - end sea projections are.
I was somewhat involuntarily thrust into the center of the public debate over climate change at this very time, when the «Hockey Stick» temperature reconstruction I co-authored, depicting the unprecedented nature of modern warming in at least the past millennium, developed into an icon in the debate over human - caused climate change [particularly when it was featured in the Summary for Policy Makers (SPM) of the Third Assessment Report of the IPCC in 2001].
The new International Union on Conservation of Nature report on Caribbean coral conservation described great opportunities to protect reefs with fairly simple steps, even as it found climate change to be less of a threat than some feared.
From Nature ReportsClimate Change, published 2/21/08 online: Shown are the number of newspaper articles that contained the phrase «climate change» or «global warming» each year from 1980 to 2006, from the Lexis - Nexis and Proquest / ABI Inform datClimate Change, published 2/21/08 online: Shown are the number of newspaper articles that contained the phrase «climate change» or «global warming» each year from 1980 to 2006, from the Lexis - Nexis and Proquest / ABI Inform dataChange, published 2/21/08 online: Shown are the number of newspaper articles that contained the phrase «climate change» or «global warming» each year from 1980 to 2006, from the Lexis - Nexis and Proquest / ABI Inform datclimate change» or «global warming» each year from 1980 to 2006, from the Lexis - Nexis and Proquest / ABI Inform datachange» or «global warming» each year from 1980 to 2006, from the Lexis - Nexis and Proquest / ABI Inform databases.
There, he focuses on an important piece, «More knowledge, less certainty,» written by the climatologist Kevin Trenberth for Nature Reports / Climate Change earlier this year.
Some other recent explorations of these problems include a Nature Reports commentary on climate communication by Maxwell Boykoff on the importance of distinguishing what is well established about climate change from those facets that are still mired in complexity.
14 pages worth reading, free download: nature reports climate change VOL 3 JUL 2009 http://www.nature.com/climate/2009/0907/pdf/climate.pdf
To set the recent trend in broader context, check out sociologist Robert Brulle's graph tracking network news coverage of global warming and the following graph of newspaper coverage of climate change from 1980 to 2006 (a separate newspaper sample) from Dr. Boykoff's recent paper in Nature Reports — Climate climate change from 1980 to 2006 (a separate newspaper sample) from Dr. Boykoff's recent paper in Nature Reports — Climate Cchange from 1980 to 2006 (a separate newspaper sample) from Dr. Boykoff's recent paper in Nature ReportsClimate Climate ChangeChange:
Here's how the Nature paper was described last year in the report on impacts of climate change from Working Group 2 of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (chapter 1 at the link climate change from Working Group 2 of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (chapter 1 at the link bchange from Working Group 2 of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (chapter 1 at the link Climate Change (chapter 1 at the link bChange (chapter 1 at the link below):
The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (whose reports are conservative by nature), and a range of other assessments all conclude with high confidence that — for better or worse — the long - term Arctic trend for summer sea ice is down, given the projected buildup of greenhouse gases and tendency of the Arctic to amplify warming.
Kevin Trenberth of the National Center for Atmospheric Research made this point powerfully last year in an important piece in the journal Nature Reports / Climate Change warning that more uncertainty, not less, would likely result from a push to enrich climate models used for the next report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Climate Change warning that more uncertainty, not less, would likely result from a push to enrich climate models used for the next report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate climate models used for the next report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Climate Change:
The two scientists, with colleagues from the UK, the U.S., the Netherlands and Czechoslovakia, report in Nature Climate Change that they used mathematical models to simulate the effect of temperature rise as a response to ever - greater global emissions of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, from the combustion of fossil fuels.
Benjamin Sulman − a biologist at Indiana University, but then of the Princeton University Environmental Institute in the US − and colleagues report in Nature Climate Change that they have developed a new computer model to examine what really happens, on a global scale, when plants colonise the soil and start taking in moisture and carbon from the atmosphere.
They became involved in popular publications beginning in June 2007 with publication of Nature Reports Climate Change, which became Nature Climate Change after May 2010.
(05/14/2012) Carbon emissions from deforestation vary greatly depending on whether timber stocks are turned into finished wood products, converted into bioenergy feedstocks, or burned outright, reports a new study published in Nature Climate Change.
The Royal Society report includes references to Clark et al, 2016 in Nature Climate Change, suggesting the final sea level rise on millennia timescale caused by anthropogenic climate change (partly depending on future emissions) lies in a range between 29 to 55 metres and to DeConto & Pollard, 2016 in Nature, a study suggesting hydro - fracturing and ice cliff collapse around Antarctic ice sheets increases high end projection for sea level rise by 2100 to ± 2 Climate Change, suggesting the final sea level rise on millennia timescale caused by anthropogenic climate change (partly depending on future emissions) lies in a range between 29 to 55 metres and to DeConto & Pollard, 2016 in Nature, a study suggesting hydro - fracturing and ice cliff collapse around Antarctic ice sheets increases high end projection for sea level rise by 2100 to ± 2 mChange, suggesting the final sea level rise on millennia timescale caused by anthropogenic climate change (partly depending on future emissions) lies in a range between 29 to 55 metres and to DeConto & Pollard, 2016 in Nature, a study suggesting hydro - fracturing and ice cliff collapse around Antarctic ice sheets increases high end projection for sea level rise by 2100 to ± 2 climate change (partly depending on future emissions) lies in a range between 29 to 55 metres and to DeConto & Pollard, 2016 in Nature, a study suggesting hydro - fracturing and ice cliff collapse around Antarctic ice sheets increases high end projection for sea level rise by 2100 to ± 2 mchange (partly depending on future emissions) lies in a range between 29 to 55 metres and to DeConto & Pollard, 2016 in Nature, a study suggesting hydro - fracturing and ice cliff collapse around Antarctic ice sheets increases high end projection for sea level rise by 2100 to ± 2 metres.
But Paul Williams of the University of Reading and Manoj Joshi of the University of East Anglia report in Nature Climate Change that they decided to look at computer models to see whether climate change would make a diffClimate Change that they decided to look at computer models to see whether climate change would make a diffeChange that they decided to look at computer models to see whether climate change would make a diffclimate change would make a diffechange would make a difference.
New research reported in Nature Climate Change finds that increased Canadian tar sands production would decrease global oil prices and thereby increase oil consumption.
Researchers at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew in the United Kingdom report in the journal Nature Plants that a match of satellite data, computer simulations and research on the ground shows that — even under severe climate change — coffee growers could relocate to higher ground, while those who could not do that could diversify to take advantage of the changing conditions.
Elite media instantly attacked the nature of where the information is reported, then cited studies that have been previously criticized by those of us skeptical of the current «climate change» hysteria:
Scientists from Australia, Taiwan and Indonesia who explored the link between leisure and global warming report in the journal Nature Climate Change how they calculated the carbon footprint of the tourism business, in what must be one of the most complex studies of the global holiday sector ever undertaken.
This week, Justin Farrell, a professor at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, released a comprehensive report in Nature Climate Change detailing just who these people opposing climate action are, where their funding comes from, and how the groups they work through are interrClimate Change detailing just who these people opposing climate action are, where their funding comes from, and how the groups they work through are interrclimate action are, where their funding comes from, and how the groups they work through are interrelated.
Sure enough, Myneni's results were eventually published three years later in April 2016 in a paper in Nature Climate Change, with 32 authors from 24 institutions in eight countries — when the IPCC report was safely in the public domain and the great Paris climate jamboree was over.Climate Change, with 32 authors from 24 institutions in eight countries — when the IPCC report was safely in the public domain and the great Paris climate jamboree was over.climate jamboree was over.»
Stéphanie Jenouvrier, a biologist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in the US, and colleagues from France and the Netherlands report in Nature Climate Change that changes in the extent and [continue reading...]
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