This is done by scaling local to global warming and by «coupled linkages» that show
how other climate changes, such as alterations in the water cycle, scale with temperature.»
Not exact matches
This billionaire entrepreneur says that «it is amazing
how focusing your mind on issues like health, poverty, conservation and
climate change can help to re-energize your thinking in
other areas.»
There are clearly
other factors that could have a major influence on the storyline, including
how geopolitical tensions are resolved and
how we adjust to
climate change.
Although it will be incredibly difficult to ever match his contributions on the pitch, it's vitally important for a former club legend, like Henry, to publicly address his concerns regarding the direction of this club... regardless of those who still feel that Henry has some sort of agenda due to the backlash he received following earlier comments he made on air regarding Arsenal, he has an intimate understanding of the game, he knows the fans are being hosed and he feels some sense of obligation, both professionally and personally, to tell it like he sees it... much like I've continually expressed over the last couple months, this team isn't evolving under this current ownership / management team... instead we are currently experiencing a «stagnant» phase in our club's storied history... a fact that can't be hidden by simply
changing the formation or bringing in one or two individuals... this team needs fundamental
change in the way it conducts business both on and off the pitch or it will continue to slowly devolve into a second tier club... regardless of the euphoria surrounding our escape act on Friday evening, as it stands, this club is more likely to be fighting for a Europa League spot for the foreseeable future than a top 4 finish... we can't hope for the failures of
others to secure our place in the top 4, we need to be the manufacturers of our own success by doing whatever is necessary to evolve as an organization... if Wenger, Gazidis and Kroenke can't take the necessary steps following the debacle they manufactured last season, their removal is imperative for our future success... unfortunately, I strongly believe that either they don't know
how to proceed in the present economic
climate or they are unwilling to do whatever it takes to turn this ship around... just look at the current state of our squad, none of our world class players are under contract beyond this season, we have a ridiculous wage bill considering the results, we can't sell our deadwood because we've mismanaged our personnel decisions and contractual obligations, we haven't properly cultivated our younger talent and we might have become one of the worst clubs ever when it comes to way we handle our transfer business, which under Dein was one of our greatest assets... it's time to get things right!!!
His session allowed him to talk about
how human
climate change in national parks is melting glaciers, raising sea level, killing trees, and causing
other impacts.
The
other, more trustworthy method is to look at
how changes in CO2 have affected past
climate, from the recent past to millions of years ago.
It remains too soon to tell exactly
how this
climate system will work under
changed conditions and
other environmental factors — such as whether the cooling effect of the soot generated by industry and burning forests outweighs the warming effect of greenhouse gases — which may play large roles.
So it's often tricky to try to separate out the
climate change signal from what might be a host of
other things relating to
how we manage crops and livestock.
Less forest cover can also
change how much sunlight is absorbed in the Northern versus the Southern hemispheres, which can shift tropical rain bands and
other climate features.
We still can not predict exactly
how climate change will affect each part of the world, but the people on the front lines are showing
others how to adapt
But in the past several years, such questions have begun to give way to
others, such as:
How will the world adapt to a
changing climate?
Yeh said the team's approach could also be used to study
how four or more pharmaceuticals interact, and a similar mathematical framework could be used to better understand
climate change (for example, to understand
how temperature, rainfall, humidity and acidity of the oceans interact) and
other scientific questions that have three or more key factors.
Just as Australian farmers have looked to Israel on
how to grow crops in a desert, Australia's struggle with extreme heat and drought could serve as a case study for
other nations facing similar situations under
climate change.
Already that's happening, although
climate has little to do with it, and Keenan and
other researchers are seeking ways to identify where and
how it's happening because of
climate change.
Debate over the tradeoffs and values of
how to respond to
climate change is appropriate for environmental education, Buhr and
other educators say.
However, determining just
how, and by
how much, has yielded mixed results — not only because of questions around the realism of related studies, but also because parsing the contributing impacts of
other threats to bees, such as
climate change, has been difficult.
They are using the simulation, detailed in a new paper in Royal Society Open Science, to determine
how drought, warmer weather, more frequent wildfires and
other climate - related
changes will affect forests across North America.
Dr. Martone's analyses of the effects of sea otters on kelp forest ecosystems can help shape predictions of
how climate change and trophic cascades, in concert with
other drivers, affect coastal ecosystems.
Nor is it clear
how other, less well understood
climate changes, such as more or less rainfall, could affect insects.
Understanding
how climate change might influence flooding has been a tricky endeavor because so many
other factors, like urbanization, deforestation or the dredging of rivers, also impact
how often floods occur and
how big they are, muddying the picture.
New research led by ecologists at the University of York shows that certain species of moths and butterflies are becoming more common, and
others rarer, as species differ in
how they respond to
climate change.
He argues that geoarchaeology — a relatively new science that combines aspects of geology and archaeology — offers the potential to make dramatic contributions to our understanding of
how climate change and
other large - scale environmental forces are shaping human history.
What's left to figure out is whether this is happening with
other subglacial lakes around the Greenland ice sheet, as well as whether and
how to incorporate the findings into models that are aimed at gauging
how much Greenland might
change with the warming
climate and
how much water it could add to the rising seas.
By identifying images with
changing leaves, blooming flowers, and
other easy - to - recognize features, citizen scientists can contribute to a better understanding of
how plants are responding to
climate change
We can also use these methods to find out
how other species are affected by
climate change,» says Mesquita.
Other studies have gauged how climate changes will affect migration, flowering, and other factors that could put plants and animals out of step with the world around
Other studies have gauged
how climate changes will affect migration, flowering, and
other factors that could put plants and animals out of step with the world around
other factors that could put plants and animals out of step with the world around them.
In recent years, a brand of research called «
climate attribution science» has sprouted from this question, examining the impact of extreme events to determine
how much — often in fractional terms — is related to human - induced
climate change, and
how much to natural variability (whether in
climate patterns such as the El Niño / La Niña - Southern Oscillation, sea - surface temperatures,
changes in incoming solar radiation, or a host of
other possible factors).
«Ice - age lesson: Large mammals need room to roam: A 20 - year study in Arctic Alaska looks at
how woolly mammoths and
other ice - age animals handled
climate change.»
Extreme weather events like Harvey are expected to become more likely as Earth's
climate changes due to greenhouse gas emissions, and scientists don't understand
how extreme weather will impact invasive pests, pollinators and
other species that affect human well - being.
«It's one that can be immediately applied in the U.K., and it can help inform
how people think about similar species and land management and
climate change in
other areas.»
The analysis acknowledges that several U.S. cities and regions have taken the lead in examining
how to adapt to sea level rise,
changing rain and snowfall patterns, heat waves and
other effects of
climate change.
«A lot of communities in our country are struggling with
how to plan to ensure reliable access to food, water and
other things in their community in the face of a
changing climate,» said Jack Fellows, vice president of the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, which organized the conference that produced the report.
He and
other report authors noted that scientists trying to face threats such as global
climate change and the preservation of biodiversity face unwanted input from special interest groups and political impedance, and countries that might be unequally affected by these threats have vastly different ideas of
how to handle them.
Sachs made his remarks yesterday at a symposium hosted by the institute on
how to improve agriculture to address the mounting challenge of feeding the world while combating
climate change and stopping the wholesale loss of biodiversity, among
other interrelated issues.
This finding, published in a study in the journal Nature
Climate Change, is critical in predicting
how much wheat and
other crops we'll need to feed the world, said Senthold Asseng, a UF / IFAS professor of agricultural and biological engineering and leader of this study.
Such trends mean scientists and policymakers will have to factor in
how synthetic
climate forcers
other than greenhouse gases will
change temperature, rainfall and weather extremes.
By studying the skeletons of farmers, peasants, monks, and nobles, paleopathologists hope to find out what diseases killed people from medieval times until the present — and
how their overall health fluctuated during famine, war,
climate change, and
other challenges.
When compared to the body of knowledge on
how forests and
other «sinks» help prevent the acceleration of
climate change, soil carbon dynamics are a relatively new field of study.
Decisions made today are made in the context of confident projections of future warming with continued emissions, but clearly there is more to do to better characterize the human and economic consequences of delaying action on
climate change and
how to frame these issues in the context of
other concerns.
Although some correspondents seemed eager to jump to the exact global warming — denying conclusions Keppler and Röckmann had cautioned against,
others expressed a more thoughtful attitude as to
how this discovery might affect our understanding of global
climate change.
Her special areas of focus include U.N. policy, U.S. foreign policy and stories about
how other nations are grappling with
climate change.
That's because there are insufficient data to determine
how the ill effects of noise created by ships, sonar signals, and
other activities interact with
other threats, including pollution,
climate change, and the loss of prey due to fishing.
(6) Under Article 4 of the United Nations Framework Convention on
Climate Change, developed country parties, including the United States, committed to «take all practicable steps to promote, facilitate, and finance, as appropriate, the transfer of, or access to, environmentally sound technologies and know -
how to
other parties, particularly developing country parties, to enable them to implement the provisions of the Convention».
With Arctic ice retreating more and more as local summers heat up, exposing ever more cold northern waters to warming sunshine — along with a host of
other regional
changes — it remains to be seen exactly
how sensitive global
climate really is.
The IPCC and
other outlets frequently indicate
how much sea levels will rise under given
climate change scenarios [1].
«
How much was due to trends / climate change and how much was due to other factors?&raq
How much was due to trends /
climate change and
how much was due to other factors?&raq
how much was due to
other factors?»
Scientists are still looking into
how climate change might affect
other types of extreme weather, such as hurricanes and tornadoes.
The Raising Risk Awareness project seeks to assess the contribution of anthropogenic
climate change and
other external drivers (e.g.» El Niño») to the occurrence of extreme weather events in developing countries in East Africa and South East Asia, and identify
how such information could help to bridge the science - communications policy gap, and enable these countries and communities to become more
climate resilient.
This involves a combination of satellite observations (when different satellites captured temperatures in both morning and evening), the use of
climate models to estimate
how temperatures
change in the atmosphere over the course of the day, and using reanalysis data that incorporates readings from surface observations, weather balloons and
other instruments.
The fundamental difference in opinion (which has not
changed since Michaels and Hansen started debating each
other in 1988) is that Hansen (and the vast majority of relevant experts) think that
climate sensitivity (
how much the globe will warm under a doubling of CO2) is around 3 (+ / -1) °C, while Michaels thinks that it is much less (< 1 °C).