Sentences with phrase «nature climate»

The study was carried out by Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment, the Stanford University's hub of environment research, and published in the latest issue of Nature Climate Change.
al., Nature Climate Change (2012) 3, 4 — 6 (2013) doi: 10.1038 / nclimate1783.
Heat waves could get deadlier in the near future, warns a new study published Monday in Nature Climate Change.
Linking models of human behavior and climate alters projected climate change in Nature Climate Change
This past summer, a disconcerting new scientific study by the climate scientist Michiel Schaeffer and colleagues — published in the journal Nature Climate Change — suggested that no matter how quickly we cut this pollution, we are unlikely to keep the seas from climbing less than five feet.
For example, as I show in a paper published in Nature Climate Change recently, a search on the online research database Scopus for studies concerning climate change and mental health yields just 208 publications between 2007 and 2018.
(05/13/2013) Even as concentrations of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere hit 400 parts per million (ppm) for the first time in human history last week, a new study in Nature Climate Change warns that thousands of the world's common species will suffer grave habitat loss under climate change.
Yesterday, a climate scientist friend drew my attention to a correction notice published by Nature Climate Change, reading as follows:
One 2013 study in Nature Climate Change, for example, found large increases in the frequency of floods in eastern Africa, Southeast Asia, parts of India and parts of the Andes under climate change.
Updated to state these errata: in the print edition of Nature Climate Change,... Continue reading →
Nature Climate Change, 2012; 2 (2): 60 DOI: 10.1038 / nclimate1386.
The study, published in the journal Nature Climate Change, cleverly quantifies how fossil - fuel trade organizations, public relations firms, think tanks, and other groups have increasingly been able to get their anti-climate change message out to American newspapers and the president.
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.
Oltmanns et al (2018, again in Nature Climate Change) recently found signs of a growing risk that convection in the Irminger Sea could shut down.
[I] n the 17 August Nature Climate Change study, a team led by [Kevin] Trenberth suggests that natural variability in the Pacific explains more than half of the hiatus.
Nature Climate Science reports that the IPCC's predictions of warming from 1993 - 2012 and 1998 - 2012 were over-estimated by factors of more than two times and four times, respectively.
c) The uncertainties in the ocean heat uptake may be underestimated by Levitus, and there are additional uncertainties regarding the role of deep ocean heat uptake (Meehl et al. 2011 Nature Climate Change).
The declining signal over India shown by the GPCP decadal mode is broadly consistent with gauge measurements since the 1950s — that several research groups including my own are trying to understand, perhaps relating to emissions of anthropogenic aerosol — although there are discrepancies between these gauge - based data sets themselves (see our recent review in Nature Climate Change, for example).
Nature Climate Change paper (relevant to the Southwest).
Moore et al 2015 found in Nature Climate Change that convection (the deep mixing of seawater closely linked to the AMOC) in the Greenland and Iceland Seas has weakened and is likely to exceed a critical point as global warming continues, where it will become limited in the depth reached.
The paper in Nature Climate Change, «Temperature and vegetation seasonality diminishment over northern lands,» pulls together a wide array of research, including the work by Bruce Forbes of the University of Lapland last year, on what I called «pop - up forests» — patches of rapidly - growing tundra shrubs.
The new study, published Sunday in Nature Climate Change, is significant in two ways.
... and extensively in climate models in the work of Clara Deser, see the paper in Nature Climate Change recently and articles such as this...
[6:54 p.m. Updated I added some background below on a new Nature Climate Change study on current and predicted North American drought.]
The Nature Climate change paper by Swart and Weaver about the impact of the oil / tar sands on climate made quite a splash in Canada.
(I also encourage you to read the review in the journal Nature Climate Change by Mike Hulme, a professor of climate at the University of East Anglia and the author of «Why We Disagree about Climate Change.»)
I reached out to Pierrehumbert because he is one of many authors of «Consequences of twenty - first - century policy for multi-millennial climate and sea - level change,» an important new Nature Climate Change analysis reinforcing past work showing a very, very, very long impact (tens of millenniums) on the Earth system — climatic, coastal and otherwise — from the carbon dioxide buildup driven by the conversion, in our lifetimes, of vast amounts of fossil fuels into useful energy.
Updated, 11:50 p.m. David Roberts at Vox today put the Nature Climate Change paper in political context when he wrote: «The U.S. presidential election will matter for 10,000 years.»
Updated, 3:10 p.m. Using climate models and observations, a fascinating study in this week's issue of Nature Climate Change points to a marked recent warming of the Atlantic Ocean as a powerful shaper of a host of notable changes in climate and ocean patterns in the last couple of decades — including Pacific wind, sea level and ocean patterns, the decade - plus hiatus in global warming and even California's deepening drought.
There has been a lot of discussion of my recent paper in Nature Climate Change (Shindell, 2014).
The new study, published May 18 in the journal Nature Climate Change, finds that the overall exposure of Americans to these future heat waves would be vastly underestimated if the role of population changes were ignored....
[Response: Since you mention Buntgen et al 2014 and the AD 774 event, I would also refer readers to our piece last year in Nature Climate Change, «Missing tree rings and the AD 774 — 775 radiocarbon event».
I'd asked Pierrrehumbert to reflect on the time - scale conundrum laid out in the Nature Climate Change paper in the context of another important and provocative proposal by Princeton's Robert Socolow, published in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in December, proposing a new field of inquiry — Destiny Studies — to examine the tough intersection of ethics, risk perception and science.
This is strictly the stratospherically adjusted forcing (Schmidt et al, 2014) and was thus incorrectly described and incorrectly referenced in the paper [we have notified the Nature Climate Change editors of this and it will be corrected].
The study, «Future population exposure to U.S. heat extremes,» is in the May 18 issue of Nature Climate Change.
Updated, 4:04 p.m. A valuable study published this week in Nature Climate Change projects that exposure to extreme heat in the United States is likely to rise enormously by mid century, driven equally by demographic shifts boosting Sun Belt populations and projected changes in heat waves in a warming climate.
Another author of the Nature Climate Change paper, Daniel Schrag of Harvard, gave a highly relevant talk at the Garrison Institute a couple of years ago in which he raised, but did not answer, a question I hope you'll all ponder:
The quote comes from a paper in the first volume of the new Nature Climate journal.
Compare the year - to - year scale at which humans make policy decisions, reflected in our political frameworks, to the multi-millennial consequences of today's energy choices, as delineated in «Consequences of twenty - first - century policy for multi-millennial climate and sea - level change,» the important recent commentary in Nature Climate Change by a host of top climate scientists, including Pierrehumbert.
Click the «Crop Yields...» link to see the abstract in Nature Climate Change with no free access.
As Bryan Walsh summarized nicely in Time today, a separate review of existing research on marine animals in acidifying conditions, published on Sunday in Nature Climate Change, found uniformly negative impacts.
Updated, Nov. 10, 2015, 3:04 p.m. A new study in Nature Climate Change, «Revaluating ocean warming impacts on global phytoplankton,» has shown that the method used to calculate phytoplankton loss in the 2010 research greatly overstated plankton losses because of a missing vital factor.
Roberts» piece summarizes a recent Nature Climate Change paper «Climate change and moral judgment.»
The study, «Unabated planetary warming and its ocean structure since 2006,» was published today in Nature Climate Change.
Nature Climate Change 2, 576 — 580 (2012) doi: 10.1038 / nclimate1529 Published online 01 July 2012
Carbon Brief has posted an excellent piece by Roz Pidcock putting the new Nature Climate Change paper in broader context: «Beneath the waves: How the deep oceans have continued to warm over the past decade.»
This was one of the motivations for our study out this week in Nature Climate Change (England et al., 2014) With the global - average surface air temperature (SAT) more - or-less steady since 2001, scientists have been seeking to explain the climate mechanics of the slowdown in warming seen in the observations during 2001 - 2013.
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921818116304787 «Unfortunately, a new study by Reich and Hobbie (2) in Nature Climate Change indicates that nitrogen availability does indeed constrain the CO2 fertilization effect over the long term, at least for grassland plants.»
The context of this chat was a paper published early in the year in Nature Climate Change on the long commitment to warming, as explored on Dot Earth.
The recent paper by Kate Marvel and others (including me) in Nature Climate Change looks at the different forcings and their climate responses over the historical period in more detail than any previous modeling study.
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