Search results for "Global warming"

showing 10 items of 283 documents

Long-term summer temperature variations in the Pyrenees from detrended stable carbon isotopes

2015

Abstract Substantial effort has recently been put into the development of climate reconstructions from tree-ring stable carbon isotopes, though the interpretation of long-term trends retained in such timeseries remains challenging. Here we use detrended δ13C measurements in Pinus uncinata tree-rings, from the Spanish Pyrenees, to reconstruct decadal variations in summer temperature back to the 13th century. The June-August temperature signal of this reconstruction is attributed using decadally as well as annually resolved, 20th century δ13C data. Results indicate that late 20th century warming has not been unique within the context of the past 750 years. Our reconstruction contains greater …

530 PhysicsIsotopes of carbonStable isotope ratioClimatologyGlobal warmingPaleoclimatologyEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)DendrochronologyClimate changeContext (language use)Dendroclimatology550 Earth sciences & geologyGeologyGeochronometria
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Cities as Enablers of Innovation

2018

The relationship between cities and innovation in present times can be regarded from a distinctive perspective. As it is vital to rethink our development patterns, in order to contrast global warming and its ominous threats, cities are themselves concrete materials for innovation. Therefore, cities challenge the very same concept of innovation by adding the long-term perspective to its social assessment framework. Cities are therefore seen both as hotbeds of creativity and innovative culture and places where different actors (policy makers, civil servants, NGOs, citizens, start-uppers, entrepreneurs, etc.) receive continuous stimuli to engage in innovations that fulfil specific needs (be th…

9. Industry and infrastructurebusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesPerspective (graphical)Global warming0211 other engineering and technologies0507 social and economic geography1. No povertySocial assessment021107 urban & regional planning02 engineering and technologyPublic relationsCreativityCivil servants12. Responsible consumptionInnovative culture13. Climate actionOrder (exchange)11. SustainabilityBusiness050703 geographymedia_common
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Importance of Climate Change for the Ranges, Communities and Conservation of Birds

2004

Publisher Summary This chapter focuses on the effects of global climate change on the size and position of geographic ranges and the richness and composition of bird communities. Plenty of evidence demonstrates that range boundaries of birds are correlated with climatic factors. In general, the northern range limit of species seems to be influenced rather by abiotic factors such as cold temperatures. The southern range limit of species appears to be determined by climatic factors such as heat or lack of water in arid regions and by biotic factors in more humid regions. For communities, increases in species richness are predicted for northern latitude and high-elevation sites and declines of…

Abiotic componentBiotic componentGeographyLand useRange (biology)EcologyGlobal warmingClimate changeSpecies richnessAridhumanities
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Complex responses of global insect pests to climate change

2018

AbstractInsect pests strongly affect the productivity and profitability of agriculture and forestry. Despite the well-known sensitivity of insects to abiotic effects such as temperature, their potential responses to ongoing climate change remain unclear. Here we compile and review documented climate change responses of 31 of the globally most impactful phytophagous insect pests, focussing on species for which long-term, high-quality data are available. Most of the selected species show at least one response affecting their severity as pests, including changes in geographic range, population dynamics, life-history traits, and/or trophic interactions. Of the studied pests, 41% only show respo…

Abiotic componenteducation.field_of_studybusiness.industryEcologyEcology (disciplines)PopulationGlobal warmingfungiClimate changeBiologyAgriculturebusinesseducationProductivityTrophic level
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Polar Bear in 'Fortitude'. Affective Aesthetics and Politics of Climate Change

2021

In the first season of the television Eco Noir crime series “Fortitude” (2015) the polar bear appears as a sticky object that embodies an ambiguous affective charge as an icon of global warming. This article discusses the ways in which the polar bear evokes viewer affect in the series through two discourses. The first one relates to violence, essentially present in crime narratives, and how the human and nonhuman animal are positioned in relation to global warming, violence and each other. It raises questions of place and belonging in a local and global context and examines how the polar bear is constructed in terms of stranger danger and victimization in relation to human animals and the t…

Affect theoryaffektiivisuusHigher consciousnessväkivaltaAgency (philosophy)Context (language use)Representation (arts)Environmental scienceilmastopolitiikkatunteetjääkarhuvaikuttaminenEcocriticismtelevisiosarjatilmastoNarrativeSociologyGlobal warmingekokritiikkiOso polarNovela negrarikossarjatAfectoilmastonmuutoksetluontosuhdeObject (philosophy)dystopiatPolar bearAffectCrime fictionympäristövaikutuksetLiteratureAestheticsFortitudeCalentamiento globalLiteraturaMedio ambienteihminen-eläinsuhderikoskirjallisuuslämpeneminenEcozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment
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Simplification, not “tropicalization”, of temperate marine ecosystems under ocean warming and acidification

2021

Ocean warming is altering the biogeographical distribution of marine organisms. In the tropics, rising sea surface temperatures are restructuring coral reef communities with sensitive species being lost. At the biogeographical divide between temperate and tropical communities, warming is causing macroalgal forest loss and the spread of tropical corals, fishes and other species, termed “tropicalization”. A lack of field research into the combined effects of warming and ocean acidification means there is a gap in our ability to understand and plan for changes in coastal ecosystems. Here, we focus on the tropicalization trajectory of temperate marine ecosystems becoming coral-dominated systems…

Aquatic Organismsnatural analoguesEffects of global warming on oceanskelp forestswarm-temperateAnimalsEnvironmental ChemistrySeawaterMarine ecosystemEcosystembiogeographyEcosystemGeneral Environmental ScienceGlobal and Planetary Changegeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologyCoral ReefsEcologyfungitechnology industry and agricultureMarine habitatsOcean acidificationCoral reefHydrogen-Ion Concentrationbiochemical phenomena metabolism and nutritionrange shiftKelp forestclimate changeHabitat destructionEnvironmental sciencescleractinian coralsgeographic locationsGlobal Change Biology
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Environmental drivers and abrupt changes of phytoplankton community in temperate lake Lielais Svētiņu, Eastern Latvia, over the last Post-Glacial per…

2021

Understanding the long-term dynamics of ecological communities on the centuries-to-millennia scale is important for explaining the emergence of present-day biodiversity patterns and for predicting possible future scenarios. Fossil pigments and ancient DNA present in various sedimentary deposits can be analysed to study long-term changes in ecological communities. We analysed recent compilations of data, including fossil pigments, microfossils, and molecular inventories from the sedimentary archives, to understand the impact of gradual versus abrupt climate changes on the ecosystem status of a regional model lake over the last ~14.5 kyr. Such long and complete paleo-archives are scarce in No…

ArcheologyClimate Researchregime shiftClimate changeEastern Europeland-use changeTemperate climatestatistical modellingfossil pigmentsRegime shiftEcosystemGlacial periodEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHoloceneGlobal and Planetary ChangeHolocenepaleolimnologyGlobal warmingecological disturbanceGeologyancient sedimentary DNAarticlesAbrupt climate changeEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographyphototrophsgeneric anthropogenic influenceQuaternary Science Reviews
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Last Millennium hydro-climate variability in Central–Eastern Europe (Northern Carpathians, Romania)

2015

Proxy-based reconstructions of climate variability over the last millennium provide important insights for understanding current climate change within a long-term context. Past hydrological changes are particularly difficult to reconstruct, yet rainfall patterns and variability are among the most critical environmental variables. Ombrotrophic bogs, entirely dependent on water from precipitation and sensitive to changes in the balance between precipitation and evapotranspiration, are highly suitable for such hydro-climate reconstructions. We present a multi-proxy analysis (testate amoebae, plant macrofossils, stable carbon isotopes in Sphagnum, pollen, spores and macroscopic charcoal) from …

ArcheologyGlobal and Planetary ChangegeographyPeatgeography.geographical_feature_categoryEcologybiologyEcologyGlobal warmingPaleontologyClimate changeOmbrotrophicMacrofossilbiology.organism_classificationSphagnumMireEnvironmental sciencePhysical geographyBogEarth-Surface ProcessesThe Holocene
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Inadvertent climate modification due to anthropogenic lead

2009

Atmospheric particles are thought to initiate the majority of terrestrial precipitation. Field-based measurements of ice-crystal residues, together with controlled environment experiments on artificial clouds, suggest that anthropogenic lead-containing particles are among the most efficient ice-forming substances in the atmosphere.

AtmosphereGreenhouse gasGlobal warmingLead (sea ice)General Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental scienceClimate changeClimate modelPrecipitationParticulatesAtmospheric sciencesNature Geoscience
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Global Warming: Human Intervention in World Climate

2010

In the preceding chapter, we described climate changes that have occurred over very long geological periods. We concluded that Earth is currently in an interglacial interval within a rather long period of glaciations. Indeed, average carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere have been slowly decreasing over the past 600,000 years, with accompanying cooling (Fig. 6.3). There have been, of course, many periodic changes in the CO2 concentrations and average temperature over this period (see Fig. 7.1). However, very recently, something quite unique and startling has occurred. As Fig. 7.1 shows, there has been a remarkable increase in CO2 levels, actually during the past 200 years, from 28…

AtmosphereHistoryClimatologyLong periodGlobal warmingInterglacialPeriod (geology)Climate changeEcological forecastingNatural (archaeology)
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