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Impacts of global change

The soil in a field near the campus of Wageningen University in the Netherlands clearly shows its layered structure.
Posted inScience Updates

Modeling Digs Beyond Soil Properties and Processes

by M. van der Ploeg, C. Carranza and Roland Baatz 29 March 201928 September 2021

International Soil Modeling Consortium Conference: New Perspectives on Soil Models; Wageningen, Netherlands, 5–7 November 2018

A tornado touches down near Elie, Manitoba, Canada, in June 2007
Posted inNews

Before Canadian Scientists Can Study Tornadoes, They Have to Find Them

by R. Kaufman 22 March 201925 March 2019

A yearlong project aims to find more than 150 “missing” tornadoes thought to hit Canada each year.

Lake Powell low water Colorado River Utah Arizona
Posted inScience Updates

Is the Recent Drought on the Colorado River the New Normal?

by J. J. Barsugli, M. P. Hoerling and B. Livneh 1 March 2019

Understanding Historical Changes in the Flow of the Colorado River; Boulder, Colorado, 24–25 September 2018

Flooding in downtown Annapolis, Md.
Posted inNews

Brief, Repetitive Floods in Coastal Cities Cause Economic Losses

by Jenessa Duncombe 15 February 2019

A case study in Annapolis is one of the first assessments of the effects of high-tide flooding on local revenue.

People disembarking from a ferry boat in Bangladesh
Posted inOpinions

Stress Testing for Climate Impacts with “Synthetic Storms”

by R. E. Benestad, K. M. Parding, A. Mezghani, A. Dobler, O. A. Landgren, H. B. Erlandsen, J. Lutz and J. E. Haugen 14 January 201929 September 2021

How well would your city weather a hurricane? Digitally “moving” past storms to new locations simulates the effects of extreme weather events on local infrastructure.

Macroalgal assemblages on rock substrata
Posted inScience Updates

Keeping a Watch on Seaweeds: The Forests of the World’s Coasts

by P. Miloslavich, C. Johnson and L. Benedetti-Cecchi 9 January 2019

Planning the Implementation of a Global Long-Term Observing and Data Sharing Strategy for Macroalgal Communities; Hobart, Tasmania, Australia, 24–26 September 2018

Posted inScience Updates

Remote Sensing Leads to Better Understanding of Polar Regions

by G. Grosse and B. Jones 28 December 2018

Fifteenth International Circumpolar Remote Sensing Symposium; Potsdam, Germany, 10–14 September 2018

Russet-crowed warbler at Pantaicolla Ridge in Peru
Posted inNews

Peruvian Mountain Birds Take an “Escalator to Extinction”

by Jenessa Duncombe 30 October 2018

As the climate warms, tropical birds living in the mountains are retreating to higher elevations to avoid the heat. What happens when they run out of mountain slope to escape to?

Aftermath of a landslide near Tatopani, Nepal, triggered by a July 2016 glacial lake outburst flood.
Posted inNews

Glacial Lake Outburst Flood Captured in Seismic Recordings

by Katherine Kornei 10 October 2018

A flood that thundered through eastern Nepal in July 2016 left a telltale seismic signature and caused more erosion than local monsoon rains, new research shows.

Satellite image of Point Barrow, Alaska. A 40-year record of carbon dioxide concentrations in Alaska offers insight into how the carbon cycle responds to temperature.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Autumn Warming No Longer Accelerating Carbon Loss in the North

by Terri Cook 21 September 2018

An analysis of Point Barrow’s 40-year record points to the importance of calculating the carbon cycle’s response to temperature during the northern latitudes’ non-growing season.

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