---
- attrs:
Abstract: 'This study examined the relative importance of climate change and drinking-water treatment for gastrointestinal illness incidence in children (age <5 years) from period 2046–2065 compared to 1991–2010. The northern Wisconsin (USA) study focused on municipalities distributing untreated groundwater. A time-series analysis first quantified the observed (1991–2010) precipitation and gastrointestinal illness associations after controlling for seasonality and temporal trends. Precipitation likely transported pathogens into drinking-water sources or into leaking water-distribution networks. Building on observed relationships, the second analysis projected how climate change and drinking-water treatment installation may alter gastrointestinal illness incidence. Future precipitation values were modeled by 13 global climate models and three greenhouse-gas emissions levels. The second analysis was rerun using three pathways: (1) only climate change, (2) climate change and the same slow pace of treatment installation observed over 1991–2010, and (3) climate change and the rapid rate of installation observed over 2011–2016. The results illustrate the risks that climate change presents to small rural groundwater municipalities without drinking water treatment. Climate-change-related seasonal precipitation changes will marginally increase the gastrointestinal illness incidence rate (mean: ∼1.5%, range: −3.6–4.3%). A slow pace of treatment installation somewhat decreased precipitation-associated gastrointestinal illness incidence (mean: ∼3.0%, range: 0.2–7.8%) in spite of climate change. The rapid treatment installation rate largely decreases the gastrointestinal illness incidence (mean: ∼82.0%, range: 82.0–83.0%).'
Author: 'Uejio, Christopher K.; Christenson, Megan; Moran, Colleen; Gorelick, Mark'
DOI: 10.1007/s10040-016-1521-9
Date: June 01
ISSN: 1435-0157
Issue: 4
Journal: Hydrogeology Journal
Pages: 969-979
Title: 'Drinking-water treatment, climate change, and childhood gastrointestinal illness projections for northern Wisconsin (USA) communities drinking untreated groundwater'
Type of Article: journal article
Volume: 25
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21114
_uuid: 851e275f-5e31-42ef-93e5-eed46db465aa
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10040-016-1521-9
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/851e275f-5e31-42ef-93e5-eed46db465aa.yaml
identifier: 851e275f-5e31-42ef-93e5-eed46db465aa
uri: /reference/851e275f-5e31-42ef-93e5-eed46db465aa
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Author: 'Hurburgh, Charles'
Place Published: 'Ames, IA'
Publisher: 'Iowa State University, Extension and Outreach'
Title: Wet Weather Creates Challenges for Harvest
URL: https://crops.extension.iastate.edu/cropnews/2016/09/wet-weather-creates-challenges-harvest
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21257
_uuid: 858d3935-f2b4-46d1-8c20-4fdf50922067
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/615c1ba0-5040-4eb4-8c2c-cd4a9eac0196
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/858d3935-f2b4-46d1-8c20-4fdf50922067.yaml
identifier: 858d3935-f2b4-46d1-8c20-4fdf50922067
uri: /reference/858d3935-f2b4-46d1-8c20-4fdf50922067
- attrs:
Abstract: "The Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District (MSD) is a regional Special Sewer District that provides Wastewater and Stormwater services to the City of St. Louis and most of St. Louis County, Missouri. The service area includes a Combined Sewer System (CSS) in the City and the older portions of the County. In 2011, MSD completed a Combined Sewer Overflow Long-Term Control Plan (LTCP), which was formalized in a Consent Decree (CD) with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in April, 2012. MSD’s Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) control plan includes a $100 million CSO Volume Reduction Green Infrastructure Program in the areas of the City of St. Louis that flow toward the Mississippi River CSOs. MSD spent five years conducting a $3 million CSO Volume Reduction Green Infrastructure Pilot Program, culminating in a CD required final report completed in December 2015. The report explains what work was completed in the GI Pilot Program and the results, and outlines MSD’s plan for full implementation of the CSO Volume Reduction Green Infrastructure Program control measure. This presentation will briefly review the GI Pilot Program, with the main focus to discuss the findings of the GI Pilot Program and the plan for full-implementation of the $100 million CSO Volume Reduction Green Infrastructure Program. Included will be major components of the program, the expected reduction in CSO volume and use of an adaptive management approach to manage the CSO Volume Reduction Green Infrastructure Program through 2034.
Implementation of green infrastructure for CSO volume reduction is one of many ways green infrastructure can be strategized for use in urban areas. As a separate entity from the City of St. Louis, MSD's plan highlights the important role that collaboration must have in the implementation of the CSO Volume Reduction Green Infrastructure Program. The plan for full implementation of the CSO Volume Reduction Green Infrastructure Program was developed with critical consideration of public-private partnerships, support of planned use areas and encouraging development and redevelopment in the City of St. Louis. Found to be effective in the GI Pilot Program, these same strategies are applicable to other communities planning and implementing green infrastructure programs."
Author: 'Norton, Melantha D.; Moore, Gary T.'
DOI: 10.2175/193864717821494853
Date: //
Issue: 2
Journal: Proceedings of the Water Environment Federation
Keywords: Adaptive Management; Public-Private Partnerships; Consent Decree; Combined Sewer Overflows; Long Term Control Plan; Green Infrastructure
Pages: 61-81
Title: St. Louis MSD CSO Volume Reduction Green Infrastructure Program
Volume: 2017
Year: 2017
_record_number: 26600
_uuid: 865ece02-421c-41f4-b0bf-1114059d76b4
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.2175/193864717821494853
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/865ece02-421c-41f4-b0bf-1114059d76b4.yaml
identifier: 865ece02-421c-41f4-b0bf-1114059d76b4
uri: /reference/865ece02-421c-41f4-b0bf-1114059d76b4
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Author: "Pan, Z.\rArritt, R.W.\rTakle, E.S.\rGutowski, W.J., Jr.\rAnderson, C.J.\rSegal, M."
DOI: 10.1029/2004GL020528
ISSN: 0094-8276
Issue: 17
Journal: Geophysical Research Letters
Pages: L17109
Title: Altered hydrologic feedback in a warming climate introduces a “warming hole”
URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2004GL020528/pdf
Volume: 31
Year: 2004
_chapter: '["Appendix 4: FAQs FINAL","Appendix 3: Climate Science FINAL"]'
_record_number: 2413
_uuid: 87d06d1e-d4d1-4e74-aa68-141d307b955a
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1029/2004GL020528
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/87d06d1e-d4d1-4e74-aa68-141d307b955a.yaml
identifier: 87d06d1e-d4d1-4e74-aa68-141d307b955a
uri: /reference/87d06d1e-d4d1-4e74-aa68-141d307b955a
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'MDNR,'
Institution: Minnesota Department of Natural Resources
Pages: 114
Place Published: 'St. Paul, MN'
Title: Natural Wild Rice in Minnesota
URL: http://files.dnr.state.mn.us/fish_wildlife/wildlife/shallowlakes/natural-wild-rice-in-minnesota.pdf
Year: 2008
_record_number: 21260
_uuid: 88a55c1a-6467-4bcf-be31-338b2e0575e5
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/mndnr-natwildrice-2008
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/88a55c1a-6467-4bcf-be31-338b2e0575e5.yaml
identifier: 88a55c1a-6467-4bcf-be31-338b2e0575e5
uri: /reference/88a55c1a-6467-4bcf-be31-338b2e0575e5
- attrs:
Author: 'Forbes, Donald L.; Gavin K. Manson; Richard Chagnon; Steven M. Solomon; Joost J. van der Sanden; Tracy L. Lynds'
Conference Name: 'Ice in the Environment: Proceedings of the 16th IAHR International Symposium on Ice'
Date: December 2-6
Pages: 344-351
Title: Nearshore ice and climate change in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence
Year of Conference: 2002
_record_number: 26568
_uuid: 8949152f-8cbe-436d-825f-5558ff849a62
reftype: Conference Proceedings
child_publication: /generic/e121f1e3-22bc-4e6a-9b40-a990eb216a6b
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8949152f-8cbe-436d-825f-5558ff849a62.yaml
identifier: 8949152f-8cbe-436d-825f-5558ff849a62
uri: /reference/8949152f-8cbe-436d-825f-5558ff849a62
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Adaptation planning offers a promising approach for identifying and devising solutions to address local climate change impacts. Yet there is little empirical understanding of the content and quality of these plans. We use content analysis to evaluate 44 local adaptation plans in the United States and multivariate regression to examine how plan quality varies across communities. We find that plans draw on multiple data sources to analyse future climate impacts and include a breadth of strategies. Most plans, however, fail to prioritize impacts and strategies or provide detailed implementation processes, raising concerns about whether adaptation plans will translate into on-the-ground reductions in vulnerability. Our analysis also finds that plans authored by the planning department and those that engaged elected officials in the planning process were of higher quality. The results provide important insights for practitioners, policymakers and scientists wanting to improve local climate adaptation planning and action.'
Author: 'Woodruff, Sierra C.; Stults, Missy'
DOI: 10.1038/nclimate3012
Date: 08//print
ISSN: 1758-678X
Issue: 8
Journal: Nature Climate Change
Pages: 796-802
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Title: Numerous strategies but limited implementation guidance in US local adaptation plans
Type of Article: Article
Volume: 6
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21160
_uuid: 8a61b1a7-bb52-496d-86f7-21911efcf5f8
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1038/nclimate3012
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8a61b1a7-bb52-496d-86f7-21911efcf5f8.yaml
identifier: 8a61b1a7-bb52-496d-86f7-21911efcf5f8
uri: /reference/8a61b1a7-bb52-496d-86f7-21911efcf5f8
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Climate change is expected to alter species distributions and habitat suitability across the globe. Understanding these shifting distributions is critical for adaptive resource management. The role of temperature in fish habitat and energetics is well established and can be used to evaluate climate change effects on habitat distributions and food web interactions. Lake Superior water temperatures are rising rapidly in response to climate change and this is likely influencing species distributions and interactions. We use a three-dimensional hydrodynamic model that captures temperature changes in Lake Superior over the last 3 decades to investigate shifts in habitat size and duration of preferred temperatures for four different fishes. We evaluated habitat changes in two native lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) ecotypes, siscowet and lean lake trout, Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), and walleye (Sander vitreus). Between 1979 and 2006, days with available preferred thermal habitat increased at a mean rate of 6, 7, and 5 days per decade for lean lake trout, Chinook salmon, and walleye, respectively. Siscowet lake trout lost 3 days per decade. Consequently, preferred habitat spatial extents increased at a rate of 579, 495 and 419 km2 per year for the lean lake trout, Chinook salmon, and walleye while siscowet lost 161 km2 per year during the modeled period. Habitat increases could lead to increased growth and production for three of the four fishes. Consequently, greater habitat overlap may intensify interguild competition and food web interactions. Loss of cold-water habitat for siscowet, having the coldest thermal preference, could forecast potential changes from continued warming. Additionally, continued warming may render more suitable conditions for some invasive species.'
Author: 'Cline, Timothy J.; Bennington, Val; Kitchell, James F.'
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0062279
Issue: 4
Journal: PLOS ONE
Pages: e62279
Publisher: Public Library of Science
Title: Climate change expands the spatial extent and duration of preferred thermal habitat for Lake Superior fishes
Volume: 8
Year: 2013
_record_number: 21212
_uuid: 8a6a8c87-01dc-4370-a982-afe4207f1962
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1371/journal.pone.0062279
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8a6a8c87-01dc-4370-a982-afe4207f1962.yaml
identifier: 8a6a8c87-01dc-4370-a982-afe4207f1962
uri: /reference/8a6a8c87-01dc-4370-a982-afe4207f1962
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Brandt, Leslie; He, Hong; Iverson, Louis; Thompson, Frank R.; Butler, Patricia; Handler, Stephen; Janowiak, Maria; Shannon, P. Danielle; Swanston, Chris; Albrecht, Matthew; Blume-Weaver, Richard; Deizman, Paul; DePuy, John; Dijak, William D.; Dinkel, Gary; Fei, Songlin; Jones-Farrand, D. Todd; Leahy, Michael; Matthews, Stephen; Nelson, Paul; Oberle, Brad; Perez, Judi; Peters, Matthew; Prasad, Anantha; Schneiderman, Jeffrey E.; Shuey, John; Smith, Adam B.; Studyvin, Charles; Tirpak, John M.; Walk, Jeffery W.; Wang, Wen J.; Watts, Laura; Weigel, Dale; Westin, Steve'
Institution: USDA Forest Service
Pages: 254
Place Published: 'Newtown Square, PA'
Series Volume: Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-124
Title: 'Central Hardwoods Ecosystem Vulnerability Assessment and Synthesis: A Report from the Central Hardwoods Climate Change Response Framework Project'
URL: https://www.nrs.fs.fed.us/pubs/45430
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21263
_uuid: 8b4159ec-1edb-4fab-8af5-10a8cdec8fb5
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/central-hardwoods-ecosystem-vulnerability-assessment-synthesis-report-central-hardwoods-climate-change-response-framework-project
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8b4159ec-1edb-4fab-8af5-10a8cdec8fb5.yaml
identifier: 8b4159ec-1edb-4fab-8af5-10a8cdec8fb5
uri: /reference/8b4159ec-1edb-4fab-8af5-10a8cdec8fb5
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Handler, Stephen; Duveneck, Matthew J.; Iverson, Louis; Peters, Emily; Scheller, Robert M.; Wythers, Kirk R.; Brandt, Leslie; Butler, Patricia; Janowiak, Maria; Shannon, P. Danielle; Swanston, Chris; Eagle, Amy Clark; Cohen, Joshua G.; Corner, Rich; Reich, Peter B.; Baker, Tim; Chhin, Sophan; Clark, Eric; Fehringer, David; Fosgitt, Jon; Gries, James; Hall, Christine; Hall, Kimberly R.; Heyd, Robert; Hoving, Christopher L.; Ibáñez, Ines; Kuhr, Don; Matthews, Stephen; Muladore, Jennifer; Nadelhoffer, Knute; Neumann, David; Peters, Matthew; Prasad, Anantha; Sands, Matt; Swaty, Randy; Wonch, Leiloni; Daley, Jad; Davenport, Mae; Emery, Marla R.; Johnson, Gary; Johnson, Lucinda; Neitzel, David; Rissman, Adena; Rittenhouse, Chadwick; Ziel, Robert'
Institution: 'U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station'
Pages: 229
Place Published: 'Newtown Square, PA'
Series Volume: General Technical Report NRS-129
Title: 'Michigan Forest Ecosystem Vulnerability Assessment and Synthesis: A Report from the Northwoods Climate Change Response Framework Project'
URL: https://www.nrs.fs.fed.us/pubs/45688
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21268
_uuid: 8c05015c-4269-4b25-86e0-2d45df89613d
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/michigan-forest-ecosystem-vulnerability-assessment-synthesis-report-northwoods-climate-change-response-framework-project
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8c05015c-4269-4b25-86e0-2d45df89613d.yaml
identifier: 8c05015c-4269-4b25-86e0-2d45df89613d
uri: /reference/8c05015c-4269-4b25-86e0-2d45df89613d
- attrs:
Author: 'Whitfield, Geoffrey P.; Meehan, Leslie A.; Maizlish, Neil; Wendel, Arthur M.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.jth.2016.06.009
Date: 2017/06/01/
ISSN: 2214-1405
Journal: Journal of Transport & Health
Pages: 172-181
Title: 'The integrated transport and health impact modeling tool in Nashville, Tennessee, USA: Implementation steps and lessons learned'
Volume: 5
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21146
_uuid: 8cec4760-e2d5-4cf1-b0b4-7c106ee0d827
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jth.2016.06.009
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8cec4760-e2d5-4cf1-b0b4-7c106ee0d827.yaml
identifier: 8cec4760-e2d5-4cf1-b0b4-7c106ee0d827
uri: /reference/8cec4760-e2d5-4cf1-b0b4-7c106ee0d827
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Minnesota Department of Health,'
Institution: Minnesota Department of Health
Pages: 100
Place Published: 'St. Paul, MN'
Title: 'Minnesota Climate and Health Profile Report 2015: An Assessment of Climate Change Impacts on the Health & Well-Being of Minnesotans'
URL: http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/climatechange/docs/mnprofile2015.pdf
Year: 2015
_record_number: 21292
_uuid: 8cf8bbe8-0eac-4ec0-abb3-d84b483606ea
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/minnesota-climate-health-profile-report-2015-an-assessment-climate-change-impacts-on-health-well-being-minnesotans
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8cf8bbe8-0eac-4ec0-abb3-d84b483606ea.yaml
identifier: 8cf8bbe8-0eac-4ec0-abb3-d84b483606ea
uri: /reference/8cf8bbe8-0eac-4ec0-abb3-d84b483606ea
- attrs:
Abstract: 'A method for projecting the water levels of the Laurentian Great Lakes under scenarios of human-caused climate change, used almost to the exclusion of other methods in the past, relies very heavily on the large basin runoff model (LBRM) as a component for determining the water budget for the lake system. This model uses near-surface air temperature as a primary predictor of evapotranspiration (ET); as in previous published work, it is shown here that the model’s very high sensitivity to temperature causes it to overestimate ET in a way that is greatly at variance with the fundamental principle of conservation of energy at the land surface. The traditional formulation is characterized here as being equivalent to having several suns in the virtual sky created by LBRM. More physically based methods show, relative to the traditional method, often astoundingly less potential ET and less ET, more runoff from the land and net basin supply for the lake basins, and higher lake water levels in the future. Using various methods of estimating the statistical significance, it is found that, at minimum, these discrepancies in results are significant at the 99.998% level. The lesson for the larger climate impact community is to use caution about whether an impact is forced directly by air temperature itself or is significantly forced by season or latitude independently of temperature. The results here apply only to the water levels of the Great Lakes and the hydrology of its basin and do not affect larger questions of climate change.'
Author: 'Lofgren, Brent M.; Jonathan Rouhana'
DOI: 10.1175/jhm-d-15-0220.1
Issue: 8
Journal: Journal of Hydrometeorology
Keywords: 'Physical Meteorology and Climatology,Atmosphere-land interaction,Climate change,Energy budget/balance,Hydrometeorology,Models and modeling,Hydrologic models,Land surface model'
Pages: 2209-2223
Title: Physically plausible methods for projecting changes in Great Lakes water levels under climate change scenarios
Volume: 17
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21205
_uuid: 8d1feebf-5a50-4165-9ce0-cc99fe88ef65
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1175/jhm-d-15-0220.1
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8d1feebf-5a50-4165-9ce0-cc99fe88ef65.yaml
identifier: 8d1feebf-5a50-4165-9ce0-cc99fe88ef65
uri: /reference/8d1feebf-5a50-4165-9ce0-cc99fe88ef65
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Author: 'EIA,'
Place Published: 'Washington, DC'
Publisher: U.S. Energy Information Administration
Title: 'U.S. States: Table C9. Electric Power Sector Consumption Estimates, 2016 [web site]'
URL: https://www.eia.gov/state/seds/data.php?incfile=/state/seds/sep_sum/html/sum_btu_eu.html&sid=US
Year: 2016
_record_number: 26692
_uuid: 8d878175-dc50-46a6-a1da-2e73c45b1b2b
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/62be0bae-823d-429c-9e2d-4b4155ce5868
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8d878175-dc50-46a6-a1da-2e73c45b1b2b.yaml
identifier: 8d878175-dc50-46a6-a1da-2e73c45b1b2b
uri: /reference/8d878175-dc50-46a6-a1da-2e73c45b1b2b
- attrs:
Author: 'Phadke, Roopali; Manning, Christie; Burlager, Samantha'
DOI: 10.1016/j.crm.2015.06.005
Date: 2015/01/01/
ISSN: 2212-0963
Journal: Climate Risk Management
Keywords: Boundary organizations; Citizen participation; Climate adaptation; Environmental justice; Public Engagement; Community-based research
Pages: 62-76
Title: 'Making it personal: Diversity and deliberation in climate adaptation planning'
Volume: 9
Year: 2015
_record_number: 21131
_uuid: 8f8f2c96-6f09-4686-b2f6-2b75b4059961
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.crm.2015.06.005
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8f8f2c96-6f09-4686-b2f6-2b75b4059961.yaml
identifier: 8f8f2c96-6f09-4686-b2f6-2b75b4059961
uri: /reference/8f8f2c96-6f09-4686-b2f6-2b75b4059961
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Swanston, Chris; Janowiak, Maria; Iverson, Louis; Parker, Linda; Mladenoff, David; Brandt, Leslie; Butler, Patricia; St. Pierre, Matt; Prasad, Anantha; Matthews, Stephen; Peters, Matthew; Higgins, Dale; Dorland, Avery'
Institution: 'U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station'
Pages: 142
Place Published: 'Newtown Square, PA'
Series Volume: Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-82
Title: 'Ecosystem Vulnerability Assessment and Synthesis: A Report from the Climate Change Response Framework Project in Northern Wisconsin'
URL: https://www.fs.fed.us/nrs/pubs/gtr/gtr_nrs82.pdf
Year: 2011
_record_number: 21277
_uuid: 8f9b5614-e7c7-480b-acc8-962a89effaa0
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/ecosystem-vulnerability-assessment-synthesis-report-climate-change-response-framework-project-northern-wisconsin
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/8f9b5614-e7c7-480b-acc8-962a89effaa0.yaml
identifier: 8f9b5614-e7c7-480b-acc8-962a89effaa0
uri: /reference/8f9b5614-e7c7-480b-acc8-962a89effaa0
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Author: 'ISU,'
Place Published: 'Ames, IA'
Publisher: Iowa State University (ISU)
Title: 'STRIPS (Science-based Trials of Rowcrops Integrated with Prairie Strips) Project [web site]'
URL: https://www.nrem.iastate.edu/research/STRIPS/
Year: 2018
_record_number: 26578
_uuid: 9162112c-438b-45d4-8d45-42ee4805b8f8
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/b897bd94-de67-44c5-95fc-bc33cb05311b
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9162112c-438b-45d4-8d45-42ee4805b8f8.yaml
identifier: 9162112c-438b-45d4-8d45-42ee4805b8f8
uri: /reference/9162112c-438b-45d4-8d45-42ee4805b8f8
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Abstract: 'A 20-km regional climate model, the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics Regional Climate Model version 4 (ICTP RegCM4), is employed to investigate heavy lake-effect snowfall (HLES) over the Great Lakes Basin and the role of ice cover in regulating these events. When coupled to a lake model and driven with atmospheric reanalysis data between 1976 and 2002, RegCM4 reproduces the major characteristics of HLES. The influence of lake ice cover on HLES is investigated through 10 case studies (2 per Great Lake), in which a simulated heavy lake-effect event is compared with a companion simulation having 100% ice cover imposed on one or all of the Great Lakes. These experiments quantify the impact of ice cover on downstream snowfall and demonstrate that Lake Superior has the strongest, most widespread influence on heavy snowfall and Lake Ontario the least. Ice cover strongly affects a wide range of atmospheric variables above and downstream of lakes during HLES, including snowfall, surface energy fluxes, wind speed, temperature, moisture, clouds, and air pressure. Averaged among the 10 events, complete ice coverage causes major reductions in lake-effect snowfall (>80%) and turbulent heat fluxes over the lakes (>90%), less low cloudiness, lower temperatures, and higher air pressure. Another important consequence is a consistent weakening (30%–40%) of lower-tropospheric winds over the lakes when completely frozen. This momentum reduction further decreases over-lake evaporation and weakens downstream wind convergence, thus mitigating lake-effect snowfall. This finding suggests a secondary, dynamical mechanism by which ice cover affects downstream snowfall during HLES events, in addition to the more widely recognized thermodynamic influence.'
Author: Steve Vavrus; Michael Notaro; Azar Zarrin
DOI: 10.1175/mwr-d-12-00107.1
Issue: 1
Journal: Monthly Weather Review
Keywords: 'Inland seas/lakes,Lake effects,Snowfall,Regional models'
Pages: 148-165
Title: The role of ice cover in heavy lake-effect snowstorms over the Great Lakes Basin as simulated by RegCM4
Volume: 141
Year: 2013
_record_number: 20862
_uuid: 91bac619-30ec-4096-ad89-2c2db0e992f5
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1175/mwr-d-12-00107.1
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/91bac619-30ec-4096-ad89-2c2db0e992f5.yaml
identifier: 91bac619-30ec-4096-ad89-2c2db0e992f5
uri: /reference/91bac619-30ec-4096-ad89-2c2db0e992f5
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Extreme heat stress during the crop reproductive period can be critical for crop productivity. Projected changes in the frequency and severity of extreme climatic events are expected to negatively impact crop yields and global food production. This study applies the global crop model PEGASUS to quantify, for the first time at the global scale, impacts of extreme heat stress on maize, spring wheat and soybean yields resulting from 72 climate change scenarios for the 21st century. Our results project maize to face progressively worse impacts under a range of RCPs but spring wheat and soybean to improve globally through to the 2080s due to CO 2 fertilization effects, even though parts of the tropic and sub-tropic regions could face substantial yield declines. We find extreme heat stress at anthesis (HSA) by the 2080s (relative to the 1980s) under RCP 8.5, taking into account CO 2 fertilization effects, could double global losses of maize yield ( Δ Y = −12.8 ± 6.7% versus − 7.0 ± 5.3% without HSA), reduce projected gains in spring wheat yield by half ( Δ Y = 34.3 ± 13.5% versus 72.0 ± 10.9% without HSA) and in soybean yield by a quarter ( Δ Y = 15.3 ± 26.5% versus 20.4 ± 22.1% without HSA). The range reflects uncertainty due to differences between climate model scenarios; soybean exhibits both positive and negative impacts, maize is generally negative and spring wheat generally positive. Furthermore, when assuming CO 2 fertilization effects to be negligible, we observe drastic climate mitigation policy as in RCP 2.6 could avoid more than 80% of the global average yield losses otherwise expected by the 2080s under RCP 8.5. We show large disparities in climate impacts across regions and find extreme heat stress adversely affects major producing regions and lower income countries.'
Author: 'Deryng, Delphine; Declan Conway; Navin Ramankutty; Jeff Price; Rachel Warren'
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/9/3/034011
ISSN: 1748-9326
Issue: 3
Journal: Environmental Research Letters
Pages: 034011
Title: Global crop yield response to extreme heat stress under multiple climate change futures
Volume: 9
Year: 2014
_record_number: 26566
_uuid: 92556cc9-7e23-42a3-8c27-6bbd88726797
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1088/1748-9326/9/3/034011
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/92556cc9-7e23-42a3-8c27-6bbd88726797.yaml
identifier: 92556cc9-7e23-42a3-8c27-6bbd88726797
uri: /reference/92556cc9-7e23-42a3-8c27-6bbd88726797
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'City of Chicago,'
Pages: 57
Title: 'City of Chicago Climate Action Plan: Our City. Our Future'
URL: http://www.chicagoclimateaction.org/filebin/pdf/finalreport/CCAPREPORTFINALv2.pdf
Volume: 2008
Year: 2008
_chapter: '["RG 3 Midwest","Ch. 11: Urban Systems FINAL","Ch. 28: Adaptation FINAL"]'
_record_number: 242
_uuid: 9282c7de-31fd-4123-96ca-69df571b1cd3
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/citychicago-cap-2008
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9282c7de-31fd-4123-96ca-69df571b1cd3.yaml
identifier: 9282c7de-31fd-4123-96ca-69df571b1cd3
uri: /reference/9282c7de-31fd-4123-96ca-69df571b1cd3
- attrs:
Author: 'Hamer, Sarah A.; Hickling, Graham J.; Walker, Edward D.; Tsao, Jean I.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.meegid.2014.06.003
Date: 2014/10/01/
ISSN: 1567-1348
Journal: 'Infection, Genetics and Evolution'
Keywords: American Midwest
Pages: 531-542
Title: Increased diversity of zoonotic pathogens and Borrelia burgdorferi strains in established versus incipient Ixodes scapularis populations across the Midwestern United States
Volume: 27
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21147
_uuid: 93155d7a-31a3-4d21-9d39-f438ecc7d372
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.meegid.2014.06.003
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/93155d7a-31a3-4d21-9d39-f438ecc7d372.yaml
identifier: 93155d7a-31a3-4d21-9d39-f438ecc7d372
uri: /reference/93155d7a-31a3-4d21-9d39-f438ecc7d372
- attrs:
.reference_type: 7
Author: "Bennett, T.M. Bull\rMaynard, Nancy G.\rCochran, Patricia\rGough, Robert\rLynn, Kathy\rMaldonado, Julie\rVoggesser, Garrit\rWotkyns, Susan\rCozzetto, Karen"
Book Title: 'Climate Change Impacts in the United States: The Third National Climate Assessment'
DOI: 10.7930/J09G5JR1
Editor: 'Melillo, Jerry M.; Richmond, Terese (T.C.); Yohe, Gary W.'
Pages: 297-317
Place Published: 'Washington, DC'
Publisher: U.S. Global Change Research Program
Reviewer: 93a1158a-17b9-43b9-9743-111f9c7ab8ab
Title: 'Ch. 12: Indigenous peoples, lands, and resources'
URL: http://nca2014.globalchange.gov/report/sectors/indigenous-peoples
Year: 2014
_chapter: '["Ch. 0: About this Report FINAL"]'
_record_number: 4749
_uuid: 93a1158a-17b9-43b9-9743-111f9c7ab8ab
reftype: Book Section
child_publication: /report/nca3/chapter/tribal-indigenous-native-lands-resources
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/93a1158a-17b9-43b9-9743-111f9c7ab8ab.yaml
identifier: 93a1158a-17b9-43b9-9743-111f9c7ab8ab
uri: /reference/93a1158a-17b9-43b9-9743-111f9c7ab8ab
- attrs:
.reference_type: 7
Author: 'Hall, Kimberly R.; Root, Terry L.'
Book Title: 'Climate Change in the Great Lakes Region: Navigating an Uncertain Future'
Editor: 'Dietz, Thomas; Bidwell, David'
ISBN: 9781611860122
Pages: 63-96
Publisher: Michigan State University Press
Title: Climate change and biodiversity in the Great Lakes Region from "fingerprints" of change to helping safeguard species
Year: 2012
_record_number: 26571
_uuid: 94291262-9164-4b7b-899a-df09aa1063e1
reftype: Book Section
child_publication: /book/4bcd4f8e-0120-4217-83a8-514199e67303
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/94291262-9164-4b7b-899a-df09aa1063e1.yaml
identifier: 94291262-9164-4b7b-899a-df09aa1063e1
uri: /reference/94291262-9164-4b7b-899a-df09aa1063e1
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Aedes ( Stegomyia ) aegypti (L.) and Aedes ( Stegomyia ) albopictus (Skuse) transmit arboviruses that are increasing threats to human health in the Americas, particularly dengue, chikungunya, and Zika viruses. Epidemics of the associated arboviral diseases have been limited to South and Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean in the Western Hemisphere, with only minor localized outbreaks in the United States. Nevertheless, accurate and up-to-date information for the geographical ranges of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus in the United States is urgently needed to guide surveillance and enhance control capacity for these mosquitoes. We compiled county records for presence of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus in the United States from 1995-2016, presented here in map format. Records were derived from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ArboNET database, VectorMap, the published literature, and a survey of mosquito control agencies, university researchers, and state and local health departments. Between January 1995 and March 2016, 183 counties from 26 states and the District of Columbia reported occurrence of Ae. aegypti , and 1,241 counties from 40 states and the District of Columbia reported occurrence of Ae. albopictus . During the same time period, Ae. aegypti was collected in 3 or more years from 94 counties from 14 states and the District of Columbia, and Ae. albopictus was collected during 3 or more years from 514 counties in 34 states and the District of Columbia. Our findings underscore the need for systematic surveillance of Ae. aegypti and Ae. albopictus in the United States and delineate areas with risk for the transmission of these introduced arboviruses.'
Author: 'Hahn, Micah B.; Eisen, Rebecca J.; Eisen, Lars; Boegler, Karen A.; Moore, Chester G.; McAllister, Janet; Savage, Harry M.; Mutebi, John-Paul'
DOI: 10.1093/jme/tjw072
ISSN: 0022-2585
Issue: 5
Journal: Journal of Medical Entomology
Pages: 1169-1175
Title: 'Reported distribution of Aedes (Stegomyia) aegypti and Aedes (Stegomyia) albopictus in the United States, 1995-2016 (Diptera: Culicidae)'
Volume: 53
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21178
_uuid: 9463d1f1-764f-4185-9a2b-41fb7d2071d7
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1093/jme/tjw072
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9463d1f1-764f-4185-9a2b-41fb7d2071d7.yaml
identifier: 9463d1f1-764f-4185-9a2b-41fb7d2071d7
uri: /reference/9463d1f1-764f-4185-9a2b-41fb7d2071d7
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Author: 'DuPont, Dale K.'
Publisher: WorkBoat.com
Title: High Water Closes River Near St. Louis
URL: https://www.workboat.com/archive/high-water-closes-river-near-st-louis/
Year: 2013
_record_number: 21318
_uuid: 9478fde6-be0e-4ddf-b79e-348a4dc7b9b1
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/b9e426a2-3058-4840-a796-b27bb6701700
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9478fde6-be0e-4ddf-b79e-348a4dc7b9b1.yaml
identifier: 9478fde6-be0e-4ddf-b79e-348a4dc7b9b1
uri: /reference/9478fde6-be0e-4ddf-b79e-348a4dc7b9b1
- attrs:
Author: 'Harding, Keith J.; Snyder, Peter K.; Liess, Stefan'
DOI: 10.1002/2013JD019994
ISSN: 2169-8996
Issue: 22
Journal: Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres
Keywords: dynamical downscaling; CMIP5; Great Plains; WRF; extreme rainfall events; model evaluation; 0550 Model verification and validation; 1626 Global climate models; 1817 Extreme events; 1854 Precipitation; 3355 Regional modeling
Pages: '12,522-12,536'
Title: Use of dynamical downscaling to improve the simulation of Central U.S. warm season precipitation in CMIP5 models
Volume: 118
Year: 2013
_record_number: 21105
_uuid: 94a4d51e-96a4-4155-926d-31be60e2206a
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1002/2013JD019994
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/94a4d51e-96a4-4155-926d-31be60e2206a.yaml
identifier: 94a4d51e-96a4-4155-926d-31be60e2206a
uri: /reference/94a4d51e-96a4-4155-926d-31be60e2206a
- attrs:
Author: 'Ludsin, Stuart A.; Kershner, Mark W.; Blocksom, Karen A.; Knight, Roger L.; Stein, Roy A.'
DOI: '10.1890/1051-0761(2001)011[0731:LADILE]2.0.CO;2'
ISSN: 1939-5582
Issue: 3
Journal: Ecological Applications
Keywords: detrended correspondence analysis; eutrophication; Great Lakes; Lake Erie; oligotrophication; phosphorus abatement; productivity; resilience; species diversity; species richness; species turnover; succession
Pages: 731-746
Publisher: Ecological Society of America
Title: 'Life after death in Lake Erie: Nutrient controls drive fish species richness, rehabilitation'
Volume: 11
Year: 2001
_record_number: 21222
_uuid: 94c3eb94-fa61-42cb-b254-abd7edfc85f4
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1890/1051-0761(2001)011%5B0731:LADILE%5D2.0.CO;2
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/94c3eb94-fa61-42cb-b254-abd7edfc85f4.yaml
identifier: 94c3eb94-fa61-42cb-b254-abd7edfc85f4
uri: /reference/94c3eb94-fa61-42cb-b254-abd7edfc85f4
- attrs:
.reference_type: 32
Author: "Kunkel, K. E.\rStevens, L. E.\rStevens, S. E.\rSun, L.\rJanssen, E.\rWuebbles, D.\rHilberg, S.D.\rTimlin, M.S.\rStoecker, L.\rWestcott, N.E.\rDobson, J.G."
Pages: 103
Place Published: 'Washington, D.C.'
Publisher: 'National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service'
Title: 'Regional Climate Trends and Scenarios for the U.S. National Climate Assessment: Part 3. Climate of the Midwest U.S. NOAA Technical Report NESDIS 142-3'
URL: http://www.nesdis.noaa.gov/technical_reports/NOAA_NESDIS_Tech_Report_142-3-Climate_of_the_Midwest_U.S.pdf
Year: 2013
_chapter: '["Ch. 4: Energy Supply and Use FINAL","Appendix 3: Climate Science FINAL","Ch. 18: Midwest FINAL"]'
_record_number: 1411
_uuid: 95f2ea7d-12e3-4ed5-9247-7cf139db91a9
reftype: Government Document
child_publication: /report/noaa-techreport-nesdis-142-3
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/95f2ea7d-12e3-4ed5-9247-7cf139db91a9.yaml
identifier: 95f2ea7d-12e3-4ed5-9247-7cf139db91a9
uri: /reference/95f2ea7d-12e3-4ed5-9247-7cf139db91a9
- attrs:
Abstract: 'The Laurentian Great Lakes of North America provide valuable ecosystem services, including fisheries, to the surrounding population. Given the prevalence of other anthropogenic stressors that have historically affected the fisheries of the Great Lakes (e.g., eutrophication, invasive species, overfishing), climate change is often viewed as a long-term stressor and, subsequently, may not always be prioritized by managers and researchers. However, climate change has the potential to negatively affect fish and fisheries in the Great Lakes through its influence on habitat. In this paper, we (1) summarize projected changes in climate and fish habitat in the Great Lakes; (2) summarize fish responses to climate change in the Great Lakes; (3) describe key interactions between climate change and other stressors relevant to Great Lakes fish, and (4) summarize how climate change can be incorporated into fisheries management. In general, fish habitat is projected to be characterized by warmer temperatures throughout the water column, less ice cover, longer periods of stratification, and more frequent and widespread periods of bottom hypoxia in productive areas of the Great Lakes. Based solely on thermal habitat, fish populations theoretically could experience prolonged optimal growth environment within a changing climate, however, models that assess physical habitat influences at specific life stages convey a more complex picture. Looking at specific interactions with other stressors, climate change may exacerbate the negative impacts of both eutrophication and invasive species for fish habitat in the Great Lakes. Although expanding monitoring and research to consider climate change interactions with currently studied stressors, may offer managers the best opportunity to keep the valuable Great Lakes fisheries sustainable, this expansion is globally applicable for large lake ecosystem dealing with multiple stressors in the face of continued human-driven changes.'
Author: 'Collingsworth, Paris D.; Bunnell, David B.; Murray, Michael W.; Kao, Yu-Chun; Feiner, Zachary S.; Claramunt, Randall M.; Lofgren, Brent M.; Höök, Tomas O.; Ludsin, Stuart A.'
DOI: 10.1007/s11160-017-9480-3
Date: June 01
ISSN: 1573-5184
Issue: 2
Journal: Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries
Pages: 363-391
Title: Climate change as a long-term stressor for the fisheries of the Laurentian Great Lakes of North America
Type of Article: journal article
Volume: 27
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21122
_uuid: 96b70944-fb5a-4706-90f1-5f423393f37c
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1007/s11160-017-9480-3
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/96b70944-fb5a-4706-90f1-5f423393f37c.yaml
identifier: 96b70944-fb5a-4706-90f1-5f423393f37c
uri: /reference/96b70944-fb5a-4706-90f1-5f423393f37c
- attrs:
Author: 'Rittenhouse, Chadwick D.; Rissman, Adena R.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.10.010
Date: 2/1/
ISSN: 0301-4797
Journal: Journal of Environmental Management
Keywords: Climate change impacts; Forestry; Adaptation; Multiple stressors
Pages: 157-167
Title: Changes in winter conditions impact forest management in north temperate forests
Volume: 149
Year: 2015
_record_number: 21142
_uuid: 97dc06d1-c73a-47d3-9b27-7ced16637538
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.10.010
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/97dc06d1-c73a-47d3-9b27-7ced16637538.yaml
identifier: 97dc06d1-c73a-47d3-9b27-7ced16637538
uri: /reference/97dc06d1-c73a-47d3-9b27-7ced16637538
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Forests and trees throughout the world are increasingly affected by factors related to global change. Expanding international trade has facilitated invasions of numerous insects and pathogens into new regions. Many of these invasions have caused substantial forest damage, economic impacts and losses of ecosystem goods and services provided by trees. Climate change is already affecting the geographic distribution of host trees and their associated insects and pathogens, with anticipated increases in pest impacts by both native and invasive pests. Although climate change will benefit many forest insects, changes in thermal conditions may disrupt evolved life history traits and cause phenological mismatches. Individually, the threats posed to forest ecosystems by invasive pests and climate change are serious. Although interactions between these two drivers and their outcomes are poorly understood and hence difficult to predict, it is clear that the cumulative impacts on forest ecosystems will be exacerbated. Here we introduce and synthesize the information in this special issue of Forestry with articles that illustrate the impacts of invasions of insects and pathogens, climate change, forest management and their interactions, as well as methods to predict, assess and mitigate these impacts. Most of these contributions were presented at the XXIV IUFRO World Congress in 2014.'
Author: 'Ramsfield, T. D.; Bentz, B. J.; Faccoli, M.; Jactel, H.; Brockerhoff, E. G.'
DOI: 10.1093/forestry/cpw018
ISSN: 0015-752X
Issue: 3
Journal: 'Forestry: An International Journal of Forest Research'
Pages: 245-252
Title: 'Forest health in a changing world: Effects of globalization and climate change on forest insect and pathogen impacts'
Volume: 89
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21177
_uuid: 98e8338c-3c49-49f7-9334-d4c28a901ad0
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1093/forestry/cpw018
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/98e8338c-3c49-49f7-9334-d4c28a901ad0.yaml
identifier: 98e8338c-3c49-49f7-9334-d4c28a901ad0
uri: /reference/98e8338c-3c49-49f7-9334-d4c28a901ad0
- attrs:
Author: 'Aronson, Myla F. J.; Handel, Steven N.'
DOI: 10.3375/043.031.0410
Date: 2011/10/01
ISSN: 0885-8608
Issue: 4
Journal: Natural Areas Journal
Pages: 400-407
Publisher: Natural Areas Association
Title: Deer and invasive plant species suppress forest herbaceous communities and canopy tree regeneration
Volume: 31
Year: 2011
_record_number: 21229
_uuid: 995741c9-a4a9-4d8b-8aa7-74b7ba90c69e
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.3375/043.031.0410
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/995741c9-a4a9-4d8b-8aa7-74b7ba90c69e.yaml
identifier: 995741c9-a4a9-4d8b-8aa7-74b7ba90c69e
uri: /reference/995741c9-a4a9-4d8b-8aa7-74b7ba90c69e
- attrs:
Author: 'Rajkovich, Nicholas B.'
DOI: 10.3998/mjs.12333712.0004.007
Journal: Michigan Journal of Sustainability
Pages: 81-101
Title: 'A system of professions approach to reducing heat exposure in Cuyahoga County, Ohio'
Volume: 4
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21293
_uuid: 99b4f914-06f7-4489-836a-04ea02b99ded
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.3998/mjs.12333712.0004.007
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/99b4f914-06f7-4489-836a-04ea02b99ded.yaml
identifier: 99b4f914-06f7-4489-836a-04ea02b99ded
uri: /reference/99b4f914-06f7-4489-836a-04ea02b99ded
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'EPA,'
Institution: 'U.S. EPA, Office of Wastewater Management'
Pages: 92
Place Published: 'Washington, DC'
Series Volume: EPA 833-R-16-006
Title: 'Report to Congress: Combined Sewer Overflows into the Great Lakes Basin'
URL: https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2016-05/documents/gls_cso_report_to_congress_-_4-12-2016.pdf
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21302
_uuid: 9a1f1c93-72af-4e99-bbce-13928fd35ba0
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/report-congress-combined-sewer-overflows-into-great-lakes-basin
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9a1f1c93-72af-4e99-bbce-13928fd35ba0.yaml
identifier: 9a1f1c93-72af-4e99-bbce-13928fd35ba0
uri: /reference/9a1f1c93-72af-4e99-bbce-13928fd35ba0
- attrs:
Abstract: 'In 2014, a presidential memorandum called for an assessment of the nation’s pollinators, in response to growing awareness of their economic importance and recent declines. We assess, for the first time to our knowledge, the status and trends of wild bee abundance and their potential impacts on pollination services across the United States. We develop national maps of wild bee abundance, report land-use–driven changes over time, and relate them to trends in agricultural demand for pollination. We estimate uncertainty in the findings, so future research can target the least-understood regions and topics. Our findings can also help focus conservation efforts where declines in bee abundance are most certain, especially where agricultural demand for pollination services is growing.Wild bees are highly valuable pollinators. Along with managed honey bees, they provide a critical ecosystem service by ensuring stable pollination to agriculture and wild plant communities. Increasing concern about the welfare of both wild and managed pollinators, however, has prompted recent calls for national evaluation and action. Here, for the first time to our knowledge, we assess the status and trends of wild bees and their potential impacts on pollination services across the coterminous United States. We use a spatial habitat model, national land-cover data, and carefully quantified expert knowledge to estimate wild bee abundance and associated uncertainty. Between 2008 and 2013, modeled bee abundance declined across 23% of US land area. This decline was generally associated with conversion of natural habitats to row crops. We identify 139 counties where low bee abundances correspond to large areas of pollinator-dependent crops. These areas of mismatch between supply (wild bee abundance) and demand (cultivated area) for pollination comprise 39% of the pollinator-dependent crop area in the United States. Further, we find that the crops most highly dependent on pollinators tend to experience more severe mismatches between declining supply and increasing demand. These trends, should they continue, may increase costs for US farmers and may even destabilize crop production over time. National assessments such as this can help focus both scientific and political efforts to understand and sustain wild bees. As new information becomes available, repeated assessments can update findings, revise priorities, and track progress toward sustainable management of our nation’s pollinators.'
Author: 'Koh, Insu; Lonsdorf, Eric V.; Williams, Neal M.; Brittain, Claire; Isaacs, Rufus; Gibbs, Jason; Ricketts, Taylor H.'
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1517685113
Issue: 1
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Pages: 140-145
Title: 'Modeling the status, trends, and impacts of wild bee abundance in the United States'
Volume: 113
Year: 2016
_record_number: 26589
_uuid: 9a868281-67c0-49c9-bc42-69f29b3705da
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1517685113
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9a868281-67c0-49c9-bc42-69f29b3705da.yaml
identifier: 9a868281-67c0-49c9-bc42-69f29b3705da
uri: /reference/9a868281-67c0-49c9-bc42-69f29b3705da
- attrs:
Author: 'Changnon, Stanley'
ISSN: 0019-2252
Issue: 3-4
Journal: Transactions of the Illinois State Academy of Science
Pages: 181-190
Title: Impacts of the 2008 floods on railroads in Illinois and adjacent states
URL: http://ilacadofsci.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/102-17MS2819-print.pdf
Volume: 102
Year: 2009
_record_number: 21296
_uuid: 9baccf7b-275b-400c-8432-c8c92651c318
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/impacts-2008-floods-on-railroads-illinois-adjacent-states
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9baccf7b-275b-400c-8432-c8c92651c318.yaml
identifier: 9baccf7b-275b-400c-8432-c8c92651c318
uri: /reference/9baccf7b-275b-400c-8432-c8c92651c318
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Consistent with a warming climate, birds are shifting the timing of their migrations, but it remains unclear to what extent these shifts have kept pace with the changing environment. Because bird migration is primarily cued by annually consistent physiological responses to photoperiod, but conditions at their breeding grounds depend on annually variable climate, bird arrival and climate-driven spring events would diverge. We combined satellite and citizen science data to estimate rates of change in phenological interval between spring green-up and migratory arrival for 48 breeding passerine species across North America. Both arrival and green-up changed over time, usually in the same direction (earlier or later). Although birds adjusted their arrival dates, 9 of 48 species did not keep pace with rapidly changing green-up and across all species the interval between arrival and green-up increased by over half a day per year. As green-up became earlier in the east, arrival of eastern breeding species increasingly lagged behind green-up, whereas in the west—where green-up typically became later—birds arrived increasingly earlier relative to green-up. Our results highlight that phenologies of species and trophic levels can shift at different rates, potentially leading to phenological mismatches with negative fitness consequences.'
Author: 'Mayor, Stephen J.; Guralnick, Robert P.; Tingley, Morgan W.; Otegui, Javier; Withey, John C.; Elmendorf, Sarah C.; Andrew, Margaret E.; Leyk, Stefan; Pearse, Ian S.; Schneider, David C.'
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02045-z
Date: 2017/05/15
ISSN: 2045-2322
Issue: 1
Journal: Scientific Reports
Pages: 1902
Title: Increasing phenological asynchrony between spring green-up and arrival of migratory birds
Volume: 7
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21164
_uuid: 9c921777-0a90-411f-b3bd-722da79a2fed
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1038/s41598-017-02045-z
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9c921777-0a90-411f-b3bd-722da79a2fed.yaml
identifier: 9c921777-0a90-411f-b3bd-722da79a2fed
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Abstract: 'The effects of climate change on north temperate freshwater ecosystems include increasing water temperatures and decreasing ice cover. Here we compare those trends in the Laurentian Great Lakes at three spatial scales to evaluate how warming varies across the surface of these massive inland water bodies. We compiled seasonal ice cover duration (1973–2013) and lake summer surface water temperatures (LSSWT; 1994–2013), and analyzed spatial patterns and trends at lake-wide, lake sub-basin, and fine spatial scales and compared those to reported lake- and basin-wide trends. At the lake-wide scale we found declining ice duration and warming LSSWT patterns consistent with previous studies. At the lake sub-basin scale, our statistical models identified distinct warming trends within each lake that included significant breakpoints in ice duration for 13 sub-basins, consistent linear declines in 11 sub-basins, and no trends in 4 sub-basins. At the finest scale, we found that the northern- and eastern-most portions of each Great Lake, especially in nearshore areas, have experienced faster rates of LSSWT warming and shortening ice duration than those previously reported from trends at the lake scale. We conclude that lake-level analyses mask significant spatial and temporal variation in warming patterns within the Laurentian Great Lakes. Recognizing spatial variability in rates of change can inform both mechanistic modeling of ecosystem responses and planning for long-term management of these large freshwater ecosystems.'
Author: 'Mason, Lacey A.; Riseng, Catherine M.; Gronewold, Andrew D.; Rutherford, Edward S.; Wang, Jia; Clites, Anne; Smith, Sigrid D. P.; McIntyre, Peter B.'
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-016-1721-2
Date: September 01
ISSN: 1573-1480
Issue: 1
Journal: Climatic Change
Pages: 71-83
Title: Fine-scale spatial variation in ice cover and surface temperature trends across the surface of the Laurentian Great Lakes
Type of Article: journal article
Volume: 138
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21117
_uuid: 9db319af-7cec-440e-8dda-41526fed6cd0
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10584-016-1721-2
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identifier: 9db319af-7cec-440e-8dda-41526fed6cd0
uri: /reference/9db319af-7cec-440e-8dda-41526fed6cd0
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Author: 'ISU,'
Place Published: 'Ames, IA'
Publisher: Iowa State University (ISU)
Title: Iowa Environmental Mesonet (IEM)
URL: https://mesonet.agron.iastate.edu/
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21258
_uuid: 9dc60b30-9bb1-46c8-aaea-9dba602c2d05
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/3686a43c-a17a-47d1-9e21-ed8acdac44ab
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9dc60b30-9bb1-46c8-aaea-9dba602c2d05.yaml
identifier: 9dc60b30-9bb1-46c8-aaea-9dba602c2d05
uri: /reference/9dc60b30-9bb1-46c8-aaea-9dba602c2d05
- attrs:
.reference_type: 9
Editor: 'Shifley, Stephen R.; Moser, W. Keith'
ISBN: Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-151
Number of Pages: 388
Place Published: 'Newtown Square, PA'
Publisher: 'U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station'
Title: Future Forests of the Northern United States
URL: https://www.nrs.fs.fed.us/pubs/50448
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21243
_uuid: 9e2e24c8-649d-4be1-b206-2177724575b5
reftype: Edited Book
child_publication: /book/future-forests-northern-united-states
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9e2e24c8-649d-4be1-b206-2177724575b5.yaml
identifier: 9e2e24c8-649d-4be1-b206-2177724575b5
uri: /reference/9e2e24c8-649d-4be1-b206-2177724575b5
- attrs:
Abstract: 'OBJECTIVES: We examined how individual and area socio-demographic characteristics independently modified the extreme heat (EH)-mortality association among elderly residents of 8 Michigan cities, May-September, 1990-2007. METHODS: In a time-stratified case-crossover design, we regressed cause-specific mortality against EH (indicator for 4-day mean, minimum, maximum or apparent temperature above 97th or 99th percentiles). We examined effect modification with interactions between EH and personal marital status, age, race, sex and education and ZIP-code percent “non-green space” (National Land Cover Dataset), age, race, income, education, living alone, and housing age (U.S. Census). RESULTS: In models including multiple effect modifiers, the odds of cardiovascular mortality during EH (99(th) percentile threshold) vs. non-EH were higher among non-married individuals (1.21, 95% CI = 1.14-1.28 vs. 0.98, 95% CI = 0.90-1.07 among married individuals) and individuals in ZIP codes with high (91%) non-green space (1.17, 95% CI = 1.06-1.29 vs. 0.98, 95% CI = 0.89-1.07 among individuals in ZIP codes with low (39%) non-green space). Results suggested that housing age may also be an effect modifier. For the EH-respiratory mortality association, the results were inconsistent between temperature metrics and percentile thresholds of EH but largely insignificant. CONCLUSIONS: Green space, housing and social isolation may independently enhance elderly peoples’ heat-related cardiovascular mortality vulnerability. Local adaptation efforts should target areas and populations at greater risk.'
Author: "Gronlund, Carina J.; Berrocal, Veronica J.; White-Newsome, Jalonne L.; Conlon, Kathryn C.; O'Neill, Marie S."
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2014.08.042
Date: 11/25
ISSN: "0013-9351\r1096-0953"
Journal: Environmental Research
Name of Database: PMC
Pages: 449-461
Title: 'Vulnerability to extreme heat by socio-demographic characteristics and area green space among the elderly in Michigan, 1990-2007'
Volume: 136
Year: 2015
_record_number: 21133
_uuid: 9ef14c5c-9a31-498c-916c-c64bca251d0e
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.envres.2014.08.042
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9ef14c5c-9a31-498c-916c-c64bca251d0e.yaml
identifier: 9ef14c5c-9a31-498c-916c-c64bca251d0e
uri: /reference/9ef14c5c-9a31-498c-916c-c64bca251d0e
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Andresen, Jeff; Steve Hilberg; Ken Kunkel'
Institution: Great Lakes Integrated Sciences and Assessments (GLISA) Center
Pages: 18
Place Published: 'Ann Arbor, MI'
Title: Historical Climate and Climate Trends in the Midwestern USA. U.S. National Climate Assessment Midwest Technical Input Report
URL: http://glisa.umich.edu/media/files/NCA/MTIT_Historical.pdf
Year: 2012
_record_number: 21250
_uuid: 9f6b4c9d-806d-4af8-8d7a-1b75cbb41f07
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/historical-climate-climate-trends-midwestern-usa-us-national-climate-assessment-midwest-technical-input-report
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/9f6b4c9d-806d-4af8-8d7a-1b75cbb41f07.yaml
identifier: 9f6b4c9d-806d-4af8-8d7a-1b75cbb41f07
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- attrs:
Abstract: 'Predicted effects of climate change include high extinction risk for many species, but confidence in these predictions is undermined by a perceived lack of empirical support. Many studies have now documented ecological responses to recent climate change, providing the opportunity to test whether the magnitude and nature of recent responses match predictions. Here, we perform a global and multitaxon metaanalysis to show that empirical evidence for the realized effects of climate change supports predictions of future extinction risk. We use International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List criteria as a common scale to estimate extinction risks from a wide range of climate impacts, ecological responses, and methods of analysis, and we compare predictions with observations. Mean extinction probability across studies making predictions of the future effects of climate change was 7% by 2100 compared with 15% based on observed responses. After taking account of possible bias in the type of climate change impact analyzed and the parts of the world and taxa studied, there was less discrepancy between the two approaches: predictions suggested a mean extinction probability of 10% across taxa and regions, whereas empirical evidence gave a mean probability of 14%. As well as mean overall extinction probability, observations also supported predictions in terms of variability in extinction risk and the relative risk associated with broad taxonomic groups and geographic regions. These results suggest that predictions are robust to methodological assumptions and provide strong empirical support for the assertion that anthropogenic climate change is now a major threat to global biodiversity.'
Author: 'Maclean, Ilya M. D.; Wilson, Robert J.'
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1017352108
Date: 'July 26, 2011'
Issue: 30
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Pages: 12337-12342
Title: Recent ecological responses to climate change support predictions of high extinction risk
Volume: 108
Year: 2011
_record_number: 21166
_uuid: a0f111d8-ec32-486c-83a9-c9f359854550
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1017352108
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a0f111d8-ec32-486c-83a9-c9f359854550.yaml
identifier: a0f111d8-ec32-486c-83a9-c9f359854550
uri: /reference/a0f111d8-ec32-486c-83a9-c9f359854550
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Abstract: 'Changes in temperature, CO(2), and precipitation under the scenarios of climate change for the next 30 yr present a challenge to crop production. This review focuses on the impact of temperature, CO(2), and ozone on agronomic crops and the implications for crop production. Understanding these implications for agricultural crops is critical for developing cropping systems resilient to stresses induced by climate change. There is variation among crops in their response to CO(2), temperature, and precipitation changes and, with the regional differences in predicted climate, a situation is created in which the responses will be further complicated. For example, the temperature effects on soybean [Glycine max (L.) Merr.] could potentially cause yield reductions of 2.4% in the South but an increase of 1.7% in the Midwest. The frequency of years when temperatures exceed thresholds for damage during critical growth stages is likely to increase for some crops and regions. The increase in CO(2) contributes significantly to enhanced plant growth and improved water use efficiency (WUE); however, there may be a downscaling of these positive impacts due to higher temperatures plants will experience during their growth cycle. A challenge is to understand the interactions of the changing climatic parameters because of the interactions among temperature, CO(2), and precipitation on plant growth and development and also on the biotic stresses of weeds, insects, and diseases. Agronomists will have to consider the variations in temperature and precipitation as part of the production system if they are to ensure the food security required by an ever increasing population.'
Alternate Journal: Agron J
Author: "Hatfield, J. L.\rBoote, K. J.\rKimball, B. A.\rZiska, L. H.\rIzaurralde, R. C.\rOrt, D.\rThomson, A. M.\rWolfe, D."
Author Address: 'Hatfield, JL; Natl Lab Agr & Environm, Ames, IA 50011 USA; Natl Lab Agr & Environm, Ames, IA 50011 USA; Natl Lab Agr & Environm, Ames, IA 50011 USA; Univ Florida, Agron Dep, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA; USDA ARS, US Arid Land Agr Res Ctr, Maricopa, AZ 85138 USA; USDA, Crop Syst & Global Change Lab, Beltsville, MD 20705 USA; Univ Maryland, Pacific NW Natl Lab, Joint Global Change Res Inst, College Pk, MD 20740 USA; Univ Illinois, USDA ARS, Photosynth Res Unit, Urbana, IL 61801 USA; Cornell Univ, Dep Hort, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA'
DOI: 10.2134/agronj2010.0303
Date: Mar-Apr
ISSN: 1435-0645
Issue: 2
Journal: Agronomy Journal
Keywords: air co2 enrichment; atmospheric carbon-dioxide; water-use efficiency; phaseolus-vulgaris l.; solanum-tuberosum l.; rottboellia-cochinchinensis interference; endosperm cell-division; high-temperature stress; soybean glycine-max; long-term exposure
Language: English
Notes: 740XZ; Times Cited:5; Cited References Count:225
Pages: 351-370
Title: 'Climate impacts on agriculture: Implications for crop production'
Volume: 103
Year: 2011
_chapter: '["Ch. 16: Northeast FINAL","Ch. 6: Agriculture FINAL","RG 3 Midwest","Ch. 18: Midwest FINAL","Ch. 21: Northwest FINAL"]'
_record_number: 361
_uuid: a2704ef3-5be4-41ee-8dfa-4c82e416a292
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.2134/agronj2010.0303
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a2704ef3-5be4-41ee-8dfa-4c82e416a292.yaml
identifier: a2704ef3-5be4-41ee-8dfa-4c82e416a292
uri: /reference/a2704ef3-5be4-41ee-8dfa-4c82e416a292
- attrs:
.reference_type: 7
Author: 'Wehner, M.F.; J.R. Arnold; T. Knutson; K.E. Kunkel; A.N. LeGrande'
Book Title: 'Climate Science Special Report: Fourth National Climate Assessment, Volume I'
DOI: 10.7930/J0CJ8BNN
Editor: 'Wuebbles, D.J.; D.W. Fahey; K.A. Hibbard; D.J. Dokken; B.C. Stewart; T.K. Maycock'
Pages: 231-256
Place Published: 'Washington, DC, USA'
Publisher: U.S. Global Change Research Program
Title: 'Droughts, Floods, and Wildfires'
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21566
_uuid: a29b612b-8c28-4c93-9c18-19314babce89
reftype: Book Section
child_publication: /report/climate-science-special-report/chapter/drought-floods-hydrology
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a29b612b-8c28-4c93-9c18-19314babce89.yaml
identifier: a29b612b-8c28-4c93-9c18-19314babce89
uri: /reference/a29b612b-8c28-4c93-9c18-19314babce89
- attrs:
Author: 'Ash, Jeremy D.; Givnish, Thomas J.; Waller, Donald M.'
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13429
ISSN: 1365-2486
Issue: 3
Journal: Global Change Biology
Keywords: climate analog; forest understory; functional traits; geographic centroid; migratory lag
Pages: 1305-1315
Title: Tracking lags in historical plant species’ shifts in relation to regional climate change
Volume: 23
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21187
_uuid: a307878c-a79f-4dec-9435-e81f75676634
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1111/gcb.13429
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a307878c-a79f-4dec-9435-e81f75676634.yaml
identifier: a307878c-a79f-4dec-9435-e81f75676634
uri: /reference/a307878c-a79f-4dec-9435-e81f75676634
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Ducks Unlimited,'
Institution: Ducks Unlimited Great Lakes/Atlantic Region
Pages: 2
Place Published: 'Ann Arbor, MI'
Title: Missouri state conservation report
URL: http://www.ducks.org/missouri/missouri-conservation-projects
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21301
_uuid: a373ebb7-290f-4513-8719-2d0a7005d9c3
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/missouri-state-conservation-report
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a373ebb7-290f-4513-8719-2d0a7005d9c3.yaml
identifier: a373ebb7-290f-4513-8719-2d0a7005d9c3
uri: /reference/a373ebb7-290f-4513-8719-2d0a7005d9c3
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Author: "Hellmann, Jessica J.\rByers, James E.\rBierwagen, Britta G.\rDukes, Jeffrey S."
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.00951.x
ISSN: 1523-1739
Issue: 3
Journal: Conservation Biology
Keywords: Climate change
Pages: 534-543
Title: Five potential consequences of climate change for invasive species
URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.00951.x/pdf
Volume: 22
Year: 2008
_chapter: '["RG 3 Midwest","Ch. 17: Southeast and Caribbean FINAL","Ch. 18: Midwest FINAL"]'
_record_number: 705
_uuid: a3f38823-1fa8-4f49-bc35-9f76c724230e
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2008.00951.x
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a3f38823-1fa8-4f49-bc35-9f76c724230e.yaml
identifier: a3f38823-1fa8-4f49-bc35-9f76c724230e
uri: /reference/a3f38823-1fa8-4f49-bc35-9f76c724230e
- attrs:
Author: 'Tobin, Patrick C.; Nagarkatti, Sudha; Loeb, Greg; Saunders, Michael C.'
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01561.x
ISSN: 1365-2486
Issue: 5
Journal: Global Change Biology
Keywords: climate change; diapause; insect population dynamics; phenology; photoperiod; seasonality; voltinism
Pages: 951-957
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Title: Historical and projected interactions between climate change and insect voltinism in a multivoltine species
Volume: 14
Year: 2008
_record_number: 21190
_uuid: a61ed579-9beb-448b-8d50-75790c8204bf
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01561.x
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a61ed579-9beb-448b-8d50-75790c8204bf.yaml
identifier: a61ed579-9beb-448b-8d50-75790c8204bf
uri: /reference/a61ed579-9beb-448b-8d50-75790c8204bf
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Heat and drought are two emerging climatic threats to the US maize and soybean production, yet their impacts on yields are collectively determined by the magnitude of climate change and rising atmospheric CO2 concentrations. This study quantifies the combined and separate impacts of high temperature, heat and drought stresses on the current and future US rainfed maize and soybean production and for the first time characterizes spatial shifts in the relative importance of individual stress. Crop yields are simulated using the Agricultural Production Systems Simulator (APSIM), driven by high-resolution (12 km) dynamically downscaled climate projections for 1995–2004 and 2085–2094. Results show that maize and soybean yield losses are prominent in the US Midwest by the late 21st century under both Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP) 4.5 and RCP8.5 scenarios, and the magnitude of loss highly depends on the current vulnerability and changes in climate extremes. Elevated atmospheric CO2 partially but not completely offsets the yield gaps caused by climate extremes, and the effect is greater in soybean than in maize. Our simulations suggest that drought will continue to be the largest threat to US rainfed maize production under RCP4.5 and soybean production under both RCP scenarios, whereas high temperature and heat stress take over the dominant stress of drought on maize under RCP8.5. We also reveal that shifts in the geographic distributions of dominant stresses are characterized by the increase in concurrent stresses, especially for the US Midwest. These findings imply the importance of considering heat and drought stresses simultaneously for future agronomic adaptation and mitigation strategies, particularly for breeding programs and crop management. The modeling framework of partitioning the total effects of climate change into individual stress impacts can be applied to the study of other crops and agriculture systems.'
Author: 'Jin, Zhenong; Zhuang, Qianlai; Wang, Jiali; Archontoulis, Sotirios V.; Zobel, Zachary; Kotamarthi, Veerabhadra R.'
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13617
Issue: 7
Journal: Global Change Biology
Pages: 2687-2704
Title: The combined and separate impacts of climate extremes on the current and future U.S. rainfed maize and soybean production under elevated CO2
Volume: 23
Year: 2017
_record_number: 26583
_uuid: a7956e52-8365-4308-9465-fb0eaa3075f6
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1111/gcb.13617
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a7956e52-8365-4308-9465-fb0eaa3075f6.yaml
identifier: a7956e52-8365-4308-9465-fb0eaa3075f6
uri: /reference/a7956e52-8365-4308-9465-fb0eaa3075f6
- attrs:
Author: 'Hanrahan, Janel L.; Kravtsov, Sergey V.; Roebber, Paul J.'
DOI: 10.1029/2009GL041707
ISSN: 1944-8007
Issue: 1
Journal: Geophysical Research Letters
Keywords: 'Great Lakes; water levels; climate variability; 1616 Climate variability; 1630 Impacts of global change; 1807 Climate impacts; 1803 Anthropogenic effects; 9345 Geographic Location: Large bodies of water (e.g., lakes and inland seas)'
Pages: L01701
Title: Connecting past and present climate variability to the water levels of Lakes Michigan and Huron
Volume: 37
Year: 2010
_record_number: 21155
_uuid: a9e10150-ec9c-47b9-838f-655a4b838703
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1029/2009GL041707
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/a9e10150-ec9c-47b9-838f-655a4b838703.yaml
identifier: a9e10150-ec9c-47b9-838f-655a4b838703
uri: /reference/a9e10150-ec9c-47b9-838f-655a4b838703
- attrs:
Author: 'Criss, Robert E.; William E. Winston'
DOI: 10.1289/ehp.12042
Issue: 12
Journal: Environmental Health Perspectives
Pages: A516-A516
Title: Public safety and faulty flood statistics
Volume: 116
Year: 2008
_record_number: 26564
_uuid: aa980625-eab7-45f5-9bcb-d8dbbd36e6c7
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1289/ehp.12042
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/aa980625-eab7-45f5-9bcb-d8dbbd36e6c7.yaml
identifier: aa980625-eab7-45f5-9bcb-d8dbbd36e6c7
uri: /reference/aa980625-eab7-45f5-9bcb-d8dbbd36e6c7
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Abstract: 'Large changes in runoff in the north-central United States have occurred during the past century, with larger floods and increases in runoff tending to occur from the 1970s to the present. The attribution of these changes is a subject of much interest. Long-term precipitation, temperature, and streamflow records were used to compare changes in precipitation and potential evapotranspiration (PET) to changes in runoff within 25 stream basins. The basins studied were organized into four groups, each one representing basins similar in topography, climate, and historic patterns of runoff. Precipitation, PET, and runoff data were adjusted for near-decadal scale variability to examine longer-term changes. A nonlinear water-balance analysis shows that changes in precipitation and PET explain the majority of multidecadal spatial/temporal variability of runoff and flood magnitudes, with precipitation being the dominant driver. Historical changes in climate and runoff in the region appear to be more consistent with complex transient shifts in seasonal climatic conditions than with gradual climate change. A portion of the unexplained variability likely stems from land-use change.'
Author: Karen R. Ryberg; Wei Lin; Aldo V. Vecchia
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)HE.1943-5584.0000775
Issue: 1
Journal: Journal of Hydrologic Engineering
Pages: 148-158
Title: Impact of climate variability on runoff in the north-central United States
Volume: 19
Year: 2014
_record_number: 20935
_uuid: ab5a35f8-2e28-4dd1-ba18-ded6a6d4c710
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1061/(ASCE)HE.1943-5584.0000775
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ab5a35f8-2e28-4dd1-ba18-ded6a6d4c710.yaml
identifier: ab5a35f8-2e28-4dd1-ba18-ded6a6d4c710
uri: /reference/ab5a35f8-2e28-4dd1-ba18-ded6a6d4c710
- attrs:
Academic Department: Natural Resources and Environment
Advisor: Maria Carmen Lemos
Author: 'Barclay, Pamela; Bastoni, Cara; Eisenhauer, David; Hassan, Masooma; Lopez, Melody; Mekias, Leila; Ramachandran, Sundeep; Stock, Ryan'
Degree: M.Sc. project
Number of Pages: 99
Place Published: 'Ann Arbor, MI'
Title: Climate Change Adaptation in Great Lakes Cities
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/97435
University: University of Michigan
Year: 2013
_record_number: 25926
_uuid: aba9434d-2e5d-4ac7-b3fa-d5cc4eb43b58
reftype: Thesis
child_publication: /generic/485e261a-5aae-45b5-a826-5b7f912b1fc5
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/aba9434d-2e5d-4ac7-b3fa-d5cc4eb43b58.yaml
identifier: aba9434d-2e5d-4ac7-b3fa-d5cc4eb43b58
uri: /reference/aba9434d-2e5d-4ac7-b3fa-d5cc4eb43b58
- attrs:
Author: 'Zhong, Yafang; Notaro, Michael; Vavrus, Stephen J.; Foster, Michael J.'
DOI: 10.1002/lno.10331
ISSN: 1939-5590
Issue: 5
Journal: Limnology and Oceanography
Pages: 1762-1786
Title: 'Recent accelerated warming of the Laurentian Great Lakes: Physical drivers'
Volume: 61
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21110
_uuid: abc62f90-c586-4ed8-bb13-4f387a2eb9b0
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1002/lno.10331
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/abc62f90-c586-4ed8-bb13-4f387a2eb9b0.yaml
identifier: abc62f90-c586-4ed8-bb13-4f387a2eb9b0
uri: /reference/abc62f90-c586-4ed8-bb13-4f387a2eb9b0
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning (CMAP),'
Institution: CMAP
Place Published: 'Chicago, IL'
Title: Climate Adaptation Guidebook for Municipalities in the Chicago Region
URL: http://www.cmap.illinois.gov/documents/10180/14136/FY13-0119%20Climate%20Adaptation%20toolkit.pdf/fa5e3867-8278-4867-841a-aad4e090847a
Year: 2013
_record_number: 21298
_uuid: ac04db1a-16ad-4ca0-91c1-b08a981eec1c
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/climate-adaptation-guidebook-municipalities-chicago-region
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ac04db1a-16ad-4ca0-91c1-b08a981eec1c.yaml
identifier: ac04db1a-16ad-4ca0-91c1-b08a981eec1c
uri: /reference/ac04db1a-16ad-4ca0-91c1-b08a981eec1c
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Ecosystem stability in variable environments depends on the diversity of form and function of the constituent species. Species phenotypes and ecologies are the product of evolution, and the evolutionary history represented by co-occurring species has been shown to be an important predictor of ecosystem function. If phylogenetic distance is a surrogate for ecological differences, then greater evolutionary diversity should buffer ecosystems against environmental variation and result in greater ecosystem stability. We calculated both abundance-weighted and unweighted phylogenetic measures of plant community diversity for a long-term biodiversity–ecosystem function experiment at Cedar Creek, Minnesota, USA. We calculated a detrended measure of stability in aboveground biomass production in experimental plots and showed that phylogenetic relatedness explained variation in stability. Our results indicate that communities where species are evenly and distantly related to one another are more stable compared to communities where phylogenetic relationships are more clumped. This result could be explained by a phylogenetic sampling effect, where some lineages show greater stability in productivity compared to other lineages, and greater evolutionary distances reduce the chance of sampling only unstable groups. However, we failed to find evidence for similar stabilities among closely related species. Alternatively, we found evidence that plot biomass variance declined with increasing phylogenetic distances, and greater evolutionary distances may represent species that are ecologically different (phylogenetic complementarity). Accounting for evolutionary relationships can reveal how diversity in form and function may affect stability.'
Author: 'Cadotte, Marc W.; Dinnage, Russell; Tilman, David'
DOI: 10.1890/11-0426.1
Issue: sp8
Journal: Ecology
Pages: S223-S233
Title: Phylogenetic diversity promotes ecosystem stability
Volume: 93
Year: 2012
_record_number: 25925
_uuid: ace4e686-cb47-4b0e-ab8f-3f57bc6e7795
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1890/11-0426.1
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ace4e686-cb47-4b0e-ab8f-3f57bc6e7795.yaml
identifier: ace4e686-cb47-4b0e-ab8f-3f57bc6e7795
uri: /reference/ace4e686-cb47-4b0e-ab8f-3f57bc6e7795
- attrs:
Author: 'Dey, K. C.; A. Mishra; M. Chowdhury'
DOI: 10.1109/TITS.2014.2371455
ISSN: 1524-9050
Issue: 3
Journal: IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems
Keywords: innovation management; intelligent transportation systems; mobile computing; roads; socio-economic effects; weather forecasting; ITS innovations; ITS-based initiatives; RWIS; adverse weather conditions; adverse weather impacts; governmental weather services; mobile road weather data collection; proactive maintenance activities; reactive maintenance activities; road mobility; road weather events; road weather forecasting techniques; road weather information system; route-specific road weather conditions; society economic output; surface transportation system; system-wide deployments; Computer crashes; Maintenance engineering; Snow; Climate change; connected vehicles; extreme weather events; intelligent transportation systems (ITS); road weather; winter road maintenance
Pages: 1107-1119
Title: 'Potential of intelligent transportation systems in mitigating adverse weather impacts on road mobility: A review'
Volume: 16
Year: 2015
_record_number: 21183
_uuid: ad1de932-cd23-42a8-8c6f-e0039db9b17d
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1109/TITS.2014.2371455
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ad1de932-cd23-42a8-8c6f-e0039db9b17d.yaml
identifier: ad1de932-cd23-42a8-8c6f-e0039db9b17d
uri: /reference/ad1de932-cd23-42a8-8c6f-e0039db9b17d
- attrs:
Author: 'Sekaluvu, Lawrence; Zhang, Lefei; Gitau, Margaret'
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.09.063
Date: 2018/01/01/
ISSN: 0301-4797
Journal: Journal of Environmental Management
Keywords: Water quality; Total Phosphorus; Soluble Reactive Phosphorus; Western Lake Erie Basin; Precipitation; Land management
Pages: 85-98
Title: Evaluation of constraints to water quality improvements in the Western Lake Erie Basin
Volume: 205
Year: 2018
_record_number: 26608
_uuid: ad473f6f-2580-4a70-aba7-699277024c20
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jenvman.2017.09.063
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ad473f6f-2580-4a70-aba7-699277024c20.yaml
identifier: ad473f6f-2580-4a70-aba7-699277024c20
uri: /reference/ad473f6f-2580-4a70-aba7-699277024c20
- attrs:
Author: 'Mishra, Vimal; Cherkauer, Keith A.; Niyogi, Dev; Lei, Ming; Pijanowski, Bryan C.; Ray, Deepak K.; Bowling, Laura C.; Yang, Guoxiang'
DOI: 10.1002/joc.2095
ISSN: 1097-0088
Issue: 13
Journal: International Journal of Climatology
Keywords: Land cover change; land-use change; climate change; land surface response; sensitivity analysis; water and energy cycle; deforestation/reforestation; urbanization; VIC; IPCC
Pages: 2025-2044
Publisher: 'John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.'
Title: A regional scale assessment of land use/land cover and climatic changes on water and energy cycle in the upper Midwest United States
Volume: 30
Year: 2010
_record_number: 21109
_uuid: aea68228-a48b-4827-9403-3c43499afc55
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1002/joc.2095
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/aea68228-a48b-4827-9403-3c43499afc55.yaml
identifier: aea68228-a48b-4827-9403-3c43499afc55
uri: /reference/aea68228-a48b-4827-9403-3c43499afc55
- attrs:
.reference_type: 7
Author: 'Peterson, Kristina; Maldonado, Julie Koppel'
Book Title: 'Anthropology and Climate Change: From Encounters to Actions'
Edition: 2nd
Editor: 'Crate, Susan A.; Nuttall, Mark'
ISBN: "978-1629580012\r1629580015 "
Pages: 336-353
Place Published: 'New York, NY'
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Title: 'When adaptation is not enough: “Between now and then” of community-led resettlement'
Year: 2016
_record_number: 26605
_uuid: aeb9b543-7b7d-48e7-b1a6-57de7bff663c
reftype: Book Section
child_publication: /book/b8b89670-ca60-4597-943f-d5d48dcdcc27
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/aeb9b543-7b7d-48e7-b1a6-57de7bff663c.yaml
identifier: aeb9b543-7b7d-48e7-b1a6-57de7bff663c
uri: /reference/aeb9b543-7b7d-48e7-b1a6-57de7bff663c
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Abstract: 'Heat is an environmental and occupational hazard. The prevention of deaths in the community caused by extreme high temperatures (heat waves) is now an issue of public health concern. The risk of heat-related mortality increases with natural aging, but persons with particular social and/or physical vulnerability are also at risk. lmportant differences in vulnerability exist between populations, depending on climate, culture, infrastructure (housing), and other factors. Public health measures include health promotion and heat wave warning systems, but the effectiveness of acute measures in response to heat waves has not yet been formally evaluated. Climate change will increase the frequency and the intensity of heat waves, and a range of measures, including improvements to housing, management of chronic diseases, and institutional care of the elderly and the vulnerable, will need to be developed to reduce health impacts.'
Accession Number: ISI:000255349400007
Alternate Journal: Annu Rev Publ Health
Author: "Kovats, R. S.\rHajat, S."
Author Address: 'Kovats, RS; London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, PEHRU, London WC1E 7HT, England; London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, PEHRU, London WC1E 7HT, England; London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, PEHRU, London WC1E 7HT, England'
DOI: 10.1146/annurev.publhealth.29.020907.090843
ISSN: 0163-7525
Journal: Annual Review of Public Health
Keywords: heat waves; early warning; mortality; august 2003; air-pollution; hospital admissions; united-states; excess mortality; elderly-people; french cities; risk-factors; hot weather; series data
Language: English
Notes: 293QI; Times Cited:67; Cited References Count:100; Annual Review of Public Health
Pages: 41-55
Title: 'Heat stress and public health: A critical review'
Volume: 29
Year: 2008
_chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","Ch. 17: Southeast and Caribbean FINAL"]'
_record_number: 831
_uuid: b00a1349-fb5f-4e2d-b1bc-cfceb0863de2
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1146/annurev.publhealth.29.020907.090843
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b00a1349-fb5f-4e2d-b1bc-cfceb0863de2.yaml
identifier: b00a1349-fb5f-4e2d-b1bc-cfceb0863de2
uri: /reference/b00a1349-fb5f-4e2d-b1bc-cfceb0863de2
- attrs:
.reference_type: 63
Author: 'City of Chicago,'
Place Published: 'Chicago, IL'
Publisher: City of Chicago Department of Transportation
Title: City Unveils “Greenest Street in America” in Pilsen Neighborhood
URL: https://www.cityofchicago.org/city/en/depts/cdot/provdrs/conservation_outreachgreenprograms/news/2012/oct/cdot_opens_the_pilsensustainablestreet.html
Year: 2012
_record_number: 21297
_uuid: b0449e10-e122-4c04-a967-f2aef8b905b8
reftype: Press Release
child_publication: /generic/c8b9985b-7191-45dd-8d2f-b5e74c2e37f9
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b0449e10-e122-4c04-a967-f2aef8b905b8.yaml
identifier: b0449e10-e122-4c04-a967-f2aef8b905b8
uri: /reference/b0449e10-e122-4c04-a967-f2aef8b905b8
- attrs:
Author: 'Pearson, Richard G.; Stanton, Jessica C.; Shoemaker, Kevin T.; Aiello-Lammens, Matthew E.; Ersts, Peter J.; Horning, Ned; Fordham, Damien A.; Raxworthy, Christopher J.; Ryu, Hae Yeong; McNees, Jason; Akcakaya, H. Resit'
DOI: 10.1038/nclimate2113
Date: 03//print
ISSN: 1758-678X
Issue: 3
Journal: Nature Climate Change
Pages: 217-221
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Title: Life history and spatial traits predict extinction risk due to climate change
Type of Article: Letter
Volume: 4
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21158
_uuid: b0d94572-aa34-47e0-bddf-0a8e7e0c60bb
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1038/nclimate2113
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b0d94572-aa34-47e0-bddf-0a8e7e0c60bb.yaml
identifier: b0d94572-aa34-47e0-bddf-0a8e7e0c60bb
uri: /reference/b0d94572-aa34-47e0-bddf-0a8e7e0c60bb
- attrs:
.reference_type: 9
Editor: 'Pryor, S.C.'
ISBN: 978-0-253-00682-0
Number of Pages: 288
Place Published: 'Bloomington, IN'
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Title: 'Climate Change in the Midwest: Impacts, Risks, Vulnerability and Adaptation'
Year: 2013
_chapter: '["Ch. 18: Midwest FINAL"]'
_record_number: 2544
_uuid: b228ac0d-7bf9-4391-99e7-5c598b9ce55e
reftype: Edited Book
child_publication: /book/434135ed-eb50-4c46-9484-77563769e657
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b228ac0d-7bf9-4391-99e7-5c598b9ce55e.yaml
identifier: b228ac0d-7bf9-4391-99e7-5c598b9ce55e
uri: /reference/b228ac0d-7bf9-4391-99e7-5c598b9ce55e
- attrs:
Author: 'Fisichelli, Nicholas A.; Abella, Scott R.; Peters, Matthew; Krist, Frank J.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2014.04.033
Date: 2014/09/01/
ISSN: 0378-1127
Journal: Forest Ecology and Management
Keywords: Climate change adaptation; Eastern United States; Forest health; Nonnative species; Vulnerability Assessment
Pages: 31-39
Title: 'Climate, trees, pests, and weeds: Change, uncertainty, and biotic stressors in eastern U.S. national park forests'
Volume: 327
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21137
_uuid: b318487a-1070-4ea1-8fb7-a80c61f5f9f6
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.foreco.2014.04.033
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b318487a-1070-4ea1-8fb7-a80c61f5f9f6.yaml
identifier: b318487a-1070-4ea1-8fb7-a80c61f5f9f6
uri: /reference/b318487a-1070-4ea1-8fb7-a80c61f5f9f6
- attrs:
Author: 'Bebber, Daniel P.; Ramotowski, Mark A. T.; Gurr, Sarah J.'
DOI: 10.1038/nclimate1990
Date: 11//print
ISSN: 1758-678X
Issue: 11
Journal: Nature Climate Change
Pages: 985-988
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Title: Crop pests and pathogens move polewards in a warming world
Type of Article: Letter
Volume: 3
Year: 2013
_record_number: 21157
_uuid: b3855765-38da-4fd9-8288-874a43b16607
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1038/nclimate1990
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b3855765-38da-4fd9-8288-874a43b16607.yaml
identifier: b3855765-38da-4fd9-8288-874a43b16607
uri: /reference/b3855765-38da-4fd9-8288-874a43b16607
- attrs:
Author: 'Sturrock, R. N.; Frankel, S. J.; Brown, A. V.; Hennon, P. E.; Kliejunas, J. T.; Lewis, K. J.; Worrall, J. J.; Woods, A. J.'
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3059.2010.02406.x
ISSN: 1365-3059
Issue: 1
Journal: Plant Pathology
Keywords: forest management; forest pathogens; plant disease management; plant pathogens; sudden aspen decline; yellow-cedar decline
Pages: 133-149
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Title: Climate change and forest diseases
Volume: 60
Year: 2011
_record_number: 21191
_uuid: b3ba546e-9bbf-47c2-a9da-3ddc4252561c
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1365-3059.2010.02406.x
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b3ba546e-9bbf-47c2-a9da-3ddc4252561c.yaml
identifier: b3ba546e-9bbf-47c2-a9da-3ddc4252561c
uri: /reference/b3ba546e-9bbf-47c2-a9da-3ddc4252561c
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Climate change can have profound impacts on biodiversity and the sustainability of many ecosystems. Various studies have investigated the impacts of climate change, but large-scale, trait-specific impacts are less understood. We analyze abundance data over time for 86 tree species/groups across the eastern United States spanning the last three decades. We show that more tree species have experienced a westward shift (73%) than a poleward shift (62%) in their abundance, a trend that is stronger for saplings than adult trees. The observed shifts are primarily due to the changes of subpopulation abundances in the leading edges and are significantly associated with changes in moisture availability and successional processes. These spatial shifts are associated with species that have similar traits (drought tolerance, wood density, and seed weight) and evolutionary histories (most angiosperms shifted westward and most gymnosperms shifted poleward). Our results indicate that changes in moisture availability have stronger near-term impacts on vegetation dynamics than changes in temperature. The divergent responses to climate change by trait- and phylogenetic-specific groups could lead to changes in composition of forest ecosystems, putting the resilience and sustainability of various forest ecosystems in question.'
Author: 'Fei, Songlin; Desprez, Johanna M.; Potter, Kevin M.; Jo, Insu; Knott, Jonathan A.; Oswalt, Christopher M.'
DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1603055
Issue: 5
Journal: Science Advances
Pages: e1603055
Title: Divergence of species responses to climate change
Volume: 3
Year: 2017
_record_number: 25153
_uuid: b476f1c4-a2d2-4944-951d-52a0f2fd90cf
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1126/sciadv.1603055
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b476f1c4-a2d2-4944-951d-52a0f2fd90cf.yaml
identifier: b476f1c4-a2d2-4944-951d-52a0f2fd90cf
uri: /reference/b476f1c4-a2d2-4944-951d-52a0f2fd90cf
- attrs:
Author: 'Ma, Wu; Liang, Jingjing; Cumming, Jonathan R.; Lee, Eungul; Welsh, Amy B.; Watson, James V.; Zhou, Mo'
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2016.03.021
Date: 7/24/
ISSN: 0304-3800
Journal: Ecological Modelling
Keywords: Climate change; Fire regime; Matrix growth model; Forest dynamics; Monte Carlo simulations; Appalachians
Pages: 28-41
Title: Fundamental shifts of central hardwood forests under climate change
Volume: 332
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21132
_uuid: b4bcfb86-ffa2-4d7c-9a26-2927804b09a0
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2016.03.021
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b4bcfb86-ffa2-4d7c-9a26-2927804b09a0.yaml
identifier: b4bcfb86-ffa2-4d7c-9a26-2927804b09a0
uri: /reference/b4bcfb86-ffa2-4d7c-9a26-2927804b09a0
- attrs:
.reference_type: 7
Author: 'Mitsch, William J.; James G. Gosselink'
Book Title: Wetlands
Edition: 5th
ISBN: 978-1-118-67682-0
Pages: 701-702
Place Published: 'Hoboken, NJ'
Publisher: Wiley
Title: 'Appendix A. Wetland losses by state in the United States, 1780s–1980s'
Year: 2015
_record_number: 21280
_uuid: b4bf88f4-7c83-4330-8721-28e3393f1e2b
reftype: Book Section
child_publication: /book/cf0907c5-00bf-4990-b713-870c93b057e8
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b4bf88f4-7c83-4330-8721-28e3393f1e2b.yaml
identifier: b4bf88f4-7c83-4330-8721-28e3393f1e2b
uri: /reference/b4bf88f4-7c83-4330-8721-28e3393f1e2b
- attrs:
.publisher: AGU
.reference_type: 0
Abstract: 'Lake Superior summer (July-September) surface water temperatures have increased approximately 2.5°C over the interval 1979-2006, equivalent to a rate of (11 ± 6) × 10^-2°C yr^-1, significantly in excess of regional atmospheric warming. This discrepancy is caused by declining winter ice cover, which is causing the onset of the positively stratified season to occur earlier at a rate of roughly a half day per year. An earlier start of the stratified season significantly increases the period over which the lake warms during the summer months, leading to a stronger trend in mean summer temperatures than would be expected from changes in summer air temperature alone.'
Author: "Austin, Jay A.\rColman, Steven M."
DOI: 10.1029/2006GL029021
ISSN: 0094-8276
Issue: 6
Journal: Geophysical Research Letters
Keywords: 'Lake Superior; climate change; ice; 0746 Cryosphere: Lakes; 1630 Global Change: Impacts of global change; 1637 Global Change: Regional climate change; 1845 Hydrology: Limnology; 4239 Oceanography: General: Limnology'
Pages: L06604
Title: 'Lake Superior summer water temperatures are increasing more rapidly than regional air temperatures: A positive ice-albedo feedback'
URL: http://www.cee.mtu.edu/~reh/papers/pubs/non_Honrath/austin07_2006GL029021.pdf
Volume: 34
Year: 2007
_chapter: '["Ch. 18: Midwest FINAL"]'
_record_number: 1026
_uuid: b63bd0c7-4a60-4486-86b1-94a8b86b32da
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1029/2006GL029021
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b63bd0c7-4a60-4486-86b1-94a8b86b32da.yaml
identifier: b63bd0c7-4a60-4486-86b1-94a8b86b32da
uri: /reference/b63bd0c7-4a60-4486-86b1-94a8b86b32da
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'National Agricultural Statistics Service,'
Document Number: Special Studies Part 1
Institution: U.S. Department of Agriculture
Pages: 249
Series Volume: AC-12-SS-1
Title: '2012 Census of Agriculture: 2013 Farm and Ranch Irrigation Survey'
URL: https://www.agcensus.usda.gov/Publications/2012/Online_Resources/Farm_and_Ranch_Irrigation_Survey/
Volume: 3
Year: 2014
_record_number: 22641
_uuid: b6fa03e3-c8b5-448b-929a-e187bc520a5e
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/2012-census-agriculture-2013-farm-ranch-irrigation-survey
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b6fa03e3-c8b5-448b-929a-e187bc520a5e.yaml
identifier: b6fa03e3-c8b5-448b-929a-e187bc520a5e
uri: /reference/b6fa03e3-c8b5-448b-929a-e187bc520a5e
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Larsen, Angela; Derby Lewis, Abigail; Lyandres, Olga; Chen, Tingqiao; Frank, Ken'
Institution: Great Lakes Integrated Sciences + Assessments (GLISA)
Pages: 18
Title: Developing a Community of Climate‐Informed Conservation Practitioners to Protect a Priority Landscape in Illinois and Wisconsin
URL: http://glisa.umich.edu/media/files/projectreports/GLISA_ProjRep_ILWI_Ravines.pdf
Year: 2013
_record_number: 21283
_uuid: b71cbf27-2a1d-477e-9d0a-4d49b427ed47
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/developing-community-climateinformed-conservation-practitioners-protect-priority-landscape-illinois-wisconsin
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uri: /reference/b71cbf27-2a1d-477e-9d0a-4d49b427ed47
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'EPA,'
Institution: 'U.S. EPA, Office of Water'
Pages: 120
Place Published: 'Washington, DC'
Title: 'Being Prepared for Climate Change: A Workbook for Developing Risk-Based Adaptation Plans'
URL: https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2014-09/documents/being_prepared_workbook_508.pdf
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21322
_uuid: b74c5cc9-2e40-4ad9-92aa-f2b02c7a4be7
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/being-prepared-climate-change-workbook-developing-risk-based-adaptation-plans
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identifier: b74c5cc9-2e40-4ad9-92aa-f2b02c7a4be7
uri: /reference/b74c5cc9-2e40-4ad9-92aa-f2b02c7a4be7
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Janowiak, Maria K.; Iverson, Louis R.; Mladenoff, David J.; Peters, Emily; Wythers, Kirk R.; Xi, Weimin; Brandt, Leslie A.; Butler, Patricia R.; Handler, Stephen D.; Shannon, P. Danielle; Swanston, Chris; Parker, Linda R.; Amman, Amy J.; Bogaczyk, Brian; Handler, Christine; Lesch, Ellen; Reich, Peter B.; Matthews, Stephen; Peters, Matthew; Prasad, Anantha; Khanal, Sami; Liu, Feng; Bal, Tara; Bronson, Dustin; Burton, Andrew; Ferris, Jim; Fosgitt, Jon; Hagan, Shawn; Johnston, Erin; Kane, Evan; Matula, Colleen; O’Connor, Ryan; Higgins, Dale; St. Pierre, Matt; Daley, Jad; Davenport, Mae; Emery, Marla R.; Fehringer, David; Hoving, Christopher L.; Johnson, Gary; Neitzel, David; Notaro, Michael; Rissman, Adena; Rittenhouse, Chadwick; Ziel, Robert'
Institution: 'U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Northern Research Station'
Pages: 247
Place Published: 'Newtown Square, PA'
Series Volume: Gen. Tech. Rep. NRS-136
Title: 'Forest Ecosystem Vulnerability Assessment and Synthesis for Northern Wisconsin and Western Upper Michigan: A Report from the Northwoods Climate Change Response Framework Project'
URL: https://www.fs.fed.us/nrs/pubs/gtr/gtr_nrs136.pdf
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21270
_uuid: b76e2693-17a0-4075-b40f-6440a89d7040
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/forest-ecosystem-vulnerability-assessment-synthesis-northern-wisconsin-western-upper-michigan-report-northwoods-climate-change-response-framework-project
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uri: /reference/b76e2693-17a0-4075-b40f-6440a89d7040
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.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Leard, Benjamin; Roth, Kevin'
Institution: 'Resources for the Future '
Place Published: Washington DC
Series Title: RFF Discussion Paper
Series Volume: RFF DP 15-19-REV
Title: 'Weather, Traffic Accidents and Exposure to Climate Change'
URL: http://www.rff.org/files/document/file/RFF-DP-15-19-REV.pdf
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21306
_uuid: b7f0265c-22da-4277-8656-6cfa9b404e60
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/weather-traffic-accidents-exposure-climate-change
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b7f0265c-22da-4277-8656-6cfa9b404e60.yaml
identifier: b7f0265c-22da-4277-8656-6cfa9b404e60
uri: /reference/b7f0265c-22da-4277-8656-6cfa9b404e60
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Pollinator conservation is of increasing interest in the light of managed honeybee (Apis mellifera) declines, and declines in some species of wild bees. Much work has gone into understanding the effects of habitat enhancements in agricultural systems on wild bee abundance, richness and pollination services. However, the effects of ecological restoration targeting “natural” ecological endpoints (e.g. restoring former agricultural fields to historic vegetation types or improving degraded natural lands) on wild bees have received relatively little attention, despite their potential importance for countering habitat loss. We conducted a meta-analysis to evaluate the effects of ecological restoration on wild bee abundance and richness, focusing on unmanaged bee communities in lands restored and managed to increase habitat availability and quality. Specifically, we assessed bee abundance and/or richness across studies comparing restored vs. unrestored treatments and studies investigating effects of specific habitat restoration techniques, such as burning, grazing, invasive plant removal and seeding. We analysed 28 studies that met our selection criteria: these represented 11 habitat types and 7 restoration techniques. Nearly all restorations associated with these studies were performed without explicit consideration of habitat needs for bees or other pollinators. The majority of restorations targeted plant community goals, which could potentially have ancillary benefits for bees. Restoration had overall positive effects on wild bee abundance and richness across multiple habitat types. Specific restoration actions, tested independently, also tended to have positive effects on wild bee richness and abundance. Synthesis and applications. We found strong evidence that ecological restoration advances wild bee conservation. This is important given that habitat loss is recognized as a leading factor in pollinator decline. Pollinator responses to land management are rarely evaluated in non-agricultural settings and so support for wild bees may be an underappreciated benefit of botanically focused management. Future restoration projects that explicitly consider the needs of wild bees could be more effective at providing nesting, foraging and other habitat resources. We encourage land managers to design and evaluate restoration projects with the habitat needs of wild bee species in mind.'
Author: 'Tonietto, Rebecca K.; Larkin, Daniel J.'
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13012
Issue: 2
Journal: Journal of Applied Ecology
Pages: 582-590
Title: 'Habitat restoration benefits wild bees: A meta-analysis'
Volume: 55
Year: 2018
_record_number: 26616
_uuid: b892e61c-be2f-48a9-8033-6a0e1c1f0c7e
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1111/1365-2664.13012
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b892e61c-be2f-48a9-8033-6a0e1c1f0c7e.yaml
identifier: b892e61c-be2f-48a9-8033-6a0e1c1f0c7e
uri: /reference/b892e61c-be2f-48a9-8033-6a0e1c1f0c7e
- attrs:
Abstract: 'The influence of the Laurentian Great Lakes on climate is assessed by comparing two decade-long simulations, with the lakes either included or excluded, using the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics Regional Climate Model, version 4. The Great Lakes dampen the variability in near-surface air temperature across the surrounding region while reducing the amplitude of the diurnal cycle and annual cycle of air temperature. The impacts of the Great Lakes on the regional surface energy budget include an increase (decrease) in turbulent fluxes during the cold (warm) season and an increase in surface downward shortwave radiation flux during summer due to diminished atmospheric moisture and convective cloud amount. Changes in the hydrologic budget due to the presence of the Great Lakes include increases in evaporation and precipitation during October–March and decreases during May–August, along with springtime reductions in snowmelt-related runoff. Circulation responses consist of a regionwide decrease in sea level pressure in autumn–winter and an increase in summer, with enhanced ascent and descent in the two seasons, respectively. The most pronounced simulated impact of the Great Lakes on synoptic systems traversing the basin is a weakening of cold-season anticyclones.'
Author: 'Notaro, Michael; Kathleen Holman; Azar Zarrin; Elody Fluck; Steve Vavrus; Val Bennington'
DOI: 10.1175/jcli-d-12-00140.1
Issue: 3
Journal: Journal of Climate
Keywords: 'Lake effects,Regional effects,Climate models,Regional models'
Pages: 789-804
Title: Influence of the Laurentian Great Lakes on regional climate
Volume: 26
Year: 2013
_record_number: 21202
_uuid: b8ba5658-e796-487b-a474-289b4fabcbae
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1175/jcli-d-12-00140.1
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b8ba5658-e796-487b-a474-289b4fabcbae.yaml
identifier: b8ba5658-e796-487b-a474-289b4fabcbae
uri: /reference/b8ba5658-e796-487b-a474-289b4fabcbae
- attrs:
Author: 'Dierkes, Christina'
Issue Number: 4
Magazine: Weine Line
Pages: 3-5
Publisher: Ohio Sea Grant
Title: From farm fields to wetlands
URL: https://ohioseagrant.osu.edu/p/3un80
Volume: 34
Year: 2012
_record_number: 26603
_uuid: b9423491-30fe-4d8e-88cc-73b226121fc8
reftype: Magazine Article
child_publication: /generic/09b51e58-871d-4800-a60b-d4b7ed7d9bed
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/b9423491-30fe-4d8e-88cc-73b226121fc8.yaml
identifier: b9423491-30fe-4d8e-88cc-73b226121fc8
uri: /reference/b9423491-30fe-4d8e-88cc-73b226121fc8
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Access Date: 'May 24, 2017'
Author: 'Missouri Department of Transportation,'
Title: 'Traveler Information Report [web site]'
URL: http://traveler.modot.org/report/modottext.aspx?type=all#tag_flood_closed
Year: 2017
_record_number: 26695
_uuid: bb613b8d-1aae-425c-b4b5-5274d1460d42
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/f55e1d02-5bf8-4347-bd92-eef7ceafc197
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bb613b8d-1aae-425c-b4b5-5274d1460d42.yaml
identifier: bb613b8d-1aae-425c-b4b5-5274d1460d42
uri: /reference/bb613b8d-1aae-425c-b4b5-5274d1460d42
- attrs:
Author: 'Jiang, Liping; Fang, Xing; Stefan, Heinz G.; Jacobson, Peter C.; Pereira, Donald L.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.02.014
Date: 2012/05/10/
ISSN: 0304-3800
Journal: Ecological Modelling
Keywords: Cisco (); Climate; Climate change; Fish habitat; Lakes; Minnesota; Simulations; Water quality; Water temperature; Dissolved oxygen
Pages: 14-27
Title: Oxythermal habitat parameters and identifying cisco refuge lakes in Minnesota under future climate scenarios using variable benchmark periods
Volume: 232
Year: 2012
_record_number: 26581
_uuid: bc912c7d-4203-4ce7-9279-32ccb4dc442f
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.02.014
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bc912c7d-4203-4ce7-9279-32ccb4dc442f.yaml
identifier: bc912c7d-4203-4ce7-9279-32ccb4dc442f
uri: /reference/bc912c7d-4203-4ce7-9279-32ccb4dc442f
- attrs:
Author: 'Potts, Simon G.; Imperatriz-Fonseca, Vera; Ngo, Hien T.; Aizen, Marcelo A.; Biesmeijer, Jacobus C.; Breeze, Thomas D.; Dicks, Lynn V.; Garibaldi, Lucas A.; Hill, Rosemary; Settele, Josef; Vanbergen, Adam J.'
DOI: 10.1038/nature20588
Date: 11/28/online
Journal: Nature
Pages: 220-229
Publisher: 'Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved.'
Title: Safeguarding pollinators and their values to human well-being
Type of Article: Review Article
Volume: 540
Year: 2016
_record_number: 26604
_uuid: bdd0b60b-ed9c-438f-9085-41c5f4784469
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1038/nature20588
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bdd0b60b-ed9c-438f-9085-41c5f4784469.yaml
identifier: bdd0b60b-ed9c-438f-9085-41c5f4784469
uri: /reference/bdd0b60b-ed9c-438f-9085-41c5f4784469
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Author: 'USDA,'
Publisher: USDA National Resources Conversation Service
Title: 'Climate Change: Cover Crops and Soil Health'
URL: https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detail/national/climatechange/?cid=stelprdb1077238
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21261
_uuid: bfc8851e-e2bd-4514-9e60-c2531136005a
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/a54026c5-1489-4d9b-86aa-3cdf8602cf39
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bfc8851e-e2bd-4514-9e60-c2531136005a.yaml
identifier: bfc8851e-e2bd-4514-9e60-c2531136005a
uri: /reference/bfc8851e-e2bd-4514-9e60-c2531136005a
- attrs:
Author: 'Van Cleave, Katherine; Lenters, John D.; Wang, Jia; Verhamme, Edward M.'
DOI: 10.4319/lo.2014.59.6.1889
ISSN: 1939-5590
Issue: 6
Journal: Limnology and Oceanography
Pages: 1889-1898
Title: 'A regime shift in Lake Superior ice cover, evaporation, and water temperature following the warm El Niño winter of 1997–1998'
Volume: 59
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21233
_uuid: bfd419cb-1989-474e-8d04-1194ea3c8be1
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.4319/lo.2014.59.6.1889
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/bfd419cb-1989-474e-8d04-1194ea3c8be1.yaml
identifier: bfd419cb-1989-474e-8d04-1194ea3c8be1
uri: /reference/bfd419cb-1989-474e-8d04-1194ea3c8be1
- attrs:
Author: 'Forrest, Jessica R. K.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.cois.2016.07.002
Date: 2016/10/01/
ISSN: 2214-5745
Journal: Current Opinion in Insect Science
Pages: 49-54
Title: Complex responses of insect phenology to climate change
Volume: 17
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21126
_uuid: c043d4c1-f9e5-4cf0-96a6-8a4362d13adf
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.cois.2016.07.002
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c043d4c1-f9e5-4cf0-96a6-8a4362d13adf.yaml
identifier: c043d4c1-f9e5-4cf0-96a6-8a4362d13adf
uri: /reference/c043d4c1-f9e5-4cf0-96a6-8a4362d13adf
- attrs:
Author: 'Mao, Dazhi; Cherkauer, Keith A.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2009.06.016
Date: 2009/07/30/
ISSN: 0022-1694
Issue: 1
Journal: Journal of Hydrology
Keywords: Land-use change; Hydrologic responses; Evapotranspiration; Runoff
Pages: 71-82
Title: Impacts of land-use change on hydrologic responses in the Great Lakes region
Volume: 374
Year: 2009
_record_number: 21145
_uuid: c0c5ef70-facd-4076-ac8a-6834e7a17434
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2009.06.016
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c0c5ef70-facd-4076-ac8a-6834e7a17434.yaml
identifier: c0c5ef70-facd-4076-ac8a-6834e7a17434
uri: /reference/c0c5ef70-facd-4076-ac8a-6834e7a17434
- attrs:
Author: 'Conrad IV, Joseph L.; Demchik, Michael C.; Vokoun, Melinda M.; Evans, Alexander M.; Lynch, Michael P.'
DOI: 10.5849/forsci.2016-051
Journal: Forest Science
Title: "Foresters' perceptions of the frequency, cost, and rationale for seasonal timber harvesting restrictions in Wisconsin"
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21236
_uuid: c1836283-c202-4f8c-99e5-4de5e47ef2a9
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.5849/forsci.2016-051
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c1836283-c202-4f8c-99e5-4de5e47ef2a9.yaml
identifier: c1836283-c202-4f8c-99e5-4de5e47ef2a9
uri: /reference/c1836283-c202-4f8c-99e5-4de5e47ef2a9
- attrs:
Abstract: 'The sensitivity of agricultural productivity to climate has not been sufficiently quantified. The total factor productivity (TFP) of the US agricultural economy has grown continuously for over half a century, with most of the growth typically attributed to technical change. Many studies have examined the effects of local climate on partial productivity measures such as crop yields and economic returns, but these measures cannot account for national-level impacts. Quantifying the relationships between TFP and climate is critical to understanding whether current US agricultural productivity growth will continue into the future. We analyze correlations between regional climate variations and national TFP changes, identify key climate indices, and build a multivariate regression model predicting the growth of agricultural TFP based on a physical understanding of its historical relationship with climate. We show that temperature and precipitation in distinct agricultural regions and seasons explain ∼70% of variations in TFP growth during 1981–2010. To date, the aggregate effects of these regional climate trends on TFP have been outweighed by improvements in technology. Should these relationships continue, however, the projected climate changes could cause TFP to drop by an average 2.84 to 4.34% per year under medium to high emissions scenarios. As a result, TFP could fall to pre-1980 levels by 2050 even when accounting for present rates of innovation. Our analysis provides an empirical foundation for integrated assessment by linking regional climate effects to national economic outcomes, offering a more objective resource for policy making.'
Author: 'Liang, Xin-Zhong; Wu, You; Chambers, Robert G.; Schmoldt, Daniel L.; Gao, Wei; Liu, Chaoshun; Liu, Yan-An; Sun, Chao; Kennedy, Jennifer A.'
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1615922114
Date: 'March 21, 2017'
Issue: 12
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Pages: E2285-E2292
Title: Determining climate effects on US total agricultural productivity
Volume: 114
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21170
_uuid: c5857041-2594-47cf-a6bc-3fab052fa903
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1615922114
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c5857041-2594-47cf-a6bc-3fab052fa903.yaml
identifier: c5857041-2594-47cf-a6bc-3fab052fa903
uri: /reference/c5857041-2594-47cf-a6bc-3fab052fa903
- attrs:
Abstract: "Development of extension and outreach that effectively engage farmers in climate change adaptation and/or mitigation activities can be informed by an improved understanding of farmers' perspectives on climate change and related impacts. This research employed latent class analysis (LCA) to analyze data from a survey of 4,778 farmers from 11 US Corn Belt states. The research focused on two related research questions: (1) to what degree do farmers differ on key measures of beliefs about climate change, experience with extreme weather, perceived risks to agriculture, efficacy, and level of support for public and private adaptive and mitigative action; and (2) are there potential areas of common ground among farmers? Results indicate that farmers have highly heterogeneous perspectives, and six distinct classes of farmers are identified. We label these as the following: the concerned (14%), the uneasy (25%), the uncertain (25%), the unconcerned (13%), the confident (18%), and the detached (5%). These groups of farmers differ primarily in terms of beliefs about climate change, the degree to which they had experienced extreme weather, and risk perceptions. Despite substantial differences on these variables, areas of similarity were discerned on variables measuring farmers' (1) confidence that they will be able to deal with increases in weather variability and (2) support for public and private efforts to help farmers adapt to increased weather variability. These results can inform segmented approaches to outreach that target subpopulations of farmers as well as broader engagement strategies that would reach wider populations. Further, findings suggest that strategies with specific reference to climate change might be most effective in engaging the subpopulations of farmers who believe that climate change is occurring and a threat, but that use of less charged terms such as weather variability would likely be more effective with a broader range of farmers. Outreach efforts that (1) appeal to farmers' problem solving capacity and (2) employ terms such as “weather variability” instead of more charged terms such as “climate change” are more likely to be effective with a wider farmer audience."
Author: 'Arbuckle, J.G.; Hobbs, J.; Loy, A.; Morton, L.W.; Prokopy, L.S.; Tyndall, J.'
DOI: 10.2489/jswc.69.6.505
Date: 'November 1, 2014'
Issue: 6
Journal: Journal of Soil and Water Conservation
Pages: 505-516
Title: Understanding Corn Belt farmer perspectives on climate change to inform engagement strategies for adaptation and mitigation
Volume: 69
Year: 2014
_record_number: 26552
_uuid: c5dbde1e-e229-4832-8587-e6ec2ed22e94
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.2489/jswc.69.6.505
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c5dbde1e-e229-4832-8587-e6ec2ed22e94.yaml
identifier: c5dbde1e-e229-4832-8587-e6ec2ed22e94
uri: /reference/c5dbde1e-e229-4832-8587-e6ec2ed22e94
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Author: 'Cloud, Harold A.; Morey, R. Vance'
Place Published: 'St. Paul, MN'
Publisher: University of Minnesota Extension
Title: Management of stored grain with aeration
URL: http://www.extension.umn.edu/agriculture/small-grains/harvest/management-of-stored-grain-with-aeration/
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21254
_uuid: c65ba7e2-12f7-4a02-82c1-622c0aeb8711
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/e89bc8e2-7c32-41a2-8d09-65a2203d6b2f
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c65ba7e2-12f7-4a02-82c1-622c0aeb8711.yaml
identifier: c65ba7e2-12f7-4a02-82c1-622c0aeb8711
uri: /reference/c65ba7e2-12f7-4a02-82c1-622c0aeb8711
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Cleveland,'
Institution: Cleveland Forest Coalition
Pages: 57
Place Published: 'Cleveland, OH'
Title: The Cleveland Tree Plan
URL: http://www.city.cleveland.oh.us/sites/default/files/forms_publications/ClevelandTreePlan.pdf
Year: 2015
_record_number: 21299
_uuid: c69f166d-6658-44f5-82dd-16e8130500ab
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/cleveland-tree-plan
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c69f166d-6658-44f5-82dd-16e8130500ab.yaml
identifier: c69f166d-6658-44f5-82dd-16e8130500ab
uri: /reference/c69f166d-6658-44f5-82dd-16e8130500ab
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Terrestrial ecosystems have encountered substantial warming over the past century, with temperatures increasing about twice as rapidly over land as over the oceans. Here, we review the likelihood of continued changes in terrestrial climate, including analyses of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project global climate model ensemble. Inertia toward continued emissions creates potential 21st-century global warming that is comparable in magnitude to that of the largest global changes in the past 65 million years but is orders of magnitude more rapid. The rate of warming implies a velocity of climate change and required range shifts of up to several kilometers per year, raising the prospect of daunting challenges for ecosystems, especially in the context of extensive land use and degradation, changes in frequency and severity of extreme events, and interactions with other stresses.'
Author: 'Diffenbaugh, N. S.; Field, C. B.'
Author Address: 'Department of Environmental Earth System Science, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA. diffenbaugh@stanford.edu'
DOI: 10.1126/science.1237123
Database Provider: CCII PubMed NLM
Date: Aug 2
EPub Date: 2013/08/03
ISSN: "1095-9203 (Electronic)\r0036-8075 (Linking)"
Issue: 6145
Journal: Science
Keywords: 'Climate Change; Ecology; Ecosystem; Forecasting; Global Warming; Humans; Models, Theoretical; Temperature'
Language: eng
NIHMSID: ' NIEHS'
Name of Database: ' '
Pages: 486-92
Title: Changes in ecologically critical terrestrial climate conditions
Volume: 341
Year: 2013
_record_number: 4324
_uuid: c7d9e476-f293-40b4-99aa-e0fd007869d4
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1126/science.1237123
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c7d9e476-f293-40b4-99aa-e0fd007869d4.yaml
identifier: c7d9e476-f293-40b4-99aa-e0fd007869d4
uri: /reference/c7d9e476-f293-40b4-99aa-e0fd007869d4
- attrs:
Author: 'Magee, Madeline R.; Wu, Chin H.'
DOI: 10.5194/hess-21-6253-2017
ISSN: 1607-7938
Issue: 12
Journal: Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Pages: 6253-6274
Publisher: Copernicus Publications
Title: Response of water temperatures and stratification to changing climate in three lakes with different morphometry
Volume: 21
Year: 2017
_record_number: 26594
_uuid: c9240a66-85a7-430d-82a0-bc895f35d143
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.5194/hess-21-6253-2017
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c9240a66-85a7-430d-82a0-bc895f35d143.yaml
identifier: c9240a66-85a7-430d-82a0-bc895f35d143
uri: /reference/c9240a66-85a7-430d-82a0-bc895f35d143
- attrs:
Abstract: 'We developed the ecosystem vulnerability assessment approach (EVAA) to help inform potential adaptation actions in response to a changing climate. EVAA combines multiple quantitative models and expert elicitation from scientists and land managers. In each of eight assessment areas, a panel of local experts determined potential vulnerability of forest ecosystems to climate change over the next century using EVAA. Vulnerability and uncertainty ratings for forest community types in each assessment area were developed. The vulnerability of individual forest types to climate change varied by region due to regional differences in how climate change is expected to affect system drivers, stressors, and dominant species and the capacity of a forest community to adapt. This assessment process is a straightforward and flexible approach to addressing the key components of vulnerability in a collaborative setting and can easily be applied to a range of forest ecosystems at local to regional scales.
Management and Policy Implications Forest managers can use vulnerability assessments to help understand which species and ecosystems may be at greatest risk in a changing climate. Vulnerability assessments explain what systems are the most (and least) vulnerable, and, more important, why they are vulnerable. We developed the ecosystem vulnerability assessment approach (EVAA) for forest managers and scientists to collaboratively assess forest ecosystem vulnerability. We applied EVAA to eight regions in the Midwest and Northeast totaling 252 million acres. Although we have applied EVAA at the ecoregional scale, it is flexible enough to be used at larger or smaller scales, depending on the needs of managers. Results from assessments using EVAA have been successfully applied to forest management decisions across the Midwest and Northeast by nongovernmental, private, and government forest managers. How this information is applied depends on the specific goals and objectives of different places and ownerships.'
Author: 'Brandt, Leslie A.; Butler, Patricia R.; Handler, Stephen D.; Janowiak, Maria K.; Shannon, P. Danielle; Swanston, Christopher W.'
DOI: 10.5849/jof.15-147
Date: //
Issue: 3
Journal: Journal of Forestry
Keywords: adaptive capacity; climate change adaptation; climate change vulnerability; climate impact assessment; expert elicitation; uncertainty
Pages: 212-221
Title: Integrating science and management to assess forest ecosystem vulnerability to climate change
Volume: 115
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21240
_uuid: c94e7da1-3648-49d7-8dc2-6ca97ec26738
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.5849/jof.15-147
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c94e7da1-3648-49d7-8dc2-6ca97ec26738.yaml
identifier: c94e7da1-3648-49d7-8dc2-6ca97ec26738
uri: /reference/c94e7da1-3648-49d7-8dc2-6ca97ec26738
- attrs:
Author: 'Herb, William R.; Johnson, Lucinda B.; Jacobson, Peter C.; Stefan, Heinz G.'
DOI: 10.1139/cjfas-2013-0535
Date: 2014/09/01
ISSN: 0706-652X
Issue: 9
Journal: Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
Pages: 1334-1348
Publisher: NRC Research Press
Title: Projecting cold-water fish habitat in lakes of the glacial lakes region under changing land use and climate regimes
Volume: 71
Year: 2014
_record_number: 26572
_uuid: c984f123-572c-4860-8068-254224730887
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1139/cjfas-2013-0535
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c984f123-572c-4860-8068-254224730887.yaml
identifier: c984f123-572c-4860-8068-254224730887
uri: /reference/c984f123-572c-4860-8068-254224730887
- attrs:
Author: 'Tomer, Mark D.; Schilling, Keith E.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2009.07.029
Date: 2009/09/30/
ISSN: 0022-1694
Issue: 1
Journal: Journal of Hydrology
Keywords: Ecohydrology; Climate change; Land use change; Gulf of Mexico hypoxia; Watershed analysis; US Midwest
Pages: 24-33
Title: A simple approach to distinguish land-use and climate-change effects on watershed hydrology
Volume: 376
Year: 2009
_record_number: 26615
_uuid: c9d0a7e9-2bba-48cb-bd53-9e8c4209976d
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2009.07.029
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/c9d0a7e9-2bba-48cb-bd53-9e8c4209976d.yaml
identifier: c9d0a7e9-2bba-48cb-bd53-9e8c4209976d
uri: /reference/c9d0a7e9-2bba-48cb-bd53-9e8c4209976d
- attrs:
Abstract: 'The development of climate change policy in cities has been closely tied to the efforts of particular individuals, policy entrepreneurs. However, there is still much we do not know about the conditions underlying the emergence and spread of policy entrepreneurship both generally and in support of climate change policies specifically. In this paper, we shed light on these issues using data from 371 mid-sized cities throughout the Great Lakes region of the USA. Building upon scholarship from the public choice literature, we explore the role that fragmentation, that is, the number of independent but connected governmental units both within the city itself as well as in the city’s regional metropolitan or micropolitan area play in explaining the emergence of climate entrepreneurship. We show that not only does fragmentation at both of these levels help predict the emergence of climate change entrepreneurs in individual cities, but also exchanges between these levels could drive the rapid development of policy entrepreneurship and related policy innovations throughout urban systems.'
Author: 'Kalafatis, Scott E.; Lemos, Maria Carmen'
DOI: 10.1007/s10113-017-1154-0
Date: August 01
ISSN: 1436-378X
Issue: 6
Journal: Regional Environmental Change
Pages: 1791-1799
Title: The emergence of climate change policy entrepreneurs in urban regions
Type of Article: journal article
Volume: 17
Year: 2017
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Author: 'De Lucia, M.; Assennato, D.'
Institution: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
Place Published: 'Rome, Italy'
Series Volume: FAO Agricultural Services Bulletin No. 93
Title: 'Agricultural engineering in development: Post-harvest operations and management of foodgrains'
URL: http://www.fao.org/docrep/t0522e/t0522e00.htm
Year: 1994
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ISSN: 15423867
Journal: Journal of Commerce
Title: High Water Forces Upper Mississippi River Closure
Volume: 04 Jun
Year: 2013
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