--- - attrs: Author: 'Nowacki, Gregory J.; Abrams, Marc D.' DOI: 10.1641/B580207 Date: 2008/02/01 ISSN: 0006-3568 Issue: 2 Journal: BioScience Pages: 123-138 Publisher: American Institute of Biological Sciences Title: The demise of fire and “mesophication” of forests in the eastern United States Volume: 58 Year: 2008 _record_number: 21966 _uuid: d4ba4719-d00a-4094-910e-233e32325031 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1641/B580207 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/d4ba4719-d00a-4094-910e-233e32325031.yaml identifier: d4ba4719-d00a-4094-910e-233e32325031 uri: /reference/d4ba4719-d00a-4094-910e-233e32325031 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Sweet, William V.; John J. Marra; Gregory Dusek' Institution: 'National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Centers for Environmental Information' Pages: 8 Title: '2016 State of U.S. High Tide Flooding and a 2017 Outlook. Supplement to State of the Climate: National Overview for June 2017' URL: https://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/monitoring-content/sotc/national/2017/may/2016_StateofHighTideFlooding.pdf Year: 2017 _record_number: 24384 _uuid: d67e2bfd-20fe-4bd8-a491-c3320b7f0044 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/2016-state-us-high-tide-flooding-2017-outlook-supplement-state-climate-national-overview-june-2017 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/d67e2bfd-20fe-4bd8-a491-c3320b7f0044.yaml identifier: d67e2bfd-20fe-4bd8-a491-c3320b7f0044 uri: /reference/d67e2bfd-20fe-4bd8-a491-c3320b7f0044 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Bell, M.L.\rGoldberg, R.\rHogrefe, C.\rKinney, P.L.\rKnowlton, K.\rLynn, B.\rRosenthal, J.\rRosenzweig, C.\rPatz, J.A." DOI: 10.1007/s10584-006-9166-7 ISSN: 0165-0009 Issue: 1-2 Journal: Climatic Change Pages: 61-76 Title: 'Climate change, ambient ozone, and health in 50 US cities' Volume: 82 Year: 2007 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL"]' _record_number: 333 _uuid: d6e399c7-1efe-4f91-927e-f957965e3aaa reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10584-006-9166-7 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/d6e399c7-1efe-4f91-927e-f957965e3aaa.yaml identifier: d6e399c7-1efe-4f91-927e-f957965e3aaa uri: /reference/d6e399c7-1efe-4f91-927e-f957965e3aaa - attrs: Author: 'McEwan, Ryan W.; Dyer, James M.; Pederson, Neil' DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0587.2010.06390.x ISSN: 1600-0587 Issue: 2 Journal: Ecography Pages: 244-256 Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd Title: 'Multiple interacting ecosystem drivers: Toward an encompassing hypothesis of oak forest dynamics across eastern North America' Volume: 34 Year: 2011 _record_number: 21192 _uuid: d7cd72b7-d121-4531-ba5a-35e7541ff578 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2010.06390.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/d7cd72b7-d121-4531-ba5a-35e7541ff578.yaml identifier: d7cd72b7-d121-4531-ba5a-35e7541ff578 uri: /reference/d7cd72b7-d121-4531-ba5a-35e7541ff578 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: "Parris, A.\rP. Bromirski\rV. Burkett\rD. Cayan\rM. Culver\rJ. Hall\rR. Horton\rK. Knuuti\rR. Moss\rJ. Obeysekera\rA. Sallenger\rJ. Weiss" Institution: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Pages: 37 Place Published: 'Silver Spring, MD' Publisher: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Series Volume: NOAA Tech Memo OAR CPO-1 Title: Global Sea Level Rise Scenarios for the United States National Climate Assessment. NOAA Tech Memo OAR CPO-1 URL: http://scenarios.globalchange.gov/sites/default/files/NOAA_SLR_r3_0.pdf Year: 2012 _chapter: '["Appendix 5: Scenarios FINAL","Ch. 20: Southwest FINAL","Ch. 25: Coastal Zone FINAL","Ch. 16: Northeast FINAL","RF 3","RG 10 Coasts","Ch. 2: Our Changing Climate FINAL","Ch. 5: Transportation FINAL","Ch. 4: Energy Supply and Use FINAL","Ch. 0: Intro Regions FINAL","Ch. 17: Southeast and Caribbean FINAL","Ch. 21: Northwest FINAL"]' _record_number: 2432 _uuid: d8089822-678e-4834-a1ec-0dca1da35314 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/noaa-techmemo-oar-cpo-1-2012 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/d8089822-678e-4834-a1ec-0dca1da35314.yaml identifier: d8089822-678e-4834-a1ec-0dca1da35314 uri: /reference/d8089822-678e-4834-a1ec-0dca1da35314 - attrs: Author: 'Berdanier, Aaron B.; Clark, James S.' DOI: 10.1890/15-0274 ISSN: 1939-5582 Issue: 1 Journal: Ecological Applications Keywords: 'adaptive management; drought; forest; long-term data; morbidity; mortality; Piedmont Plateau, North Carolina, USA; southern Appalachian Mountains, North Carolina, USA; tree' Pages: 17-23 Title: Multiyear drought-induced morbidity preceding tree death in southeastern U.S. forests Volume: 26 Year: 2016 _record_number: 22019 _uuid: d8731246-25c1-4f5f-95ed-26eb14d03840 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1890/15-0274 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/d8731246-25c1-4f5f-95ed-26eb14d03840.yaml identifier: d8731246-25c1-4f5f-95ed-26eb14d03840 uri: /reference/d8731246-25c1-4f5f-95ed-26eb14d03840 - attrs: .reference_type: 16 Access Year: 2018 Author: 'Smith, Adam B.' Publisher: Climate.gov Title: '2017 U.S. billion-dollar weather and climate disasters: A historic year in context' URL: https://www.climate.gov/news-features/blogs/beyond-data/2017-us-billion-dollar-weather-and-climate-disasters-historic-year Year: 2018 _record_number: 26309 _uuid: d9ee8071-8309-4068-8607-072562b2c3a2 reftype: Web Page child_publication: /webpage/37b370d0-38a1-4d70-ab1d-5c60593dee62 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/d9ee8071-8309-4068-8607-072562b2c3a2.yaml identifier: d9ee8071-8309-4068-8607-072562b2c3a2 uri: /reference/d9ee8071-8309-4068-8607-072562b2c3a2 - attrs: Article Number: e01400 Author: 'Stevens, P. W.; Blewett, D. A.; Boucek, R. E.; Rehage, J. S.; Winner, B. L.; Young, J. M.; Whittington, J. A.; Paperno, R.' DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.1400 ISSN: 2150-8925 Issue: 8 Journal: Ecosphere Keywords: 'Centropomus undecimalis; coastal areas; common snook; disturbance; fishes; Special Feature: Extreme Cold Spells' Pages: e01400 Title: Resilience of a tropical sport fish population to a severe cold event varies across five estuaries in southern Florida Volume: 7 Year: 2016 _record_number: 24381 _uuid: da29fed3-0376-4167-95f1-90cd096a6ddd reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1002/ecs2.1400 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/da29fed3-0376-4167-95f1-90cd096a6ddd.yaml identifier: da29fed3-0376-4167-95f1-90cd096a6ddd uri: /reference/da29fed3-0376-4167-95f1-90cd096a6ddd - attrs: .reference_type: 63 Author: 'City of Fayetteville,' Pages: 3 Place Published: 'Fayetteville, AR' Title: Arkansans Can Take Steps to Respond to Climate Change URL: http://www.fayetteville-ar.gov/DocumentCenter/View/14890/Commentary_Climate-Change?bidId= Year: 2017 _record_number: 26344 _uuid: daef52e5-526b-4499-8c36-c920dbe7df41 reftype: Press Release child_publication: /generic/7abd2ec9-a96d-4ba0-a431-1bc4011e62a0 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/daef52e5-526b-4499-8c36-c920dbe7df41.yaml identifier: daef52e5-526b-4499-8c36-c920dbe7df41 uri: /reference/daef52e5-526b-4499-8c36-c920dbe7df41 - attrs: .reference_type: 7 Author: 'Beard, Charles B.; Eisen, Rebecca J.; Barker, Christopher M.; Garofalo, Jada F.; Hahn, Micah; Hayden, Mary; Monaghan, Andrew J.; Ogden, Nicholas H.; Schramm, Paul J.' Book Title: 'The Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the United States: A Scientific Assessment' DOI: 10.7930/J0765C7V Pages: 129–156 Place Published: 'Washington, DC' Publisher: ' U.S. Global Change Research Program' Title: 'Ch. 5: Vector-borne diseases ' Year: 2016 _record_number: 19377 _uuid: dbfb7cd9-7c82-43ea-a4e2-9e2eb0b851fd reftype: Book Section child_publication: /report/usgcrp-climate-human-health-assessment-2016/chapter/vectorborne-diseases href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/dbfb7cd9-7c82-43ea-a4e2-9e2eb0b851fd.yaml identifier: dbfb7cd9-7c82-43ea-a4e2-9e2eb0b851fd uri: /reference/dbfb7cd9-7c82-43ea-a4e2-9e2eb0b851fd - attrs: Author: 'Smee, Delbert L.; Sanchez, James A.; Diskin, Meredith; Trettin, Carl' DOI: 10.1016/j.ecss.2017.02.005 Date: 2017/03/05/ ISSN: 0272-7714 Journal: 'Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science' Keywords: Vegetation shift; Climate change; Shrimp Pages: 306-313 Title: Mangrove expansion into salt marshes alters associated faunal communities Volume: 187 Year: 2017 _record_number: 24377 _uuid: dc56d025-7d25-499f-b0e9-37451a783c60 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.ecss.2017.02.005 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/dc56d025-7d25-499f-b0e9-37451a783c60.yaml identifier: dc56d025-7d25-499f-b0e9-37451a783c60 uri: /reference/dc56d025-7d25-499f-b0e9-37451a783c60 - attrs: Abstract: 'Heat waves and air pollution episodes pose a serious threat to human health and may worsen under future climate change. In this paper, we use 15 years (1999–2013) of commensurately gridded (1° x 1°) surface observations of extended summer (April–September) surface ozone (O3), fine particulate matter (PM2.5), and maximum temperature (TX) over the eastern United States and Canada to construct a climatology of the coincidence, overlap, and lag in space and time of their extremes. Extremes of each quantity are defined climatologically at each grid cell as the 50 d with the highest values in three 5-y windows (∼95th percentile). Any two extremes occur on the same day in the same grid cell more than 50% of the time in the northeastern United States, but on a domain average, co-occurrence is approximately 30%. Although not exactly co-occurring, many of these extremes show connectedness with consistent offsets in space and in time, which often defy traditional mechanistic explanations. All three extremes occur primarily in large-scale, multiday, spatially connected episodes with scales of >1,000 km and clearly coincide with large-scale meteorological features. The largest, longest-lived episodes have the highest incidence of co-occurrence and contain extreme values well above their local 95th percentile threshold, by +7 ppb for O3, +6 µg m−3 for PM2.5, and +1.7 °C for TX. Our results demonstrate the need to evaluate these extremes as synergistic costressors to accurately quantify their impacts on human health.' Author: 'Schnell, Jordan L.; Prather, Michael J.' DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1614453114 Date: 'March 14, 2017' Issue: 11 Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Pages: 2854-2859 Title: 'Co-occurrence of extremes in surface ozone, particulate matter, and temperature over eastern North America' Volume: 114 Year: 2017 _record_number: 24241 _uuid: dd3e0e92-583c-44d5-9bb8-03e1057e605f reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1614453114 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/dd3e0e92-583c-44d5-9bb8-03e1057e605f.yaml identifier: dd3e0e92-583c-44d5-9bb8-03e1057e605f uri: /reference/dd3e0e92-583c-44d5-9bb8-03e1057e605f - attrs: DOI: 10.7289/V5/TM-SEFSC-699 Editor: 'Lovett, Heidi B.; Sunny B. Snider ; Karla K. Gore; Roldan C. Muñoz ' Pages: 40 Place Published: 'Miami, FL' Series Volume: NOAA Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFSC-699 Title: Gulf of Mexico regional action plan to implement the NOAA Fisheries climate science strategy Year: 2016 _record_number: 24411 _uuid: ddf445e2-14f6-4d4f-834e-c9cd8b9ff688 reftype: Edited Report child_publication: /report/gulf-mexico-regional-action-plan-implement-noaa-fisheries-climate-science-strategy href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ddf445e2-14f6-4d4f-834e-c9cd8b9ff688.yaml identifier: ddf445e2-14f6-4d4f-834e-c9cd8b9ff688 uri: /reference/ddf445e2-14f6-4d4f-834e-c9cd8b9ff688 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'Increased forest fire activity across the western continental United States (US) in recent decades has likely been enabled by a number of factors, including the legacy of fire suppression and human settlement, natural climate variability, and human-caused climate change. We use modeled climate projections to estimate the contribution of anthropogenic climate change to observed increases in eight fuel aridity metrics and forest fire area across the western United States. Anthropogenic increases in temperature and vapor pressure deficit significantly enhanced fuel aridity across western US forests over the past several decades and, during 2000–2015, contributed to 75% more forested area experiencing high (>1 σ) fire-season fuel aridity and an average of nine additional days per year of high fire potential. Anthropogenic climate change accounted for ∼55% of observed increases in fuel aridity from 1979 to 2015 across western US forests, highlighting both anthropogenic climate change and natural climate variability as important contributors to increased wildfire potential in recent decades. We estimate that human-caused climate change contributed to an additional 4.2 million ha of forest fire area during 1984–2015, nearly doubling the forest fire area expected in its absence. Natural climate variability will continue to alternate between modulating and compounding anthropogenic increases in fuel aridity, but anthropogenic climate change has emerged as a driver of increased forest fire activity and should continue to do so while fuels are not limiting.' Author: 'Abatzoglou, John T.; Williams, A. Park' DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1607171113 Date: 'October 18, 2016' Issue: 42 Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Pages: 11770-11775 Title: Impact of anthropogenic climate change on wildfire across western US forests Volume: 113 Year: 2016 _record_number: 20416 _uuid: de4a77df-03ba-4319-a13f-7fdefbb353a5 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1607171113 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/de4a77df-03ba-4319-a13f-7fdefbb353a5.yaml identifier: de4a77df-03ba-4319-a13f-7fdefbb353a5 uri: /reference/de4a77df-03ba-4319-a13f-7fdefbb353a5 - attrs: .reference_type: 9 Editor: 'Stein, Bruce A.; Lynn S. Kutner; Jonathan S. Adams' ISBN: 9780195125191 Number of Pages: 432 Place Published: Oxford; New York Publisher: Oxford University Press Title: 'Precious Heritage: The Status of Biodiversity in the United States' Year: 2000 _record_number: 24379 _uuid: de5524c1-8076-4ae6-9558-ec6c96b475b5 reftype: Edited Book child_publication: /book/precious-heritage-status-biodiversity-united-states href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/de5524c1-8076-4ae6-9558-ec6c96b475b5.yaml identifier: de5524c1-8076-4ae6-9558-ec6c96b475b5 uri: /reference/de5524c1-8076-4ae6-9558-ec6c96b475b5 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Spanger-Siegfried, Erika; Melanie Fitzpatrick; Kristina Dahl' Institution: Union of Concerned Scientists Pages: 64 Place Published: 'Cambridge, MA' Title: 'Encroaching Tides: How Sea Level Rise and Tidal Flooding Threaten U.S. East and Gulf Coast Communities over the Next 30 Years' URL: http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/impacts/effects-of-tidal-flooding-and-sea-level-rise-east-coast-gulf-of-mexico Year: 2014 _record_number: 23183 _uuid: df029572-7e7a-4f65-91c2-da86756620c4 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/encroaching-tides-how-sea-level-rise-tidal-flooding-threaten-us-east-gulf-coast-communities-over-next-30-year href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/df029572-7e7a-4f65-91c2-da86756620c4.yaml identifier: df029572-7e7a-4f65-91c2-da86756620c4 uri: /reference/df029572-7e7a-4f65-91c2-da86756620c4 - attrs: .reference_type: 63 Author: 'Acadiana Planning Commission,' Date: February 20 Place Published: 'Lafayette, LA' Title: APC Board allocates $25 million in HMGP funding to regional flood mitigation projects URL: http://planacadiana.org/uncategorized/apc-board-allocates-25-million-in-hmgp-funding-to-regional-flood-mitigation-projects/ Year: 2018 _record_number: 26329 _uuid: e0d6a200-c830-403f-b892-af8c052bf37b reftype: Press Release child_publication: /generic/e943098c-bf7f-468e-85cc-df56ce88963b href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e0d6a200-c830-403f-b892-af8c052bf37b.yaml identifier: e0d6a200-c830-403f-b892-af8c052bf37b uri: /reference/e0d6a200-c830-403f-b892-af8c052bf37b - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Emrich, Christopher T.; Daniel P. Morath; Gregg C. Bowser; Rachel Reeves' Institution: Florida Department of Health Pages: various Place Published: 'Tallahassee, FL' Title: 'Climate-sensitive hazards in Florida: Identifying and prioritizing threats to build resilience against climate effects' URL: http://www.floridahealth.gov/environmental-health/climate-and-health/_documents/climate-sensitive-hazards-in-florida-final-report.pdf Year: 2014 _record_number: 24427 _uuid: e1f4f1b2-6b77-465a-bddb-ed992079deea reftype: Report child_publication: /report/climate-sensitive-hazards-florida-identifying-prioritizing-threats-build-resilience-against-climate-effects href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e1f4f1b2-6b77-465a-bddb-ed992079deea.yaml identifier: e1f4f1b2-6b77-465a-bddb-ed992079deea uri: /reference/e1f4f1b2-6b77-465a-bddb-ed992079deea - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'FHWA,' Institution: 'Federal Highway Administration’s (FHWA), Climate Resilience Pilot Program' Pages: 4 Place Published: 'Washington, DC' Series Volume: FHWA-HEP-16-076 Title: 'FHWA Climate Resilience Pilot Program: Tennessee Department of Transportation' URL: https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/sustainability/resilience/pilots/2013-2015_pilots/tennessee/index.cfm Year: 2017 _record_number: 24422 _uuid: e231be91-fafb-44c7-a1b0-3d3a6cc0aa60 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/fhwa-climate-resilience-pilot-program-tennessee-department-transportation href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e231be91-fafb-44c7-a1b0-3d3a6cc0aa60.yaml identifier: e231be91-fafb-44c7-a1b0-3d3a6cc0aa60 uri: /reference/e231be91-fafb-44c7-a1b0-3d3a6cc0aa60 - attrs: Author: 'Cavanaugh, Kyle C.; Parker, John D.; Cook-Patton, Susan C.; Feller, Ilka C.; Williams, A. Park; Kellner, James R.' DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12843 ISSN: 1365-2486 Issue: 5 Journal: Global Change Biology Keywords: Avicennia germinans; climate change; ecological thresholds; freeze tolerance; Laguncularia racemosa; range expansion; Rhizophora mangle; species distribution modeling Pages: 1928-1938 Title: Integrating physiological threshold experiments with climate modeling to project mangrove species’ range expansion Volume: 21 Year: 2015 _record_number: 24300 _uuid: e3f0f82a-4c3d-4c01-924e-5b396ab55f7d reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/gcb.12843 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e3f0f82a-4c3d-4c01-924e-5b396ab55f7d.yaml identifier: e3f0f82a-4c3d-4c01-924e-5b396ab55f7d uri: /reference/e3f0f82a-4c3d-4c01-924e-5b396ab55f7d - attrs: Abstract: 'Climate-driven changes in biotic interactions can profoundly alter ecological communities, particularly when they impact foundation species. In marine systems, changes in herbivory and the consequent loss of dominant habitat forming species can result in dramatic community phase shifts, such as from coral to macroalgal dominance when tropical fish herbivory decreases, and from algal forests to ‘barrens’ when temperate urchin grazing increases. Here, we propose a novel phase-shift away from macroalgal dominance caused by tropical herbivores extending their range into temperate regions. We argue that this phase shift is facilitated by poleward-flowing boundary currents that are creating ocean warming hotspots around the globe, enabling the range expansion of tropical species and increasing their grazing rates in temperate areas. Overgrazing of temperate macroalgae by tropical herbivorous fishes has already occurred in Japan and the Mediterranean. Emerging evidence suggests similar phenomena are occurring in other temperate regions, with increasing occurrence of tropical fishes on temperate reefs.' Author: 'Vergés, Adriana; Steinberg, Peter D.; Hay, Mark E.; Poore, Alistair G. B.; Campbell, Alexandra H.; Ballesteros, Enric; Heck, Kenneth L.; Booth, David J.; Coleman, Melinda A.; Feary, David A.; Figueira, Will; Langlois, Tim; Marzinelli, Ezequiel M.; Mizerek, Toni; Mumby, Peter J.; Nakamura, Yohei; Roughan, Moninya; van Sebille, Erik; Gupta, Alex Sen; Smale, Dan A.; Tomas, Fiona; Wernberg, Thomas; Wilson, Shaun K.' DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2014.0846 Issue: 1789 Journal: 'Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences' Title: 'The tropicalization of temperate marine ecosystems: Climate-mediated changes in herbivory and community phase shifts' Volume: 281 Year: 2014 _record_number: 24389 _uuid: e4313895-fb80-4d31-906c-2fadb9da71de reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1098/rspb.2014.0846 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e4313895-fb80-4d31-906c-2fadb9da71de.yaml identifier: e4313895-fb80-4d31-906c-2fadb9da71de uri: /reference/e4313895-fb80-4d31-906c-2fadb9da71de - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Evans, Jason M.; Jill Gambill; Robin J. McDowell; P. Warwick Prichard; Charles S. Hopkinson' DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.1.3825.9604/1 Institution: 'NOAA, Georgia Sea Grant' Pages: 82 Place Published: 'Athens, GA' Title: 'Tybee Island: Sea level rise adaptation plan' Year: 2016 _record_number: 24423 _uuid: e45eceee-7d09-4dbf-abd7-f200683378a6 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/tybee-island-sea-level-rise-adaptation-plan href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e45eceee-7d09-4dbf-abd7-f200683378a6.yaml identifier: e45eceee-7d09-4dbf-abd7-f200683378a6 uri: /reference/e45eceee-7d09-4dbf-abd7-f200683378a6 - attrs: Abstract: 'Mosquito-borne diseases are an increasingly important health concern, which pose great challenges for safe and sustainable control and eradication. This reality calls for management approaches that consider multiple aspects of the transmission cycle from a landscape and vector ecology perspective, to socio-economic elements that may increase exposure. This study seeks to better understand these pathways using dengue fever in the San Juan Bay Estuary (SJBE), Puerto Rico. Dengue is transmitted by Aedes aegypti, a species that thrives in cities. Here we ask which elements within the urban landscape could be managed to help prevent dengue outbreaks. We studied the potential of coastal wetlands in the SJBE to buffer vector proliferation, hypothesizing that wetland ecosystem services lead to lower dengue occurrence. We test this hypothesis using census-block level dengue data from 2010-13, including the largest epidemic in Puerto Rican history. Our analytical model includes socio-economic factors and environmental controls that may also affect dengue dynamics. Results from beta-binomial regressions and model averaging indicated that dengue occurrence was lower in neighborhoods with higher wetland cover even after controlling for population density and other socio-economic aspects. Our models suggest that heat hazard mitigation is partly responsible for the association between wetlands and dengue.' Author: 'De Jesús Crespo, Rebeca; Méndez Lázaro, Pablo; Yee, Susan H.' DOI: 10.1007/s13157-017-0990-5 Date: January 23 ISSN: 1943-6246 Journal: Wetlands Title: 'Linking wetland ecosystem services to vector-borne disease: Dengue fever in the San Juan Bay Estuary, Puerto Rico' Type of Article: journal article Year: 2018 _record_number: 26346 _uuid: e4747552-23aa-45d2-9601-3b4b9b7b9994 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s13157-017-0990-5 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e4747552-23aa-45d2-9601-3b4b9b7b9994.yaml identifier: e4747552-23aa-45d2-9601-3b4b9b7b9994 uri: /reference/e4747552-23aa-45d2-9601-3b4b9b7b9994 - attrs: Author: 'Jackson, Stephen T.; Overpeck, Jonathan T.' DOI: '10.1666/0094-8373(2000)26[194:ROPPAC]2.0.CO;2' Date: 2000/12/01 ISSN: 0094-8373 Issue: sp4 Journal: Paleobiology Pages: 194-220 Publisher: The Paleontological Society Title: Responses of plant populations and communities to environmental changes of the late Quaternary Volume: 26 Year: 2000 _record_number: 24327 _uuid: e5b81899-7df2-418f-b34b-9a8e6944efb2 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1666/0094-8373(2000)26%5B194:ROPPAC%5D2.0.CO;2 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e5b81899-7df2-418f-b34b-9a8e6944efb2.yaml identifier: e5b81899-7df2-418f-b34b-9a8e6944efb2 uri: /reference/e5b81899-7df2-418f-b34b-9a8e6944efb2 - attrs: Author: 'Anthony, Kenneth R. N.; Maynard, Jeffrey A.; Diaz-Pulido, Guillermo; Mumby, Peter J.; Marshall, Paul A.; Cao, Long; Hoegh-Guldberg, O. V. E.' DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02364.x ISSN: 1365-2486 Issue: 5 Journal: Global Change Biology Keywords: climate change; coral reefs; herbivory; ocean acidification; resilience Pages: 1798-1808 Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd Title: Ocean acidification and warming will lower coral reef resilience Volume: 17 Year: 2011 _record_number: 24289 _uuid: e684169c-60a2-4c78-a724-36fb93fb385a reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02364.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e684169c-60a2-4c78-a724-36fb93fb385a.yaml identifier: e684169c-60a2-4c78-a724-36fb93fb385a uri: /reference/e684169c-60a2-4c78-a724-36fb93fb385a