--- - attrs: Abstract: 'Heat waves have been linked to increased risk of mortality and morbidity, and are projected to increase in frequency and intensity in a changing climate. Houston and other areas in Texas experienced an exceptional heat wave in the summer of 2011 producing the hottest August on record. This study aims to assess the health-related impact of this heat wave.' Author: 'Zhang, Kai; Chen, Tsun-Hsuan; Begley, Charles E.' DOI: 10.1186/1476-069x-14-11 Date: January 27 ISSN: 1476-069X Issue: 1 Journal: Environmental Health Pages: 11 Title: 'Impact of the 2011 heat wave on mortality and emergency department visits in Houston, Texas' Type of Article: journal article Volume: 14 Year: 2015 _record_number: 23248 _uuid: e337db11-d5e9-4a9b-be9f-7773befd61b9 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1186/1476-069x-14-11 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e337db11-d5e9-4a9b-be9f-7773befd61b9.yaml identifier: e337db11-d5e9-4a9b-be9f-7773befd61b9 uri: /reference/e337db11-d5e9-4a9b-be9f-7773befd61b9 - attrs: Author: 'Dinan, Terry' DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2017.03.034 Date: 2017/08/01/ ISSN: 0921-8009 Journal: Ecological Economics Keywords: Climate change; Hurricane damage; Sea level rise; Damage elasticities; Wind damage; Storm surge Pages: 186-198 Title: 'Projected increases in hurricane damage in the United States: The role of climate change and coastal development' Volume: 138 Year: 2017 _record_number: 23085 _uuid: e3ac668b-0cd6-40c6-afb5-2df1600ca96c reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2017.03.034 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e3ac668b-0cd6-40c6-afb5-2df1600ca96c.yaml identifier: e3ac668b-0cd6-40c6-afb5-2df1600ca96c uri: /reference/e3ac668b-0cd6-40c6-afb5-2df1600ca96c - attrs: .reference_type: 16 Author: 'NCAI,' Place Published: 'Washington, DC' Publisher: National Congress of American Indians Title: 'Policy Issues: Land & Natural Resources. Climate Change [web page]' URL: http://www.ncai.org/policy-issues/land-natural-resources/climate-change Year: 2018 _record_number: 25913 _uuid: e57a7177-cf14-4499-9d13-73eeeaa0a89c reftype: Web Page child_publication: /webpage/18b7434b-082d-4537-9958-cf9f6f77a9be href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e57a7177-cf14-4499-9d13-73eeeaa0a89c.yaml identifier: e57a7177-cf14-4499-9d13-73eeeaa0a89c uri: /reference/e57a7177-cf14-4499-9d13-73eeeaa0a89c - attrs: .reference_type: 7 Author: 'Easterling, D.R.; J.R. Arnold; T. Knutson; K.E. Kunkel; A.N. LeGrande; L.R. Leung; R.S. Vose; D.E. Waliser; M.F. Wehner' Book Title: 'Climate Science Special Report: Fourth National Climate Assessment, Volume I' Chapter: 7 DOI: 10.7930/J0H993CC Editor: 'Wuebbles, D.J.; D.W. Fahey; K.A. Hibbard; D.J. Dokken; B.C. Stewart; T.K. Maycock' Pages: 207-230 Place Published: 'Washington, DC, USA' Publisher: U.S. Global Change Research Program Title: Precipitation Change in the United States Year: 2017 _record_number: 21565 _uuid: e8089a19-413e-4bc5-8c4a-7610399e268c reftype: Book Section child_publication: /report/climate-science-special-report/chapter/precipitation-change href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e8089a19-413e-4bc5-8c4a-7610399e268c.yaml identifier: e8089a19-413e-4bc5-8c4a-7610399e268c uri: /reference/e8089a19-413e-4bc5-8c4a-7610399e268c - attrs: Author: 'Estrada, Francisco; Botzen, W. J. Wouter; Tol, Richard S. J.' DOI: 10.1038/nclimate3301 Date: 06//print ISSN: 1758-678X Issue: 6 Journal: Nature Climate Change Pages: 403-406 Publisher: Nature Publishing Group Title: A global economic assessment of city policies to reduce climate change impacts Type of Article: Letter Volume: 7 Year: 2017 _record_number: 21835 _uuid: e904b5f2-2c5e-4e55-8365-2ba748291939 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1038/nclimate3301 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/e904b5f2-2c5e-4e55-8365-2ba748291939.yaml identifier: e904b5f2-2c5e-4e55-8365-2ba748291939 uri: /reference/e904b5f2-2c5e-4e55-8365-2ba748291939 - attrs: .reference_type: 16 Author: 'Gulf Coast Prairie Landscape Conservation Cooperative,' Place Published: 'Corvallis, OR' Publisher: Conservation Biology Institute Title: 'Conservation Planning Atlas [web tool]' URL: http://gcplcc.databasin.org Year: 2018 _record_number: 25798 _uuid: eaf202cd-5f44-4e09-801c-25a616f73026 reftype: Web Page child_publication: /webpage/2d07906a-c001-4601-929f-c511ff5250da href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/eaf202cd-5f44-4e09-801c-25a616f73026.yaml identifier: eaf202cd-5f44-4e09-801c-25a616f73026 uri: /reference/eaf202cd-5f44-4e09-801c-25a616f73026 - attrs: Author: 'McManus, Gary' Last Update Date: June 1 Publisher: Oklahoma Climatological Survey Title of Entry: Historic May rains eliminate drought Title of WebLog: The OCS Mesonet Ticker URL: http://ticker.mesonet.org/select.php?mo=06&da=01&yr=2015 Year: 2015 _record_number: 25806 _uuid: eb7f4bdb-a66f-43e3-8ac5-0488fad49139 reftype: Blog child_publication: /webpage/bc142d82-580b-43a8-be7c-9e3216ffbf49 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/eb7f4bdb-a66f-43e3-8ac5-0488fad49139.yaml identifier: eb7f4bdb-a66f-43e3-8ac5-0488fad49139 uri: /reference/eb7f4bdb-a66f-43e3-8ac5-0488fad49139 - attrs: Abstract: 'Epidemics of cholera have been frequent in southern Africa since the reintroduction of the disease to the continent in 1970. In late 1992, following a severe drought and an influx of refugees from Mozambique, cholera reappeared in Zimbabwe for the first time since 1985 and rapidly spread through the rural areas of the country. Data relating to symptomatic cholera infection collected during 2 large outbreaks on the eastern border of the country showed that host age and sex were important factors relating to symptomatic infection, as were population density and access to water. Epidemic profiles for the 2 study areas differed in that one of the profiles exhibited a distinct second phase epidemic. This unusual pattern was compared qualitatively with the output of a series of simple mathematical models to examine the contribution of different epidemiological processes to the pattern of disease observed. Model output suggested a complex disease process, in which the dynamics may have been influenced by spatial components. Statistical analysis of these unusual data showed that the observed pattern was independent of the effects of host age or sex, and provided compelling evidence of a marked spatial component of the second phase epidemic.' Author: 'Bradley, M.; Shakespeare, R.; Ruwende, A.; Woolhouse, M. E. J.; Mason, E.; Munatsi, A.' DOI: 10.1016/S0035-9203(96)90512-X ISSN: 0035-9203 Issue: 4 Journal: Transactions of The Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene Notes: 10.1016/S0035-9203(96)90512-X Pages: 378-382 Title: Epidemiological features of epidemic cholera (El Tor) in Zimbabwe Volume: 90 Year: 1996 _record_number: 23239 _uuid: ecd31071-287c-4f05-9213-076b682db142 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/S0035-9203(96)90512-X href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ecd31071-287c-4f05-9213-076b682db142.yaml identifier: ecd31071-287c-4f05-9213-076b682db142 uri: /reference/ecd31071-287c-4f05-9213-076b682db142 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Abstract: 'In the Southwest and Central Plains of Western North America, climate change is expected to increase drought severity in the coming decades. These regions nevertheless experienced extended Medieval-era droughts that were more persistent than any historical event, providing crucial targets in the paleoclimate record for benchmarking the severity of future drought risks. We use an empirical drought reconstruction and three soil moisture metrics from 17 state-of-the-art general circulation models to show that these models project significantly drier conditions in the later half of the 21st century compared to the 20th century and earlier paleoclimatic intervals. This desiccation is consistent across most of the models and moisture balance variables, indicating a coherent and robust drying response to warming despite the diversity of models and metrics analyzed. Notably, future drought risk will likely exceed even the driest centuries of the Medieval Climate Anomaly (1100–1300 CE) in both moderate (RCP 4.5) and high (RCP 8.5) future emissions scenarios, leading to unprecedented drought conditions during the last millennium.' Author: 'Cook, Benjamin I.; Ault, Toby R.; Smerdon, Jason E.' DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.1400082 Issue: 1 Journal: Science Advances Pages: e1400082 Title: Unprecedented 21st century drought risk in the American Southwest and Central Plains Volume: 1 Year: 2015 _record_number: 20415 _uuid: ed70fd44-147d-4ffa-ab1b-68451bd1d335 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1126/sciadv.1400082 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ed70fd44-147d-4ffa-ab1b-68451bd1d335.yaml identifier: ed70fd44-147d-4ffa-ab1b-68451bd1d335 uri: /reference/ed70fd44-147d-4ffa-ab1b-68451bd1d335 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Steiner, Jean L.; Jeanne M. Schneider; Clay Pope; Sarah Pope; Paulette Ford; Rachel F. Steele ' Institution: Departamento de Agricultura de Estados Unidos Pages: 74 Series Editor: T. Anderson Title: 'Evaluación de vulnerabilidad de las llanuras meridionales y estrategias preliminares de adaptación y mitigación para agricultores, ganaderos y propietarios de tierras forestales' URL: https://www.climatehubs.oce.usda.gov/archive/sites/default/files/southern_plains_vulnerability_assessment_final_es.pdf Year: 2015 _record_number: 25810 _uuid: eed25dbb-ae18-479d-8115-44840713b43c reftype: Report child_publication: /report/evaluacion-de-vulnerabilidad-de-las-llanuras-meridionales-y-estrategias-preliminares-de-adaptacion-y-mitigacion-para-agricultores-ganaderos-y-propietarios-de-tierras-forestales href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/eed25dbb-ae18-479d-8115-44840713b43c.yaml identifier: eed25dbb-ae18-479d-8115-44840713b43c uri: /reference/eed25dbb-ae18-479d-8115-44840713b43c - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Moore, Georgianne W.; Edgar, Christopher B.; Vogel, Jason G.; Washington-Allen, Robert A.; March, Rosaleen G; Zehnder, Rebekah' DOI: 10.1890/15-0330 ISSN: 1939-5582 Issue: 2 Journal: Ecological Applications Keywords: 'acute drought impact; Central North America; dead carbon pool; forest structure; Texas, USA; tree death' Pages: 602-611 Title: Tree mortality from an exceptional drought spanning mesic to semiarid ecoregions Volume: 26 Year: 2016 _record_number: 19786 _uuid: f1380bfc-e39d-43d9-87d6-dfcff35fa7fb reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1890/15-0330 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f1380bfc-e39d-43d9-87d6-dfcff35fa7fb.yaml identifier: f1380bfc-e39d-43d9-87d6-dfcff35fa7fb uri: /reference/f1380bfc-e39d-43d9-87d6-dfcff35fa7fb - attrs: Abstract: 'Managing for species using current weather patterns fails to incorporate the uncertainty associated with future climatic conditions; without incorporating potential changes in climate into conservation strategies, management and conservation efforts may fall short or waste valuable resources. Understanding the effects of climate change on species in the Great Plains of North America is especially important, as this region is projected to experience an increased magnitude of climate change. Of particular ecological and conservation interest is the lesser prairie‐chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus), which was listed as “threatened” under the U.S. Endangered Species Act in May 2014. We used Bayesian hierarchical models to quantify the effects of extreme climatic events (extreme values of the Palmer Drought Severity Index [PDSI]) relative to intermediate (changes in El Niño Southern Oscillation) and long‐term climate variability (changes in the Pacific Decadal Oscillation) on trends in lesser prairie‐chicken abundance from 1981 to 2014. Our results indicate that lesser prairie‐chicken abundance on leks responded to environmental conditions of the year previous by positively responding to wet springs (high PDSI) and negatively to years with hot, dry summers (low PDSI), but had little response to variation in the El Niño Southern Oscillation and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. Additionally, greater variation in abundance on leks was explained by variation in site relative to broad‐scale climatic indices. Consequently, lesser prairie‐chicken abundance on leks in Kansas is more strongly influenced by extreme drought events during summer than other climatic conditions, which may have negative consequences for the population as drought conditions intensify throughout the Great Plains.' Author: 'Ross, Beth E.; Haukos, David; Hagen, Christian; Pitman, James' DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.1323 Issue: 6 Journal: Ecosphere Pages: e01323 Title: The relative contribution of climate to changes in lesser prairie‐chicken abundance Volume: 7 Year: 2016 _record_number: 25780 _uuid: f18554bd-80a0-4dd9-af82-c223395fcd95 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1002/ecs2.1323 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f18554bd-80a0-4dd9-af82-c223395fcd95.yaml identifier: f18554bd-80a0-4dd9-af82-c223395fcd95 uri: /reference/f18554bd-80a0-4dd9-af82-c223395fcd95 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'OWRB,' Institution: Oklahoma Water Resources Board Place Published: Oklahoma City Publisher: 'University of Oklahoma Printing Services,' Title: The Oklahoma Comprehensive Water Plan URL: http://www.owrb.ok.gov/supply/ocwp/ocwp.php Year: 2012 _record_number: 25807 _uuid: f18978b9-1d12-4537-aec4-941d178c045c reftype: Report child_publication: /report/oklahoma-comprehensive-water-plan href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f18978b9-1d12-4537-aec4-941d178c045c.yaml identifier: f18978b9-1d12-4537-aec4-941d178c045c uri: /reference/f18978b9-1d12-4537-aec4-941d178c045c - attrs: .reference_type: 9 Author: USGCRP DOI: 10.7930/J0R49NQX Number of Pages: 312 Place Published: 'Washington, DC' Publisher: U.S. Global Change Research Program Title: 'The Impacts of Climate Change on Human Health in the United States: A Scientific Assessment' Year: 2016 _record_number: 19368 _uuid: f1e633d5-070a-4a7d-935b-a2281a0c9cb6 reftype: Book child_publication: /report/usgcrp-climate-human-health-assessment-2016 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f1e633d5-070a-4a7d-935b-a2281a0c9cb6.yaml identifier: f1e633d5-070a-4a7d-935b-a2281a0c9cb6 uri: /reference/f1e633d5-070a-4a7d-935b-a2281a0c9cb6 - attrs: Issue Date: August 16 Newspaper: The Weather Channel Reporter: 'Erdman, Jon' Title: '18 Major Flood Events Have Hit Texas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas Since March 2015' URL: https://weather.com/storms/severe/news/flood-fatigue-2015-2016-texas-louisiana-oklahoma Year: 2016 _record_number: 25790 _uuid: f29b94d3-c885-4401-953e-f4f31556efee reftype: Newspaper Article child_publication: /generic/af442852-240c-4001-b28c-34c6a03bba1e href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f29b94d3-c885-4401-953e-f4f31556efee.yaml identifier: f29b94d3-c885-4401-953e-f4f31556efee uri: /reference/f29b94d3-c885-4401-953e-f4f31556efee - attrs: Author: 'Banner, Jay L.; Charles S. Jackson; Zong-Liang Yang; Katharine Hayhoe; Connie Woodhouse; Lindsey Gulden; Kathy Jacobs; Gerald North; Ruby Leung; Warren Washington; Xiaoyan Jiang; Richard Castell' ISSN: 2160-5319 Issue: 1 Journal: Texas Water Journal Pages: 1-19 Title: 'Climate change impacts on Texas water: A white paper assessment of the past, present and future and recommendations for action' URL: https://journals.tdl.org/twj/index.php/twj/article/view/1043 Volume: 1 Year: 2010 _record_number: 23294 _uuid: f2bce905-3f9b-47a6-aae9-3b59d3d80e38 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/climate-change-impacts-on-texas-water-white-paper-assessment-past-present-future-recommendations-action href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f2bce905-3f9b-47a6-aae9-3b59d3d80e38.yaml identifier: f2bce905-3f9b-47a6-aae9-3b59d3d80e38 uri: /reference/f2bce905-3f9b-47a6-aae9-3b59d3d80e38 - attrs: Author: 'Newkirk II, Vann R.' E-Pub Date: 'September 2, 2017' Periodical Title: The Atlantic Title: '"Hurricane Harvey’s public-health nightmare"' URL: https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/09/hurricane-harveys-public-health-nightmare/538767/ Year: 2017 _record_number: 23229 _uuid: f8225523-7ae9-4ab4-ac28-4cfafe1b508b reftype: Electronic Article child_publication: /generic/92e3a55c-6ea8-4c46-9813-e8316c23270a href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f8225523-7ae9-4ab4-ac28-4cfafe1b508b.yaml identifier: f8225523-7ae9-4ab4-ac28-4cfafe1b508b uri: /reference/f8225523-7ae9-4ab4-ac28-4cfafe1b508b - attrs: Abstract: 'Major changes are occurring with far reaching implications for the existing equilibria or disequilibria in the water-energy-food-environment interface. The increased demand of energy worldwide will reflect directly and indirectly on water-dependent systems. Direct implications will come from higher energy prices, which make extraction and conveyance of water more costly. Indirect implications will be in the form of demand for alternative energy sources. It triggers demand for hydropower and remains a major driver—along with some environmental policies—for biofuel expansion. The key question is how these effects may alter water allocation and influence food security, rural poverty and environmental sustainability. This paper sets the background and context of this special issue by highlighting some of the major water-related policy issues related to the subject and provides an overview and synthesis of the papers in this special issue. Besides offering insight into how these papers address these questions in the practical context of few selected countries and basins, this paper also indicates some key areas for future research on the subject.%U ; http://wp.iwaponline.com/content/ppiwawaterpol/10/S1/1.full.pdf' Author: 'Hellegers, Petra; Zilberman, David; Steduto, Pasquale; McCornick, Peter' DOI: 10.2166/wp.2008.048 Issue: S1 Journal: Water Policy Pages: 1-10 Title: 'Interactions between water, energy, food and environment: Evolving perspectives and policy issues' Volume: 10 Year: 2008 _record_number: 23256 _uuid: f94be101-daad-4c14-9a81-81dc9e8c71c0 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.2166/wp.2008.048 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/f94be101-daad-4c14-9a81-81dc9e8c71c0.yaml identifier: f94be101-daad-4c14-9a81-81dc9e8c71c0 uri: /reference/f94be101-daad-4c14-9a81-81dc9e8c71c0 - attrs: Abstract: 'Episodes of severe weather in the United States, such as the present abundance of rainfall in California, are brandished as tangible evidence of the future costs of current climate trends. Hsiang et al. collected national data documenting the responses in six economic sectors to short-term weather fluctuations. These data were integrated with probabilistic distributions from a set of global climate models and used to estimate future costs during the remainder of this century across a range of scenarios (see the Perspective by Pizer). In terms of overall effects on gross domestic product, the authors predict negative impacts in the southern United States and positive impacts in some parts of the Pacific Northwest and New England.Science, this issue p. 1362; see also p. 1330Estimates of climate change damage are central to the design of climate policies. Here, we develop a flexible architecture for computing damages that integrates climate science, econometric analyses, and process models. We use this approach to construct spatially explicit, probabilistic, and empirically derived estimates of economic damage in the United States from climate change. The combined value of market and nonmarket damage across analyzed sectors—agriculture, crime, coastal storms, energy, human mortality, and labor—increases quadratically in global mean temperature, costing roughly 1.2% of gross domestic product per +1°C on average. Importantly, risk is distributed unequally across locations, generating a large transfer of value northward and westward that increases economic inequality. By the late 21st century, the poorest third of counties are projected to experience damages between 2 and 20% of county income (90% chance) under business-as-usual emissions (Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5).' Author: 'Hsiang, Solomon; Kopp, Robert; Jina, Amir; Rising, James; Delgado, Michael; Mohan, Shashank; Rasmussen, D. J.; Muir-Wood, Robert; Wilson, Paul; Oppenheimer, Michael; Larsen, Kate; Houser, Trevor' DOI: 10.1126/science.aal4369 Issue: 6345 Journal: Science Pages: 1362-1369 Title: Estimating economic damage from climate change in the United States Volume: 356 Year: 2017 _record_number: 23965 _uuid: fad9e8ec-8951-4daa-9a9c-e093ef86af16 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1126/science.aal4369 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/fad9e8ec-8951-4daa-9a9c-e093ef86af16.yaml identifier: fad9e8ec-8951-4daa-9a9c-e093ef86af16 uri: /reference/fad9e8ec-8951-4daa-9a9c-e093ef86af16 - attrs: Author: 'Hawkes, Logan' Place Published: 'Irving, TX' Publisher: FarmProgress/Informa Title of Entry: Texas Rice Belt flooded by heavy rains Title of WebLog: Southwest FarmPress URL: http://www.southwestfarmpress.com/grains/texas-rice-belt-flooded-heavy-rains Year: 2016 _record_number: 23289 _uuid: fbcfc7c8-d3b5-4812-a14f-d0c9f1267531 reftype: Blog child_publication: /webpage/f92f02b6-abbc-4dba-b112-a70954a58412 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/fbcfc7c8-d3b5-4812-a14f-d0c9f1267531.yaml identifier: fbcfc7c8-d3b5-4812-a14f-d0c9f1267531 uri: /reference/fbcfc7c8-d3b5-4812-a14f-d0c9f1267531 - attrs: Abstract: 'The Southern High Plains is anticipated to experience significant changes in temperature and precipitation due to climate change. These changes may influence the lesser prairie-chicken (Tympanuchus pallidicinctus) in positive or negative ways. We assessed the potential changes in clutch size, incubation start date, and nest survival for lesser prairie-chickens for the years 2050 and 2080 based on modeled predictions of climate change and reproductive data for lesser prairie-chickens from 2001–2011 on the Southern High Plains of Texas and New Mexico. We developed 9 a priori models to assess the relationship between reproductive parameters and biologically relevant weather conditions. We selected weather variable(s) with the most model support and then obtained future predicted values from climatewizard.org. We conducted 1,000 simulations using each reproductive parameter’s linear equation obtained from regression calculations, and the future predicted value for each weather variable to predict future reproductive parameter values for lesser prairie-chickens. There was a high degree of model uncertainty for each reproductive value. Winter temperature had the greatest effect size for all three parameters, suggesting a negative relationship between above-average winter temperature and reproductive output. The above-average winter temperatures are correlated to La Niña events, which negatively affect lesser prairie-chickens through resulting drought conditions. By 2050 and 2080, nest survival was predicted to be below levels considered viable for population persistence; however, our assessment did not consider annual survival of adults, chick survival, or the positive benefit of habitat management and conservation, which may ultimately offset the potentially negative effect of drought on nest survival.' Author: 'Grisham, Blake A.; Boal, Clint W.; Haukos, David A.; Davis, Dawn M.; Boydston, Kathy K.; Dixon, Charles; Heck, Willard R.' DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0068225 Issue: 7 Journal: PLOS ONE Pages: e68225 Publisher: Public Library of Science Title: The predicted influence of climate change on lesser prairie-chicken reproductive parameters Volume: 8 Year: 2013 _record_number: 25785 _uuid: ff3fe7bf-7ec6-4ab8-be12-ff588c6ab892 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1371/journal.pone.0068225 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/ff3fe7bf-7ec6-4ab8-be12-ff588c6ab892.yaml identifier: ff3fe7bf-7ec6-4ab8-be12-ff588c6ab892 uri: /reference/ff3fe7bf-7ec6-4ab8-be12-ff588c6ab892