---
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Author: 'Bograd, Steven J.; Buil, Mercedes Pozo; Lorenzo, Emanuele Di; Castro, Carmen G.; Schroeder, Isaac D.; Goericke, Ralf; Anderson, Clarissa R.; Benitez-Nelson, Claudia; Whitney, Frank A.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.dsr2.2014.04.009
Date: 2//
ISSN: 0967-0645
Journal: 'Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography'
Keywords: California Current System; California Undercurrent; CalCOFI; Dissolved oxygen; Inorganic nutrients; Water masses; Upwelling
Pages: 42-52
Title: Changes in source waters to the Southern California Bight
Volume: 112
Year: 2015
_record_number: 20008
_uuid: 52a3a443-6cc8-4903-8517-1ed294241d99
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.dsr2.2014.04.009
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/52a3a443-6cc8-4903-8517-1ed294241d99.yaml
identifier: 52a3a443-6cc8-4903-8517-1ed294241d99
uri: /reference/52a3a443-6cc8-4903-8517-1ed294241d99
- attrs:
.reference_type: 7
Author: 'Kossin, J.P.; T. Hall; T. Knutson; K.E. Kunkel; R.J. Trapp; D.E. Waliser; M.F. Wehner'
Book Title: 'Climate Science Special Report: Fourth National Climate Assessment, Volume I'
DOI: 10.7930/J07S7KXX
Editor: 'Wuebbles, D.J.; D.W. Fahey; K.A. Hibbard; D.J. Dokken; B.C. Stewart; T.K. Maycock'
Pages: 257-276
Place Published: 'Washington, DC, USA'
Publisher: U.S. Global Change Research Program
Title: Extreme Storms
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21567
_uuid: 52ce1b63-1b04-4728-9f1b-daee39af665e
reftype: Book Section
child_publication: /report/climate-science-special-report/chapter/extreme-storms
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/52ce1b63-1b04-4728-9f1b-daee39af665e.yaml
identifier: 52ce1b63-1b04-4728-9f1b-daee39af665e
uri: /reference/52ce1b63-1b04-4728-9f1b-daee39af665e
- attrs:
Author: 'McCabe, Ryan M.; Hickey, Barbara M.; Kudela, Raphael M.; Lefebvre, Kathi A.; Adams, Nicolaus G.; Bill, Brian D.; Gulland, Frances M. D.; Thomson, Richard E.; Cochlan, William P.; Trainer, Vera L.'
DOI: 10.1002/2016GL070023
ISSN: 1944-8007
Issue: 19
Journal: Geophysical Research Letters
Keywords: 'harmful algal bloom; Pseudo-nitzschia australis; domoic acid; upwelling; warm anomaly; toxin; 1616 Climate variability; 4279 Upwelling and convergences; 4217 Coastal processes; 4855 Phytoplankton; 4815 Ecosystems, structure, dynamics, and modeling'
Pages: '10,366-10,376'
Title: An unprecedented coastwide toxic algal bloom linked to anomalous ocean conditions
Volume: 43
Year: 2016
_record_number: 24640
_uuid: 5300d778-0b4e-44bb-9449-c6a36ead3636
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1002/2016GL070023
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/5300d778-0b4e-44bb-9449-c6a36ead3636.yaml
identifier: 5300d778-0b4e-44bb-9449-c6a36ead3636
uri: /reference/5300d778-0b4e-44bb-9449-c6a36ead3636
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Author: 'Naughton, M. B.; Henderson, Alden; Mirabelli, Maria C.; Kaiser, Reinhard; Wilhelm, John L.; Kieszak, Stephanie M.; Rubin, Carol H.; McGeehin, Michael A.'
DOI: 10.1016/S0749-3797(02)00421-X
ISSN: 0749-3797
Issue: 4
Journal: American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Pages: 221-227
Title: Heat-related mortality during a 1999 heat wave in Chicago
Volume: 22
Year: 2002
_record_number: 19220
_uuid: 53b9906c-e4bf-4190-8ce7-73022280cba6
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/S0749-3797(02)00421-X
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/53b9906c-e4bf-4190-8ce7-73022280cba6.yaml
identifier: 53b9906c-e4bf-4190-8ce7-73022280cba6
uri: /reference/53b9906c-e4bf-4190-8ce7-73022280cba6
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Medellín-Azuara, Josué ; Duncan MacEwan; Richard E. Howitt; Daniel A. Sumner; Jay R. Lund'
Institution: 'University of California-Davis, Center for Watershed Sciences'
Pages: 17
Place Published: 'Davis, CA'
Title: Economic Analysis of the 2016 California Drought on Agriculture
URL: https://watershed.ucdavis.edu/droughtimpacts
Year: 2016
_record_number: 23936
_uuid: 53ceb8c3-f1b8-4cc1-bb65-3268f4f8bb74
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/economic-analysis-2016-california-drought-on-agriculture
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/53ceb8c3-f1b8-4cc1-bb65-3268f4f8bb74.yaml
identifier: 53ceb8c3-f1b8-4cc1-bb65-3268f4f8bb74
uri: /reference/53ceb8c3-f1b8-4cc1-bb65-3268f4f8bb74
- attrs:
Author: 'Kim, Seung Hee; Kim, Jinwon; Walko, Rovert; Myoung, Boksoon; Stack, David; Kafatos, Menas'
DOI: 10.1016/j.proenv.2015.07.210
Date: 2015/01/01/
ISSN: 1878-0296
Journal: Procedia Environmental Sciences
Keywords: Regional climate change; yield potential; crop model; regional climate model; maize; Southwestern United States
Pages: 279-280
Title: Climate change impacts on maize-yield potential in the southwestern United States
Volume: 29
Year: 2015
_record_number: 23800
_uuid: 53efddbf-8a1f-44fb-83e2-167fde08c9aa
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.proenv.2015.07.210
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/53efddbf-8a1f-44fb-83e2-167fde08c9aa.yaml
identifier: 53efddbf-8a1f-44fb-83e2-167fde08c9aa
uri: /reference/53efddbf-8a1f-44fb-83e2-167fde08c9aa
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Fire suppression in many dry forest types has left a legacy of dense, homogeneous forests. Such landscapes have high water demands and fuel loads, and when burned can result in catastrophically large fires. These characteristics are undesirable in the face of projected warming and drying in the western US. Alternative forest and fire treatments based on managed wildfire—a regime in which fires are allowed to burn naturally and only suppressed under defined management conditions—offer a potential strategy to ameliorate the effects of fire suppression. Understanding the long-term effects of this strategy on vegetation, water, and forest resilience is increasingly important as the use of managed wildfire becomes more widely accepted. The Illilouette Creek Basin in Yosemite National Park has experienced 40 years of managed wildfire, reducing forest cover by 22%, and increasing meadow areas by 200% and shrublands by 24%. Statistical upscaling of 3300 soil moisture observations made since 2013 suggests that large increases in wetness occurred in sites where fire caused transitions from forests to dense meadows. The runoff ratio (ratio of annual runoff to precipitation) from the basin appears to be increasing or stable since 1973, compared to declines in runoff ratio for nearby, unburned watersheds. Managed wildfire appears to increase landscape heterogeneity, and likely improves resilience to disturbances, such as fire and drought, although more detailed analysis of fire effects on basin-scale hydrology is needed.'
Author: 'Boisramé, Gabrielle; Thompson, Sally; Collins, Brandon; Stephens, Scott'
DOI: 10.1007/s10021-016-0048-1
Date: June 01
ISSN: 1435-0629
Issue: 4
Journal: Ecosystems
Pages: 717-732
Title: Managed wildfire effects on forest resilience and water in the Sierra Nevada
Type of Article: journal article
Volume: 20
Year: 2017
_record_number: 23666
_uuid: 54acf6dd-9fd1-418f-ae0f-39f17afb79b0
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10021-016-0048-1
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/54acf6dd-9fd1-418f-ae0f-39f17afb79b0.yaml
identifier: 54acf6dd-9fd1-418f-ae0f-39f17afb79b0
uri: /reference/54acf6dd-9fd1-418f-ae0f-39f17afb79b0
- attrs:
.reference_type: 16
Author: 'DOE,'
Place Published: 'Washington, DC'
Publisher: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
Title: Tribal energy projects database
URL: https://energy.gov/indianenergy/maps/tribal-energy-projects-database
Year: 2017
_record_number: 23907
_uuid: 54f0f885-6503-4fdc-92bd-388969b88585
reftype: Web Page
child_publication: /webpage/116898a5-88e3-4595-a201-555ddf8e353c
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/54f0f885-6503-4fdc-92bd-388969b88585.yaml
identifier: 54f0f885-6503-4fdc-92bd-388969b88585
uri: /reference/54f0f885-6503-4fdc-92bd-388969b88585
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Domoic acid is a potent neurotoxin produced by certain marine microalgae that can accumulate in the foodweb, posing a health threat to human seafood consumers and wildlife in coastal regions worldwide. Evidence of climatic regulation of domoic acid in shellfish over the past 20 y in the Northern California Current regime is shown. The timing of elevated domoic acid is strongly related to warm phases of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation and the Oceanic Niño Index, an indicator of El Niño events. Ocean conditions in the northeast Pacific that are associated with warm phases of these indices, including changes in prevailing currents and advection of anomalously warm water masses onto the continental shelf, are hypothesized to contribute to increases in this toxin. We present an applied domoic acid risk assessment model for the US West Coast based on combined climatic and local variables. Evidence of regional- to basin-scale controls on domoic acid has not previously been presented. Our findings have implications in coastal zones worldwide that are affected by this toxin and are particularly relevant given the increased frequency of anomalously warm ocean conditions.'
Author: 'McKibben, S. Morgaine; Peterson, William; Wood, A. Michelle; Trainer, Vera L.; Hunter, Matthew; White, Angelicque E.'
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1606798114
Date: 'January 10, 2017'
Issue: 2
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Pages: 239-244
Title: Climatic regulation of the neurotoxin domoic acid
Volume: 114
Year: 2017
_record_number: 23823
_uuid: 5509daeb-bffb-4395-8582-1fef669a7a49
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1606798114
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/5509daeb-bffb-4395-8582-1fef669a7a49.yaml
identifier: 5509daeb-bffb-4395-8582-1fef669a7a49
uri: /reference/5509daeb-bffb-4395-8582-1fef669a7a49
- attrs:
Author: 'Myint, Soe Win; Zheng, Baojuan; Talen, Emily; Fan, Chao; Kaplan, Shai; Middel, Ariane; Smith, Martin; Huang, Huei-ping; Brazel, Anthony'
DOI: 10.1890/EHS14-0028.1
Date: 2015/06/01
ISSN: 2096-4129
Issue: 4
Journal: Ecosystem Health and Sustainability
Pages: 1-15
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Title: 'Does the spatial arrangement of urban landscape matter? Examples of urban warming and cooling in Phoenix and Las Vegas'
Volume: 1
Year: 2015
_record_number: 26374
_uuid: 556b95ec-c32c-4647-9dee-7b91df063ba0
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1890/EHS14-0028.1
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/556b95ec-c32c-4647-9dee-7b91df063ba0.yaml
identifier: 556b95ec-c32c-4647-9dee-7b91df063ba0
uri: /reference/556b95ec-c32c-4647-9dee-7b91df063ba0
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'Redsteer, M. Hiza, Kelley, K.B., Francis, H. and Block, D.'
Institution: UNISDR
Place Published: 'Geneva, Switzerland'
Title: 'Disaster risk assessment case study: Recent drought on the Navajo nation, southwestern United States. Background Paper prepared for the 2011 Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction.'
URL: http://www.preventionweb.net/english/hyogo/gar/2011/en/bgdocs/Redsteer_Kelley_Francis_&_Block_2010.pdf
Year: 2010
_record_number: 18828
_uuid: 55bb8299-2349-4d73-b75a-acb2754e5ff6
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/isdr-usgs-disasterrisk-2011
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/55bb8299-2349-4d73-b75a-acb2754e5ff6.yaml
identifier: 55bb8299-2349-4d73-b75a-acb2754e5ff6
uri: /reference/55bb8299-2349-4d73-b75a-acb2754e5ff6
- attrs:
.reference_type: 10
Author: 'EIA,'
Institution: U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA)
Pages: 146
Place Published: 'Washington, DC'
Series Volume: AEO2018
Title: Annual Energy Outlook 2018
URL: https://www.eia.gov/outlooks/aeo/
Year: 2018
_record_number: 25441
_uuid: 561029d5-4494-43bf-98d2-96ad38606588
reftype: Report
child_publication: /report/eia-annual-energy-outlook-2018
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/561029d5-4494-43bf-98d2-96ad38606588.yaml
identifier: 561029d5-4494-43bf-98d2-96ad38606588
uri: /reference/561029d5-4494-43bf-98d2-96ad38606588
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Many tribes in California and Oregon value California black oak (Quercus kelloggii) as a traditional source of food and other values. Over centuries or millennia, Native Americans learned that they could enhance production of desired resources by regularly igniting low-intensity surface fires in stands of black oak. Although black oak is likely to remain widespread in the future, a warming climate, increasingly dense forests, and altered fire regimes threaten the large, full-crowned mature trees that produce crops of high-quality acorns and provide cavities for many wildlife species. To examine the effects of different kinds of burns on tribal values including associated plants, fungi, and wildlife of special cultural significance, we reviewed and synthesized scientific studies of black oak in conjunction with interviews and workshops with tribal members who use the species and recall burning by their ancestors. We conducted two exploratory analyses to understand trends in large black oaks and potential tradeoffs regarding black oak restoration. Our findings identify opportunities for reintroducing low-intensity fire, in conjunction with thinning, to restore stands that are favorable for acorn gathering. We present examples of such projects and discuss how to overcome challenges in restoring the socioecological benefits of black oak ecosystems for tribes.
Management and Policy Implications Wildfires and forest densification threaten the large California black oaks that produce acorns valued by tribes for food and social well-being. Tribal members identified desired conditions including large black oaks with full crowns and low branches that produce abundant acorns free from pests and a relatively open ground surface with diverse plant communities and edible fungi near the oak trees. Tribal knowledge of using frequent, low-intensity fires and other traditional tending and gathering practices can advance strategies for promoting these conditions. Active treatments that remove competing conifer trees, reduce fuels, and reintroduce low-intensity fire are needed to support tribal values associated with gathering acorns and other plant resources associated with black oak stands. Targeting stands with large black oaks in gently sloped areas close to roads would promote tribal access while reducing the likelihood of adversely affecting sensitive wildlife such as spotted owls and fishers. Forest management plans can build on recent efforts to work with tribes in developing monitoring, forest thinning, and fire management activities to promote black oaks.'
Author: 'Long, Jonathan W.; Goode, Ron W.; Gutteriez, Raymond J.; Lackey, Jessica J.; Anderson, M. Kat'
DOI: 10.5849/jof.16-033
Date: //
Issue: 5
Journal: Journal of Forestry
Keywords: cultural burning; traditional ecological knowledge; forest planning; ecosystem services; landscape restoration
Pages: 426-434
Title: Managing California black oak for tribal ecocultural restoration
Volume: 115
Year: 2017
_record_number: 23682
_uuid: 5631fb79-8860-4b2f-98e9-ae2335ae28e0
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.5849/jof.16-033
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/5631fb79-8860-4b2f-98e9-ae2335ae28e0.yaml
identifier: 5631fb79-8860-4b2f-98e9-ae2335ae28e0
uri: /reference/5631fb79-8860-4b2f-98e9-ae2335ae28e0
- attrs:
.reference_type: 0
Author: "Ault, T. R.\rMacalady, A. K.\rPederson, G. T.\rBetancourt, J. L.\rSchwartz, M. D."
DOI: 10.1175/2011jcli4069.1
Date: Aug
ISSN: 0894-8755
Issue: 15
Journal: Journal of Climate
Keywords: united-states; annular mode; extratropical circulation; geopotential; height; climate-change; part i; trends; phenology; earlier; wildfire
Pages: 4003-4014
Title: Northern hemisphere modes of variability and the timing of spring in western North America
Type of Article: Article
URL: http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/2011JCLI4069.1
Volume: 24
Year: 2011
_chapter: '["Ch. 20: Southwest FINAL","Ch. 8: Ecosystems FINAL"]'
_record_number: 1190
_uuid: 56447233-ad64-46b3-8371-925de98e78c0
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1175/2011jcli4069.1
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/56447233-ad64-46b3-8371-925de98e78c0.yaml
identifier: 56447233-ad64-46b3-8371-925de98e78c0
uri: /reference/56447233-ad64-46b3-8371-925de98e78c0
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Six decades of observations at 20 coastal airports, from Alaska to southern California, reveal coherent interannual to interdecadal variation of coastal low cloudiness (CLC) from summer to summer over this broad region. The leading mode of CLC variability represents coherent variation, accounting for nearly 40% of the total CLC variance spanning 1950–2012. This leading mode and the majority of individual airports exhibit decreased low cloudiness from the earlier to the later part of the record. Exploring climatic controls on CLC, we identify North Pacific Sea Surface Temperature anomalies, largely in the form of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) as well correlated with, and evidently helping to organize, the coherent patterns of summer coastal cloud variability. Links from the PDO to summer CLC appear a few months in advance of the summer. These associations hold up consistently in interannual and interdecadal frequencies.'
Author: 'Schwartz, Rachel E.; Gershunov, Alexander; Iacobellis, Sam F.; Cayan, Daniel R.'
DOI: 10.1002/2014GL059825
Issue: 9
Journal: Geophysical Research Letters
Pages: 3307-3314
Title: 'North American west coast summer low cloudiness: Broadscale variability associated with sea surface temperature'
Volume: 41
Year: 2014
_record_number: 26383
_uuid: 566f09cf-bf52-4392-90d5-3b96d6c42c93
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1002/2014GL059825
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/566f09cf-bf52-4392-90d5-3b96d6c42c93.yaml
identifier: 566f09cf-bf52-4392-90d5-3b96d6c42c93
uri: /reference/566f09cf-bf52-4392-90d5-3b96d6c42c93
- attrs:
Author: 'Van Pelt, Robert; Sillett, Stephen C.; Kruse, William A.; Freund, James A.; Kramer, Russell D.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2016.05.018
Date: 2016/09/01/
ISSN: 0378-1127
Journal: Forest Ecology and Management
Keywords: Old growth; Forest structure; Biomass; LAI; Leaf area; Carbon sequestration; LiDAR; Emergent trees; Heartwood; Allometric equations; Light-use complementarity
Pages: 279-308
Title: Emergent crowns and light-use complementarity lead to global maximum biomass and leaf area in Sequoia sempervirens forests
Volume: 375
Year: 2016
_record_number: 23877
_uuid: 56f2bfb8-90f4-439c-92a7-a4ab82e13c5c
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.foreco.2016.05.018
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/56f2bfb8-90f4-439c-92a7-a4ab82e13c5c.yaml
identifier: 56f2bfb8-90f4-439c-92a7-a4ab82e13c5c
uri: /reference/56f2bfb8-90f4-439c-92a7-a4ab82e13c5c
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Global ocean temperatures are rising, yet the impacts of such changes on harmful algal blooms (HABs) are not fully understood. Here we used high-resolution sea-surface temperature records (1982 to 2016) and temperature-dependent growth rates of two algae that produce potent biotoxins, Alexandrium fundyense and Dinophysis acuminata, to evaluate recent changes in these HABs. For both species, potential mean annual growth rates and duration of bloom seasons significantly increased within many coastal Atlantic regions between 40°N and 60°N, where incidents of these HABs have emerged and expanded in recent decades. Widespread trends were less evident across the North Pacific, although regions were identified across the Salish Sea and along the Alaskan coastline where blooms have recently emerged, and there have been significant increases in the potential growth rates and duration of these HAB events. We conclude that increasing ocean temperature is an important factor facilitating the intensification of these, and likely other, HABs and thus contributes to an expanding human health threat.'
Author: 'Gobler, Christopher J.; Doherty, Owen M.; Hattenrath-Lehmann, Theresa K.; Griffith, Andrew W.; Kang, Yoonja; Litaker, R. Wayne'
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1619575114
Date: 'May 9, 2017'
Issue: 19
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Pages: 4975-4980
Title: Ocean warming since 1982 has expanded the niche of toxic algal blooms in the North Atlantic and North Pacific oceans
Volume: 114
Year: 2017
_record_number: 21822
_uuid: 59d0bcfb-805b-472d-b6fe-3b70bacc3d25
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1073/pnas.1619575114
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/59d0bcfb-805b-472d-b6fe-3b70bacc3d25.yaml
identifier: 59d0bcfb-805b-472d-b6fe-3b70bacc3d25
uri: /reference/59d0bcfb-805b-472d-b6fe-3b70bacc3d25
- attrs:
Abstract: 'The Yakima River Basin (Basin) in south-central Washington is a prime example of a place where competing water uses, coupled with over-allocation of water resources, have presented water managers with the challenge of meeting current demand, anticipating future demand, and preparing for potential impacts of climate change. We took a decision analysis approach that gathered diverse stakeholders to discuss their concerns pertaining to climate change effects on the Basin and future goals that were collectively important. One main focus was centered on how climate change may influence future salmon populations. Salmon have played a prominent role in the cultures of Basin communities, especially for tribal communities that have social, cultural, spiritual, subsistence, and economic ties to them. Stakeholders identified the need for a better understanding on how the cultural, spiritual, subsistence, and economic aspects of the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation could be affected by changes in salmon populations. In an attempt to understand the complexities of these potential effects, this paper proposes a conceptual model which 1) identifies cultural values and components and the interactions between those components that could influence tribal well-being, and 2) shows how federal natural resource managers could incorporate intangible tribal cultural components into decision-making processes by understanding important components of tribal well-being. Future work includes defining the parameterization of the cultural components in order for the conceptual model to be incorporated with biophysical resource models for scenario simulations.'
Author: 'Montag, J. M.; Swan, K.; Jenni, K.; Nieman, T.; Hatten, J.; Mesa, M.; Graves, D.; Voss, F.; Mastin, M.; Hardiman, J.; Maule, A.'
DOI: 10.1007/s10584-013-1001-3
Date: May 01
ISSN: 1573-1480
Issue: 1
Journal: Climatic Change
Pages: 385-398
Title: Climate change and Yakama Nation tribal well-being
Type of Article: journal article
Volume: 124
Year: 2014
_record_number: 21116
_uuid: 5a014fc7-218e-4116-88e9-c47a65b48e8c
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10584-013-1001-3
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/5a014fc7-218e-4116-88e9-c47a65b48e8c.yaml
identifier: 5a014fc7-218e-4116-88e9-c47a65b48e8c
uri: /reference/5a014fc7-218e-4116-88e9-c47a65b48e8c
- attrs:
Author: 'Barrows, C. W.'
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2011.01.018
Date: 2011/07/01/
ISSN: 0140-1963
Issue: 7
Journal: Journal of Arid Environments
Keywords: Chuckwalla; Climate change; Desert tortoise; Joshua Tree National Park; Mahalanobis; Mojave Desert; Niche modeling; Sonoran Desert
Pages: 629-635
Title: Sensitivity to climate change for two reptiles at the Mojave–Sonoran Desert interface
Volume: 75
Year: 2011
_record_number: 23719
_uuid: 5aa9463f-dfab-4ff9-9e39-0edd90c5eae7
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jaridenv.2011.01.018
href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/5aa9463f-dfab-4ff9-9e39-0edd90c5eae7.yaml
identifier: 5aa9463f-dfab-4ff9-9e39-0edd90c5eae7
uri: /reference/5aa9463f-dfab-4ff9-9e39-0edd90c5eae7
- attrs:
Abstract: 'Scientists have long predicted large-scale responses of infectious diseases to climate change, giving rise to a polarizing debate, especially concerning human pathogens for which socioeconomic drivers and control measures can limit the detection of climate-mediated changes. Climate change has already increased the occurrence of diseases in some natural and agricultural systems, but in many cases, outcomes depend on the form of climate change and details of the host-pathogen system. In this review, we highlight research progress and gaps that have emerged during the past decade and develop a predictive framework that integrates knowledge from ecophysiology and community ecology with modeling approaches. Future work must continue to anticipate and monitor pathogen biodiversity and disease trends in natural ecosystems and identify opportunities to mitigate the impacts of climate-driven disease emergence.'
Author: 'Altizer, S.; Ostfeld, R. S.; Johnson, P. T.; Kutz, S.; Harvell, C. D.'
Author Address: 'Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA. saltizer@uga.edu'
DOI: 10.1126/science.1239401
Database Provider: CCII PubMed NLM
Date: Aug 2
EPub Date: 2013/08/03
ISSN: "1095-9203 (Electronic)\r\n0036-8075 (Linking)"
Issue: 6145
Journal: Science
Keywords: 'Animals; Biodiversity; Climate Change; Communicable Diseases/ epidemiology/transmission; Extinction, Biological; Health; Host-Parasite Interactions; Host-Pathogen Interactions; Humans; Prognosis'
Language: eng
NIHMSID: ' NIEHS'
Name of Database: ' '
Notes: "Altizer, Sonia\r\nOstfeld, Richard S\r\nJohnson, Pieter T J\r\nKutz, Susan\r\nHarvell, C Drew\r\nResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't\r\nResearch Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.\r\nReview\r\nUnited States\r\nScience. 2013 Aug 2;341(6145):514-9. doi: 10.1126/science.1239401."
Pages: 514-519
Research Notes: 'CCII Unique - PDF retrieved'
Title: 'Climate change and infectious diseases: From evidence to a predictive framework'
Volume: 341
Year: 2013
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Author: 'Hurteau, Matthew; North, Malcolm'
DOI: 10.1890/080049
ISSN: 1540-9309
Issue: 8
Journal: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
Pages: 409-414
Publisher: Ecological Society of America
Title: Fuel treatment effects on tree-based forest carbon storage and emissions under modeled wildfire scenarios
Volume: 7
Year: 2009
_record_number: 23785
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Author: 'Norton-Smith, Kathryn; Kathy Lynn; Karletta Chief; Karen Cozzetto; Jamie Donatuto; Margaret Hiza Redsteer; Linda E. Kruger; Julie Maldonado; Carson Viles; Kyle P. Whyte'
Institution: 'U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, Pacific Northwest Research Station'
Pages: 136
Place Published: 'Portland, OR'
Series Volume: Gen. Tech. Rep. PNW-GTR-944
Title: 'Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples: A Synthesis of Current Impacts and Experiences'
URL: https://www.fs.usda.gov/treesearch/pubs/53156
Year: 2016
_record_number: 21324
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reftype: Report
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Abstract: 'In most Mediterranean climate (MedClim) regions around the world, global climate models (GCMs) consistently project drier futures. In California, however, projections of changes in annual precipitation are inconsistent. Analysis of daily precipitation in 30 GCMs reveals patterns in projected hydrometeorology over each of the five MedClm regions globally and helps disentangle their causes. MedClim regions, except California, are expected to dry via decreased frequency of winter precipitation. Frequencies of extreme precipitation, however, are projected to increase over the two MedClim regions of the Northern Hemisphere where projected warming is strongest. The increase in heavy and extreme precipitation is particularly robust over California, where it is only partially offset by projected decreases in low-medium intensity precipitation. Over the Mediterranean Basin, however, losses from decreasing frequency of low-medium-intensity precipitation are projected to dominate gains from intensifying projected extreme precipitation. MedClim regions are projected to become more sub-tropical, i.e. made dryer via pole-ward expanding subtropical subsidence. California’s more nuanced hydrological future reflects a precarious balance between the expanding subtropical high from the south and the south-eastward extending Aleutian low from the north-west. These dynamical mechanisms and thermodynamic moistening of the warming atmosphere result in increased horizontal water vapor transport, bolstering extreme precipitation events.'
Author: 'Polade, Suraj D.; Gershunov, Alexander; Cayan, Daniel R.; Dettinger, Michael D.; Pierce, David W.'
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-11285-y
Date: 2017/09/07
ISSN: 2045-2322
Issue: 1
Journal: Scientific Reports
Pages: 10783
Title: 'Precipitation in a warming world: Assessing projected hydro-climate changes in California and other Mediterranean climate regions'
Volume: 7
Year: 2017
_record_number: 25977
_uuid: 5dffb545-5207-4630-97d9-72c19d864746
reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1038/s41598-017-11285-y
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Author: 'Shukla, Shraddhanand; Safeeq, Mohammad; AghaKouchak, Amir; Guan, Kaiyu; Funk, Chris'
DOI: 10.1002/2015GL063666
ISSN: 1944-8007
Issue: 11
Journal: Geophysical Research Letters
Keywords: California drought; drought predictability; 1812 Drought; 1922 Forecasting
Pages: 4384-4393
Title: Temperature impacts on the water year 2014 drought in California
Volume: 42
Year: 2015
_record_number: 23857
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reftype: Journal Article
child_publication: /article/10.1002/2015GL063666
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