--- - attrs: Author: 'Brusca, Richard C.; Wiens, John F.; Meyer, Wallace M.; Eble, Jeff; Franklin, Kim; Overpeck, Jonathan T.; Moore, Wendy' DOI: 10.1002/ece3.720 ISSN: 2045-7758 Issue: 10 Journal: Ecology and Evolution Keywords: climate change; elevational shifts; montane plants; Southwest Pages: 3307-3319 Title: "Dramatic response to climate change in the Southwest: Robert Whittaker's 1963 Arizona Mountain plant transect revisited" Volume: 3 Year: 2013 _record_number: 23733 _uuid: 30388ca2-14dc-4c75-ac66-cdccbe59d2ac reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1002/ece3.720 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/30388ca2-14dc-4c75-ac66-cdccbe59d2ac.yaml identifier: 30388ca2-14dc-4c75-ac66-cdccbe59d2ac uri: /reference/30388ca2-14dc-4c75-ac66-cdccbe59d2ac - attrs: Abstract: 'Water scarcity, energy consumption, and air temperature regulation are three critical resource and environmental challenges linked to urban population growth. While appliance efficiency continues to increase, today’s homes are larger and residents are using more energy-consuming devices. Recent research has often described the energy–water nexus as a “tradeoff” between energy and water due to reduced temperatures resulting from irrigated vegetation. Accordingly, some arid cities have implemented landscape-conversion programs that encourage homeowners to convert their yards from grass (mesic) to drought-tolerant (xeric) landscapes to help conserve water resources. We investigated these relationships in Phoenix, Arizona by examining energy and water data for the summer months of June–September 2005 while temperature variability was analyzed from a local heat wave. Results show parallel consumption patterns with energy and water use strongly correlated and newer homes using more of both. The counterintuitive findings show that “drought-resistant” models may not be beneficial for community health, environment, or economics and that this issue is further complicated by socio-economic variables.' Author: 'Ruddell, Darren M.; Dixon, P. Grady' DOI: 10.1007/s00484-013-0743-y Date: September 01 ISSN: 1432-1254 Issue: 7 Journal: International Journal of Biometeorology Pages: 1421-1431 Title: 'The energy–water nexus: Are there tradeoffs between residential energy and water consumption in arid cities?' Type of Article: journal article Volume: 58 Year: 2014 _record_number: 23849 _uuid: 303cc526-6398-4a92-9f79-ec1f8a1d92d1 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s00484-013-0743-y href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/303cc526-6398-4a92-9f79-ec1f8a1d92d1.yaml identifier: 303cc526-6398-4a92-9f79-ec1f8a1d92d1 uri: /reference/303cc526-6398-4a92-9f79-ec1f8a1d92d1 - attrs: Author: 'Hessburg, Paul F.; Spies, Thomas A.; Perry, David A.; Skinner, Carl N.; Taylor, Alan H.; Brown, Peter M.; Stephens, Scott L.; Larson, Andrew J.; Churchill, Derek J.; Povak, Nicholas A.; Singleton, Peter H.; McComb, Brenda; Zielinski, William J.; Collins, Brandon M.; Salter, R. Brion; Keane, John J.; Franklin, Jerry F.; Riegel, Greg' DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2016.01.034 Date: 2016/04/15/ ISSN: 0378-1127 Journal: Forest Ecology and Management Keywords: Forest resilience; Resistance; Climate change; Multi-scale heterogeneity; Patch size distributions; Topographic controls; Early successional habitats Pages: 221-250 Title: 'Tamm Review: Management of mixed-severity fire regime forests in Oregon, Washington, and Northern California' Volume: 366 Year: 2016 _record_number: 23777 _uuid: 30b4170d-d727-491b-a2f1-da2dc6e0bec9 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.foreco.2016.01.034 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/30b4170d-d727-491b-a2f1-da2dc6e0bec9.yaml identifier: 30b4170d-d727-491b-a2f1-da2dc6e0bec9 uri: /reference/30b4170d-d727-491b-a2f1-da2dc6e0bec9 - attrs: Abstract: 'Biological soil crusts (biocrusts) are soil-surface communities in drylands, dominated by cyanobacteria, mosses, and lichens. They provide key ecosystem functions by increasing soil stability and influencing soil hydrologic, nutrient, and carbon cycles. Because of this, methods to reestablish biocrusts in damaged drylands are needed. Here we test the reintroduction of field-collected vs. greenhouse-cultured biocrusts for rehabilitation.' Author: 'Antoninka, Anita; Bowker, Matthew A.; Chuckran, Peter; Barger, Nichole N.; Reed, Sasha; Belnap, Jayne' DOI: 10.1007/s11104-017-3300-3 Date: August 01 ISSN: 1573-5036 Issue: 1 Journal: Plant and Soil Pages: 213-225 Title: Maximizing establishment and survivorship of field-collected and greenhouse-cultivated biocrusts in a semi-cold desert Type of Article: journal article Volume: 429 Year: 2018 _record_number: 25957 _uuid: 30c3b051-a73f-45b3-8b27-94b92a46fd94 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s11104-017-3300-3 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/30c3b051-a73f-45b3-8b27-94b92a46fd94.yaml identifier: 30c3b051-a73f-45b3-8b27-94b92a46fd94 uri: /reference/30c3b051-a73f-45b3-8b27-94b92a46fd94 - attrs: Abstract: 'Climate change and fire suppression have altered fire regimes globally, leading to larger, more frequent, and more severe wildfires. Responses of coldwater stream biota to single wildfires are well studied, but measured responses to consecutive wildfires in warmwater systems that often include mixed assemblages of native and nonnative taxa are lacking. We quantified changes in physical habitat, resource availability, and biomass of cold- and warmwater oligochaetes, insects, crayfish, fishes, and tadpoles following consecutive megafires (covering >100 km2) in the upper Gila River, New Mexico, USA. We were particularly interested in comparing responses of native and nonnative fishes that might have evolved under different disturbance regimes. Changes in habitat and resource availability were related to cumulative fire effects, fire size, and postfire precipitation. The 2nd of 2 consecutive wildfires in the basin was larger and, coupled with moderate postfire discharge, resulted in increased siltation and decreased algal biomass. Several insect taxa responded to these fires with reduced biomass, whereas oligochaete biomass was unaffected. Biomass of 6 of 7 native fish species decreased after the fires, and decreases were associated with site proximity to fire. Nonnative fish decreases after fire were most pronounced for coldwater salmonids, and warmwater nonnative fishes exhibited limited responses. All crayfish and tadpoles collected were nonnative and were unresponsive to fire disturbance. More pronounced responses of native insects and fishes to fires indicate that increasing fire size and frequency threatens the persistence of native fauna and suggests that management activities promoting ecosystem resilience might help ameliorate wildfire effects.' Author: 'Whitney, James E.; Keith B. Gido; Tyler J. Pilger; David L. Propst; Thomas F. Turner' DOI: 10.1086/683391 Issue: 4 Journal: Freshwater Science Keywords: 'mega-fire,native fish,invasive species,macroinvertebrates,warmwater stream,disturbance, ash flows' Pages: 1510-1526 Title: 'Consecutive wildfires affect stream biota in cold- and warmwater dryland river networks' Volume: 34 Year: 2015 _record_number: 23883 _uuid: 312954a5-9b1c-44cb-859f-8cc777d15924 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1086/683391 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/312954a5-9b1c-44cb-859f-8cc777d15924.yaml identifier: 312954a5-9b1c-44cb-859f-8cc777d15924 uri: /reference/312954a5-9b1c-44cb-859f-8cc777d15924 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Lane, Nic' Institution: Congressional Research Service (CRS) Pages: 10 Place Published: 'Washington, DC' Series Volume: Order Code RL34466 Title: The Bureau of Reclamation’s Aging Infrastructure. CRS Report for Congress URL: https://www.everycrsreport.com/files/20080430_RL34466_999c4f1e853858e3c312f08c1888d8b83929d19b.pdf Year: 2008 _record_number: 23957 _uuid: 316a43e3-84fa-4eae-af65-7ff2dbc2ebbb reftype: Report child_publication: /report/bureau-reclamations-aging-infrastructure-crs-report-congress href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/316a43e3-84fa-4eae-af65-7ff2dbc2ebbb.yaml identifier: 316a43e3-84fa-4eae-af65-7ff2dbc2ebbb uri: /reference/316a43e3-84fa-4eae-af65-7ff2dbc2ebbb - attrs: Abstract: 'California’s San Francisco Bay/Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (bay/delta) estuary system is subject to externally forced storm surge propagating from the open ocean. In the lower reaches of the delta, storm surge dominates water level extremes and can have a significant impact on wetlands, freshwater aquifers, levees, and ecosys- tems. The magnitude and distribution of open-ocean tide generated storm surge throughout the bay/delta are described by a network of stations within the bay/delta system and along the California coast. Correlation of non-tide water levels between stations in the network indicates that peak storm surge fluctuations propagate into the bay/delta system from outside the Golden Gate. The initial peak surge propa- gates from the open ocean inland, while a trailing (smaller amplitude) secondary peak is associated with river discharge. Extreme non-tide water levels are generally associated with extreme Sacramento-San Joaquin river flows, underscoring the po- tential impact of sea level rise on the delta levees and bay/delta ecosystem.' Author: 'Bromirski, Peter D.; Flick, Reinhard E.' Journal: Shore & Beach Pages: 29-37 Title: Storm surge in the San Francisco Bay/Delta and nearby coastal locations URL: https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Storm-surge-in-the-San-Francisco-Bay-%2F-Delta-and-Bromirski-Flick/42e3b5b84e3252cd2147ca5a2f3a382316233c9d Volume: 76 Year: 2008 _record_number: 25960 _uuid: 31856fff-487f-4e52-b536-2f22b0d485ae reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/storm-surge-san-francisco-baydelta-nearby-coastal-locations href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/31856fff-487f-4e52-b536-2f22b0d485ae.yaml identifier: 31856fff-487f-4e52-b536-2f22b0d485ae uri: /reference/31856fff-487f-4e52-b536-2f22b0d485ae - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'State of California,' Institution: California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services Pages: 61 Place Published: 'Sacramento, CA' Title: Contingency Plan for Excessive Heat Emergencies URL: http://www.caloes.ca.gov/PlanningPreparednessSite/Documents/ExcessiveHeatContingencyPlan2014.pdf Year: 2014 _record_number: 23918 _uuid: 31c9a217-7e78-4574-885e-ff6ce7e4511a reftype: Report child_publication: /report/contingency-plan-excessive-heat-emergencies href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/31c9a217-7e78-4574-885e-ff6ce7e4511a.yaml identifier: 31c9a217-7e78-4574-885e-ff6ce7e4511a uri: /reference/31c9a217-7e78-4574-885e-ff6ce7e4511a - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Analitis, A.; Michelozzi, P.; D'Ippoliti, D.; de'Donato, F.; Menne, B.; Matthies, F.; Atkinson, R.W.; Iñiguez, C.; Basagaña, X.; Schneider, A.; Lefranc, A.; Paldy, A.; Bisanti, L.; Katsouyanni, K." DOI: 10.1097/EDE.0b013e31828ac01b ISSN: 1531-5487 Issue: 1 Journal: Epidemiology Pages: 15-22 Title: 'Effects of heat waves on mortality: Effect modification and confounding by air pollutants' Volume: 25 Year: 2014 _chapter: Ch2 _record_number: 19126 _uuid: 31d5b802-7b91-4580-a10c-741035c5f9f6 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1097/EDE.0b013e31828ac01b href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/31d5b802-7b91-4580-a10c-741035c5f9f6.yaml identifier: 31d5b802-7b91-4580-a10c-741035c5f9f6 uri: /reference/31d5b802-7b91-4580-a10c-741035c5f9f6 - attrs: Date: March 28 Editor: 'Maldonado, Julie; Powell, Dana' Pages: 18 Place Published: 'Santa Fe, NM' Series Title: Society for Applied Anthropology Annual Meeting Title: 'Just Environmental and Climate Pathways: Knowledge Exchange among Community Organizers, Scholar-Activists, Citizen-Scientists and Artists' URL: http://likenknowledge.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/Climate-Pathways-Workshop-Report_Santa-Fe_March-2017.pdf Year: 2017 _record_number: 26401 _uuid: 329424f7-8338-4f49-bb76-892fcaff2bc5 reftype: Edited Report child_publication: /report/just-environmental-climate-pathways-knowledge-exchange-among-community-organizers-scholar-activists-citizen-scientists-artists href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/329424f7-8338-4f49-bb76-892fcaff2bc5.yaml identifier: 329424f7-8338-4f49-bb76-892fcaff2bc5 uri: /reference/329424f7-8338-4f49-bb76-892fcaff2bc5 - attrs: .publisher: Springer Netherlands .reference_type: 0 Alternate Journal: Climatic Change Author: "Cozzetto, K.\rChief, K.\rDittmer, K.\rBrubaker, M.\rGough, R.\rSouza, K.\rEttawageshik, F.\rWotkyns, S.\rOpitz-Stapleton, S.\rDuren, S.\rChavan, P." DOI: 10.1007/s10584-013-0852-y Date: 2013/10/01 ISSN: 0165-0009 Issue: 3 Journal: Climatic Change Language: English Pages: 569-584 Title: Climate change impacts on the water resources of American Indians and Alaska Natives in the U.S Volume: 120 Year: 2013 _chapter: '["Ch. 20: Southwest FINAL"]' _record_number: 4339 _uuid: 32a621bf-5225-47a3-b7df-559443b3486e reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1007/s10584-013-0852-y href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/32a621bf-5225-47a3-b7df-559443b3486e.yaml identifier: 32a621bf-5225-47a3-b7df-559443b3486e uri: /reference/32a621bf-5225-47a3-b7df-559443b3486e - attrs: Author: 'Ferrenberg, Scott; Tucker, Colin L.; Reed, Sasha C.' DOI: 10.1002/fee.1469 ISSN: 1540-9309 Issue: 3 Journal: Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment Pages: 160-167 Title: 'Biological soil crusts: Diminutive communities of potential global importance' Volume: 15 Year: 2017 _record_number: 23763 _uuid: 32a6b190-a684-46b4-a499-bf30f51beebc reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1002/fee.1469 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/32a6b190-a684-46b4-a499-bf30f51beebc.yaml identifier: 32a6b190-a684-46b4-a499-bf30f51beebc uri: /reference/32a6b190-a684-46b4-a499-bf30f51beebc - attrs: Abstract: 'Climate change is expected to modify the timing of seasonal transitions this century, impacting wildlife migrations, ecosystem function, and agricultural activity. Tracking seasonal transitions in a consistent manner across space and through time requires indices that can be used for monitoring and managing biophysical and ecological systems during the coming decades. Here a new gridded dataset of spring indices is described and used to understand interannual, decadal, and secular trends across the coterminous United States. This dataset is derived from daily interpolated meteorological data, and the results are compared with historical station data to ensure the trends and variations are robust. Regional trends in the first leaf index range from −0.8 to −1.6 days decade−1, while first bloom index trends are between −0.4 and −1.2 for most regions. However, these trends are modulated by interannual to multidecadal variations, which are substantial throughout the regions considered here. These findings emphasize the important role large-scale climate modes of variability play in modulating spring onset on interannual to multidecadal time scales. Finally, there is some potential for successful subseasonal forecasts of spring onset, as indices from most regions are significantly correlated with antecedent large-scale modes of variability.' Author: 'Ault, Toby R.; Mark D. Schwartz; Raul Zurita-Milla; Jake F. Weltzin; Julio L. Betancourt' DOI: 10.1175/jcli-d-14-00736.1 Issue: 21 Journal: Journal of Climate Keywords: 'Climate variability,Decadal variability,Interannual variability,Multidecadal variability,Spring season,Agriculture' Pages: 8363-8378 Title: Trends and natural variability of spring onset in the coterminous United States as evaluated by a new gridded dataset of spring indices Volume: 28 Year: 2015 _record_number: 21918 _uuid: 3307a62c-ed45-4399-bcb9-f77e71b1e626 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1175/jcli-d-14-00736.1 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/3307a62c-ed45-4399-bcb9-f77e71b1e626.yaml identifier: 3307a62c-ed45-4399-bcb9-f77e71b1e626 uri: /reference/3307a62c-ed45-4399-bcb9-f77e71b1e626 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Article Number: S4 Author: "Moore, S.K.\rTrainer, V.L.\rMantua, N.J.\rParker, M.S.\rLaws, E.A.\rBacker, L.C.\rFleming, L.E." DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-7-S2-S4 ISSN: 1476-069X Issue: Suppl 2 Journal: Environmental Health Pages: S4 Title: Impacts of climate variability and future climate change on harmful algal blooms and human health URL: http://www.ehjournal.net/content/pdf/1476-069X-7-S2-S4.pdf Volume: 7 Year: 2008 _chapter: '["Ch. 9: Human Health FINAL","RG 2 Southeast","Ch. 17: Southeast and Caribbean FINAL"]' _record_number: 2079 _uuid: 3325ef64-347b-4c33-9289-9e05e905dcbe reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1186/1476-069X-7-S2-S4 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/3325ef64-347b-4c33-9289-9e05e905dcbe.yaml identifier: 3325ef64-347b-4c33-9289-9e05e905dcbe uri: /reference/3325ef64-347b-4c33-9289-9e05e905dcbe - attrs: Author: 'Crouch, Jake; Heim, Richard R.; Fenimore, Chris' DOI: 10.1175/2015BAMSStateoftheClimate.1 Issue: 8 Journal: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society Pages: S175-S176 Title: 'Regional climates: United States [in "State of the Climate in 2015"]' Volume: 97 Year: 2016 _record_number: 26356 _uuid: 355736ff-9fd5-4aa5-973b-92f8755f1110 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1175/2015BAMSStateoftheClimate.1 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/355736ff-9fd5-4aa5-973b-92f8755f1110.yaml identifier: 355736ff-9fd5-4aa5-973b-92f8755f1110 uri: /reference/355736ff-9fd5-4aa5-973b-92f8755f1110 - attrs: Abstract: 'During the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA), Western North America experienced episodes of intense aridity that persisted for multiple decades or longer. These megadroughts are well documented in many proxy records, but the causal mechanisms are poorly understood. General circulation models (GCMs) simulate megadroughts, but do not reproduce the temporal clustering of events during the MCA, suggesting they are not caused by the time history of volcanic or solar forcing. Instead, GCMs generate megadroughts through (1) internal atmospheric variability, (2) sea-surface temperatures, and (3) land surface and dust aerosol feedbacks. While no hypothesis has been definitively rejected, and no GCM has accurately reproduced all features (e.g., timing, duration, and extent) of any specific megadrought, their persistence suggests a role for processes that impart memory to the climate system (land surface and ocean dynamics). Over the 21st century, GCMs project an increase in the risk of megadrought occurrence through greenhouse gas forced reductions in precipitation and increases in evaporative demand. This drying is robust across models and multiple drought indicators, but major uncertainties still need to be resolved. These include the potential moderation of vegetation evaporative losses at higher atmospheric [CO2], variations in land surface model complexity, and decadal to multidecadal modes of natural climate variability that could delay or advance onset of aridification over the the next several decades. Because future droughts will arise from both natural variability and greenhouse gas forced trends in hydroclimate, improving our understanding of the natural drivers of persistent multidecadal megadroughts should be a major research priority. WIREs Clim Change 2016, 7:411–432. doi: 10.1002/wcc.394 This article is categorized under: Paleoclimates and Current Trends > Paleoclimate Climate Models and Modeling > Knowledge Generation with Models' Author: 'Cook, Benjamin I.; Cook, Edward R.; Smerdon, Jason E.; Seager, Richard; Williams, A. Park; Coats, Sloan; Stahle, David W.; Díaz, José Villanueva' DOI: 10.1002/wcc.394 Issue: 3 Journal: 'Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change' Pages: 411-432 Title: 'North American megadroughts in the Common Era: Reconstructions and simulations' Volume: 7 Year: 2016 _record_number: 26347 _uuid: 355da812-737f-42a1-845f-698282d3cbd6 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1002/wcc.394 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/355da812-737f-42a1-845f-698282d3cbd6.yaml identifier: 355da812-737f-42a1-845f-698282d3cbd6 uri: /reference/355da812-737f-42a1-845f-698282d3cbd6 - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Arizona Department of Health Services,' Institution: 'Arizona Department of Health Services ' Pages: 40 Place Published: 'Phoenix, AZ' Title: Heat Emergency Response Plan URL: http://www.azdhs.gov/documents/preparedness/epidemiology-disease-control/extreme-weather/heat/heat-emergency-response-plan.pdf Year: 2014 _record_number: 23712 _uuid: 35b6273c-6f5b-427e-b559-36c0390f7679 reftype: Report child_publication: /report/heat-emergency-response-plan href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/35b6273c-6f5b-427e-b559-36c0390f7679.yaml identifier: 35b6273c-6f5b-427e-b559-36c0390f7679 uri: /reference/35b6273c-6f5b-427e-b559-36c0390f7679 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: 'Lute, A. C.; Abatzoglou, J. T.; Hegewisch, K. C.' DOI: 10.1002/2014WR016267 ISSN: 1944-7973 Issue: 2 Journal: Water Resources Research Keywords: snow; climate variability; climate change; extreme events; 0736 Snow; 1616 Climate variability; 1637 Regional climate change; 1817 Extreme events Pages: 960-972 Title: Projected changes in snowfall extremes and interannual variability of snowfall in the western United States Volume: 51 Year: 2015 _record_number: 19695 _uuid: 35f5fd61-d32c-4604-89b4-9bf7de191fc3 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1002/2014WR016267 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/35f5fd61-d32c-4604-89b4-9bf7de191fc3.yaml identifier: 35f5fd61-d32c-4604-89b4-9bf7de191fc3 uri: /reference/35f5fd61-d32c-4604-89b4-9bf7de191fc3 - attrs: Author: 'Marinucci, Gino; Luber, George; Uejio, Christopher; Saha, Shubhayu; Hess, Jeremy' DOI: 10.3390/ijerph110606433 ISSN: 1660-4601 Issue: 6 Journal: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health Pages: 6433 Title: Building resilience against climate effects—A novel framework to facilitate climate readiness in public health agencies Volume: 11 Year: 2014 _record_number: 23818 _uuid: 3604af97-e60e-4478-9883-045e8bf9573f reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.3390/ijerph110606433 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/3604af97-e60e-4478-9883-045e8bf9573f.yaml identifier: 3604af97-e60e-4478-9883-045e8bf9573f uri: /reference/3604af97-e60e-4478-9883-045e8bf9573f - attrs: .reference_type: 10 Author: 'Trent, R. B.' Institution: California Department of Public Health Pages: 10 Place Published: 'Sacramento, CA' Title: Review of July 2006 Heat Wave Related Fatalities in California Year: 2007 _record_number: 26399 _uuid: 36b60b2c-b15a-4830-9f40-4bf832f5242f reftype: Report child_publication: /report/review-july-2006-heat-wave-related-fatalities-california href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/36b60b2c-b15a-4830-9f40-4bf832f5242f.yaml identifier: 36b60b2c-b15a-4830-9f40-4bf832f5242f uri: /reference/36b60b2c-b15a-4830-9f40-4bf832f5242f - attrs: Author: 'Das, Tapash; Maurer, Edwin P.; Pierce, David W.; Dettinger, Michael D.; Cayan, Daniel R.' DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2013.07.042 Date: 2013/09/25/ ISSN: 0022-1694 Journal: Journal of Hydrology Keywords: Climate change; Statistical downscaling; Flood risk; Sierra Nevada Pages: 101-110 Title: Increases in flood magnitudes in California under warming climates Volume: 501 Year: 2013 _record_number: 25962 _uuid: 371a2787-89a1-48bf-ac3a-15ee3c5be9f3 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2013.07.042 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/371a2787-89a1-48bf-ac3a-15ee3c5be9f3.yaml identifier: 371a2787-89a1-48bf-ac3a-15ee3c5be9f3 uri: /reference/371a2787-89a1-48bf-ac3a-15ee3c5be9f3 - attrs: Author: 'Busch, D. Shallin; Griffis, Roger; Link, Jason; Abrams, Karen; Baker, Jason; Brainard, Russell E.; Ford, Michael; Hare, Jonathan A.; Himes-Cornell, Amber; Hollowed, Anne; Mantua, Nathan J.; McClatchie, Sam; McClure, Michelle; Nelson, Mark W.; Osgood, Kenric; Peterson, Jay O.; Rust, Michael; Saba, Vincent; Sigler, Michael F.; Sykora-Bodie, Seth; Toole, Christopher; Thunberg, Eric; Waples, Robin S.; Merrick, Richard' DOI: 10.1016/j.marpol.2016.09.001 Date: 2016/12/01/ ISSN: 0308-597X Journal: Marine Policy Keywords: Adaptation; Climate policy; Ecosystem-based management; Fisheries management; Living marine resources; Marine conservation Pages: 58-67 Title: Climate science strategy of the US National Marine Fisheries Service Volume: 74 Year: 2016 _record_number: 23353 _uuid: 372d0974-9c5c-4501-be26-0a787ba59ec3 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.marpol.2016.09.001 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/372d0974-9c5c-4501-be26-0a787ba59ec3.yaml identifier: 372d0974-9c5c-4501-be26-0a787ba59ec3 uri: /reference/372d0974-9c5c-4501-be26-0a787ba59ec3 - attrs: Author: 'Ziska, Lewis H.; Beggs, Paul J.' DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2011.10.032 Date: 2012/01/01/ ISSN: 0091-6749 Issue: 1 Journal: Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology Keywords: Climate change; aerobiology; pollen; allergen; allergic rhinitis; asthma; exposure Pages: 27-32 Title: 'Anthropogenic climate change and allergen exposure: The role of plant biology' Volume: 129 Year: 2012 _record_number: 23896 _uuid: 376d6db3-0999-4bc8-9844-86c5a20ea7a0 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1016/j.jaci.2011.10.032 href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/376d6db3-0999-4bc8-9844-86c5a20ea7a0.yaml identifier: 376d6db3-0999-4bc8-9844-86c5a20ea7a0 uri: /reference/376d6db3-0999-4bc8-9844-86c5a20ea7a0 - attrs: .reference_type: 0 Author: "Gonzalez, P.\rNeilson, R. P.\rLenihan, J. M.\rDrapek, R. J." DOI: 10.1111/j.1466-8238.2010.00558.x Date: Nov ISSN: 1466-8238 Issue: 6 Journal: Global Ecology and Biogeography Pages: 755-768 Short Title: Global patterns in the vulnerability of ecosystems to vegetation shifts due to climate change Title: Global patterns in the vulnerability of ecosystems to vegetation shifts due to climate change URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1466-8238.2010.00558.x/pdf Volume: 19 Year: 2010 _chapter: '["Ch. 20: Southwest FINAL","Ch. 8: Ecosystems FINAL","RG 5 Southwest"]' _record_number: 780 _uuid: 37982de0-0e01-476f-b522-b8162d709134 reftype: Journal Article child_publication: /article/10.1111/j.1466-8238.2010.00558.x href: https://data.globalchange.gov/reference/37982de0-0e01-476f-b522-b8162d709134.yaml identifier: 37982de0-0e01-476f-b522-b8162d709134 uri: /reference/37982de0-0e01-476f-b522-b8162d709134