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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons™
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- Keyword
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- Climate change (3)
- Climate (2)
- Invasive species (2)
- Aaron Burr (1)
- Abundance (1)
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- Arctic (1)
- Arkansas River (1)
- Birds (1)
- Birds (Aves); climate change; drought; extreme weather; heat wave; land surface temperature; mixed effects models; MODIS; North American Breeding Bird Survey; standardized precipitation index; United States (1)
- Boreal forest (1)
- Conspiracy (1)
- Cryosphere (1)
- DEVELOPING MECHANISM (1)
- Drought (1)
- Exploration (1)
- Fire weather (1)
- Great Plains (1)
- Greenness (1)
- Holocene (1)
- INTRASEASONAL OSCILLATIONS (1)
- Instability (1)
- James Wilkinson (1)
- Lake deposits (1)
- Lightning (1)
- MODIS (1)
- Melt (1)
- Melt season (1)
- Meteorology (1)
- Mixed effects models (1)
- NON-PROPAGATING (1)
- Publication
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- Droughtscape, Quarterly Newsletter of NDMC, 2007- (4)
- Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences: Faculty Publications (2)
- Drought Mitigation Center: Faculty Publications (2)
- National Invasive Species Council (2)
- Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research (1)
Articles 1 - 14 of 14
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Invasive Species And Climate Change, Invasive Species Advisory Committee
Invasive Species And Climate Change, Invasive Species Advisory Committee
National Invasive Species Council
ISSUE
Climate change interacts with and can often amplify the negative impacts of invasive species. These interactions are not fully appreciated or understood. They can result in threats to critical ecosystem functions on which our food system and other essential provisions and services depend as well as increase threats to human health. The Invasive Species Advisory Committee to the National Invasive Species Council recognizes the Administration’s commitment to dealing proactively with global climate change. However, unless we recognize and act on the impact of climate change and its interaction with ecosystems and invasive species, we will fall further behind in …
Propagating And Non-Propagating Intraseasonal Oscillations In The Tropical Atmosphere: Their Vertical And Horizontal Structures And Developing Mechanisms, Zhaoning Liang
School of Natural Resources: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
A fixed beamformer is proposed and designed to identify source regions of Intra-Seasonal Oscillations (ISO) in the tropical atmosphere. After tested by simulations of single and complex sources of waves, the fixed beamformer is applied to the ECMWF interpolated data grids to detect and identify source regions of the ISO in the tropical Indian and Pacific Ocean region. Results show that the fixed beamforming technique can uniquely identify the source region of the ISO, the source regions of all major ISO in the tropical Indian and western equatorial Pacific region from 1974 to 2002 have been identified.
Examinations of ISO …
Droughtscape- Fall 2010, Kelly Smith
Droughtscape- Fall 2010, Kelly Smith
Droughtscape, Quarterly Newsletter of NDMC, 2007-
CDC Issues Drought Guidance for Public Health
La Niña May Intensify Drought in South
Recent Workshops and Meetings
East Feels Impacts as Heat Intensifies Drought
New Products
Nicole Wall Co-Facilitates Republican River Basin Task Force
NDMC Climatologist on Ethiopia Team
An Intercomparison Of Regional Atmospheric Circulation And The Melt Season Loss Of Arctic Snow Cover And Sea Ice Extent Across The Land-Ocean Boundary, Angela C. Bliss
An Intercomparison Of Regional Atmospheric Circulation And The Melt Season Loss Of Arctic Snow Cover And Sea Ice Extent Across The Land-Ocean Boundary, Angela C. Bliss
Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research
This study is designed to compare the monthly continental snow cover and sea ice extent loss in the Arctic with regional atmospheric conditions including: mean sea level pressure, 925 hPa air temperature, and mean wind direction among others during the melt season (March-August) over the 29-year study period 1979-2007. Little research has gone into studying the concurrent variations in the annual loss of continental snow cover and sea ice extent across the land-ocean boundary, since these data are largely stored in incompatible formats. However, the analysis of these data, averaged spatially over three autonomous study regions located in Siberia, North …
Droughtscape- Summer 2010, Kelly Smith
Droughtscape- Summer 2010, Kelly Smith
Droughtscape, Quarterly Newsletter of NDMC, 2007-
Upcoming Workshops
Mild Drought Season Likely to Persist
Drought Impacts Intensify in Upper Midwest
Visiting Scientists
North Carolina Takes Drought Monitor Seriously
International Work- Murcia, Spain, June
Marine Bioinvasions And Climate Change, James T. Carlton, Sandra C. Lindstrom, Celia M. Smith, Jennifer E. Smith
Marine Bioinvasions And Climate Change, James T. Carlton, Sandra C. Lindstrom, Celia M. Smith, Jennifer E. Smith
National Invasive Species Council
BACKGROUND
Invasive species are second only to habitat destruction as the greatest cause of species endangerment and global biodiversity loss. Invasive species can cause severe and permanent damage to the ecosystems they invade. Consequences of invasion include competition with or predation upon native species, hybridization, carrying or supporting harmful pathogens and parasites that may affect wildlife and human health, disturbing ecosystem function through alteration of food webs and nutrient recycling rates, acting as ecosystem engineers and altering habitat structure, and degradation of the aesthetic quality of our natural resources. In many cases we may not fully know the native animals …
Droughtscape- Spring 2010, Kelly Smith
Droughtscape- Spring 2010, Kelly Smith
Droughtscape, Quarterly Newsletter of NDMC, 2007-
NDMC and NC Drought Council Team Up
Drought to Intensify in Northwest and Hawaii
International Work
Impacts Recorded in Hawaii and Western States
U.S. Drought Monitor Archives Enhanced
Low-Water Impact Surveys Completed
K-12 Drought Outreach
Effects Of Lightning And Other Meteorological Factors On Fire Activity In The North American Boreal Forest: Implications For Fire Weather Forecasting, David Peterson, Jun Wang, Charles Ichoku, Lorraine Remer
Effects Of Lightning And Other Meteorological Factors On Fire Activity In The North American Boreal Forest: Implications For Fire Weather Forecasting, David Peterson, Jun Wang, Charles Ichoku, Lorraine Remer
Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences: Faculty Publications
The effects of lightning and other meteorological factors on wildfire activity in the North American boreal forest are statistically analyzed during the fire seasons of 2000–2006 through an integration of the following data sets: the MODerate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) level 2 fire products, the 3-hourly 32-km gridded meteorological data from North American Regional Reanalysis (NARR), and the lightning data collected by the Canadian Lightning Detection Network (CLDN) and the Alaska Lightning Detection Network (ALDN). Positive anomalies of the 500 hPa geopotential height field, convective available potential energy (CAPE), number of cloud-to-ground lightning strikes, and the number of consecutive dry …
Zebulon Pike: Great American Explorer Or Climate Spy?, Merlin P. Lawson, Randall Cerveny, Cary Mock
Zebulon Pike: Great American Explorer Or Climate Spy?, Merlin P. Lawson, Randall Cerveny, Cary Mock
Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences: Faculty Publications
Zebulon Pike is known in history books as one of America’s heroes—a great explorer whose adventures in the American West rivaled the Lewis and Clark Expedition and who became the namesake for Colorado’s Pike’s Peak. But what if the history books got it wrong, and Pike was actually not the hero everyone thinks he is? What if he was actually a spy carrying out a secret mission, or a scoundrel interested in overthrowing the American government and helping to carve a new empire out of the North American Southwest? Evidence from Pike’s famed expedition in 1806-1807 points to the possibility …
Droughtscape- Winter 2010, Kelly Smith
Droughtscape- Winter 2010, Kelly Smith
Droughtscape, Quarterly Newsletter of NDMC, 2007-
USDM Forum Highlights
Drought Likely to Ease
Research Shows Birds Vulnerable to Drought
Drought Recedes in 2009
CA, TX Suffer Impacts from Ongoing Drought
NDMC Wishes Ryu Well
Conferees Pick SPI for Global Drought Index
Paleo-Environmental Changes In The Uvs Nuur Basin (Northwest-Mongolia), Michael Walther
Paleo-Environmental Changes In The Uvs Nuur Basin (Northwest-Mongolia), Michael Walther
Erforschung biologischer Ressourcen der Mongolei / Exploration into the Biological Resources of Mongolia, ISSN 0440-1298
Geomorphological, geochemical, sedimentological and palynological results are presented against the background of palaeoclimatic changes during the past 15,000 years, yielding a chrono-, bio- and morphostratigraphical model of landscape evolution in the region of northern Central Asia. Holocene and Late-Glacial climatic fluctuations there are shown to correlate well with conditions in central Europe. Particular attention is given to the importance of the palaeoclimatic interpretation of lake Basin sediments when reconstructing the palaeoenvironment.
Effects Of Drought On Avian Community Structure, Thomas P. Albright, Anna M. Pidgeon, Chadwick D. Rittenhouse, Murray K. Clayton, Curtis H. Flather, Patrick D. Culbert, Brian D. Wardlows, Volker C. Radeloff
Effects Of Drought On Avian Community Structure, Thomas P. Albright, Anna M. Pidgeon, Chadwick D. Rittenhouse, Murray K. Clayton, Curtis H. Flather, Patrick D. Culbert, Brian D. Wardlows, Volker C. Radeloff
Drought Mitigation Center: Faculty Publications
Droughts are expected to become more frequent under global climate change. Avifauna depend on precipitation for hydration, cover, and food. While there are indications that avian communities respond negatively to drought, little is known about the response of birds with differing functional and behavioral traits, what time periods and indicators of drought are most relevant, or how response varies geographically at broad spatial scales. Our goals were thus to determine (1) how avian abundance and species richness are related to drought, (2) whether community variations are more related to vegetation vigor or precipitation deviations and at what time periods relationships …
Combined Effects Of Heat Waves And Droughts On Avian Communities Across The Conterminous United States, Thomas P. Albright, Anna M. Pidgeon, Chadwick D. Rittenhouse, Murray K. Clayton, Brian D. Wardlow, Curtis H. Flather, Patrick D. Culbert, Volker C. Radeloff
Combined Effects Of Heat Waves And Droughts On Avian Communities Across The Conterminous United States, Thomas P. Albright, Anna M. Pidgeon, Chadwick D. Rittenhouse, Murray K. Clayton, Brian D. Wardlow, Curtis H. Flather, Patrick D. Culbert, Volker C. Radeloff
Drought Mitigation Center: Faculty Publications
Increasing surface temperatures and climatic variability associated with global climate change are expected to produce more frequent and intense heat waves and droughts in many parts of the world. Our goal was to elucidate the fundamental, but poorly understood, effects of these extreme weather events on avian communities across the conterminous United States. Specifically, we explored: (1) the effects of timing and duration of heat and drought events, (2) the effects of jointly occurring drought and heat waves relative to these events occurring in isolation, and (3) how effects vary among functional groups related to nest location and migratory habit, …
Managing Drought Risk On The Ranch: A Planning Guide For Great Plains Ranchers, University Of Nebraska - Lincoln National Drought Mitigation Center
Managing Drought Risk On The Ranch: A Planning Guide For Great Plains Ranchers, University Of Nebraska - Lincoln National Drought Mitigation Center
National Drought Mitigation Center: Publications
TABLE OF CONTENTS
WHY PLAN FOR DROUGHT?......... 3
UNDERSTANDING DROUGHT........... 6
THE RANCH DROUGHT PLAN........... 9
COMMUNICATION AND PLANNING PARTNERS............ 10
RANCH VISION AND OBJECTIVES............. 11
SWOT ANALYSIS............... 12
INVENTORY OF RANCH RESOURCES................ 13
CRITICAL DATES AND TARGET POINTS................. 15
MONITORING PLAN AND SCHEDULE.................... 19
EVALUATE DROUGHT MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES............ 20
IMPLEMENT AND MONITOR THE DROUGHT PLAN............ 29
WORKSHEETS........... 30