﻿FN Clarivate Analytics Web of Science
VR 1.0
PT J
AU Chagumaira, C
   Rurinda, J
   Nezomba, H
   Mtambanengwe, F
   Mapfumo, P
AF Chagumaira, Christopher
   Rurinda, Jairos
   Nezomba, Hatirarami
   Mtambanengwe, Florence
   Mapfumo, Paul
TI Use patterns of natural resources supporting livelihoods of smallholder
   communities and implications for climate change adaptation in Zimbabwe
SO ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change and variability; Declining natural resource base;
   Ecosystem productivity; Farmer resource endowment; Wetlands; Woodlands
ID SOIL FERTILITY; COMMUNAL AREA; MANAGEMENT; FARMERS; FOREST;
   PRECIPITATION; VARIABILITY; HOUSEHOLDS; PRODUCTS; SECURITY
AB Declining crop and livestock production due to a degrading land resource base and changing climate among other biophysical and socio-economic constraints, is increasingly forcing rural households in Zimbabwe and other parts of Southern Africa to rely on common natural resource pools (CNRPs) to supplement their household food and income. Between 2011 and 2013, we combined farmer participatory research approaches, remote sensing and geographic information systems (GIS) to (1) understand the contribution of CNRPs to household food and income in Dendenyore and Ushe smallholder communities in Hwedza District, eastern Zimbabwe and (2) assess changes of the CNRPs in both space and time, and their implications on climate change adaptation. Across study sites, wetlands and woodlands were ranked as the most important CNRPs. Extraction and use patterns of products from the different pools differed among households of different resource endowment. Resource-constrained households (RG3) sold an average of 183 kg household(-1) year(-1) of wild loquats fruits (Uapaca kirkiana), realising about US$48, while resource-endowed farmers (RG1) had no need to sale any. The RG3 households also realised approximately US$70 household(-1) year(-1) from sale of crafts made from water reeds (Phragmites mauritianus). Empirical data closely supported communities' perceptions that CNRPs had declined significantly in recent years compared with two to three decades ago. More than 60 % of the respondents perceived that the availability of natural resources drawn from wetlands and woodlands, often used for food, energy and crafts, has decreased markedly since the 1980s. Classification of land cover in a GIS environment indicated that CNRPs declined between 1972 and 2011, supporting farmers' perceptions. Overall, woodlands declined by 37 % in both communities, while the total area under wetlands decreased by 29 % in Ushe, a drier area and 49 % in Dendenyore, a relatively humid area. The over-reliance in CNRPs by rural communities could be attributed to continued decline in crop yields linked to increased within-season rainfall variability, and the absence of alternative food and income sources. This suggests limited options for rural communities to adapt to the changing food production systems in the wake of climate change and variability and other challenges such as declining soil fertility. There is therefore a need to design adaptive farm management options that enhance both crop and livestock production in a changing climate as well as identifying other livelihood alternatives outside agriculture to reduce pressure on CNRPs. In addition, promotion of alternative sources of energy such as solar power and biogas among rural communities could reduce the cutting of trees for firewood from woodlands.
C1 [Chagumaira, Christopher; Rurinda, Jairos; Nezomba, Hatirarami; Mtambanengwe, Florence; Mapfumo, Paul] Univ Zimbabwe, Soil Fertil Consortium Southern Africa SOFECSA, Dept Soil Sci & Agr Engn, POB MP 167, Harare, Zimbabwe.
C3 University of Zimbabwe
RP Mapfumo, P (corresponding author), Univ Zimbabwe, Soil Fertil Consortium Southern Africa SOFECSA, Dept Soil Sci & Agr Engn, POB MP 167, Harare, Zimbabwe.
EM paulmapfumo@gmail.com
RI Nezomba, Hatirarami/JAO-3502-2023; Mtambanengwe, Florence/AAX-4571-2021;
   Chagumaira, Christopher/AAI-7239-2020
OI Chagumaira, Christopher/0000-0003-0590-0350
FU IDRC/DFID-Climate Change Adaptation in Africa [104140]; Soil Fertility
   Consortium for Southern Africa (SOFECSA); Deutscher Akademischer
   Austausch Dienst (DAAD) [A/11/95775]; Global Change SysTem for Analysis,
   Research and Training (START) International
FX This study was part of the IDRC/DFID-Climate Change Adaptation in Africa
   funded (Grant 104140) project 'Lack of resilience in African smallholder
   farming: Exploring measures to enhance the adaptive capacity of local
   communities to pressures of climate change' led by the University of
   Zimbabwe (UZ) and implemented under the auspices of the Soil Fertility
   Consortium for Southern Africa (SOFECSA). We also thank the Deutscher
   Akademischer Austausch Dienst (DAAD) In-country scholarship award
   (A/11/95775) and Global Change SysTem for Analysis, Research and
   Training (START) International for additional financial support. We
   appreciate the assistance from the SOFECSA UZ project team members, the
   farmers and extension staff in Dendenyore and Ushe communities in Hwedza
   District.
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NR 68
TC 17
Z9 19
U1 0
U2 106
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1387-585X
EI 1573-2975
J9 ENVIRON DEV SUSTAIN
JI Environ. Dev. Sustain.
PD FEB
PY 2016
VL 18
IS 1
BP 237
EP 255
DI 10.1007/s10668-015-9637-y
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DC9JF
UT WOS:000369537000014
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nowaczewska, W
   Dabrowski, P
   Kuzminski, L
AF Nowaczewska, Wioletta
   Dabrowski, Pawel
   Kuzminski, Lukasz
TI Morphological Adaptation to Climate in Modern <i>Homo sapiens</i>
   Crania: The Importance of Basicranial Breadth
SO COLLEGIUM ANTROPOLOGICUM
LA English
DT Article
DE variation in basicranial breadth; adaptation to climate; modern humans
ID CRANIOFACIAL MORPHOLOGY; COLD STRESS; HEAD FORM; MODULARITY; EVOLUTION;
   SELECTION; SHAPE
AB The aim of this study is to investigate whether the variation in breadth of the cranial base among modern human populations that inhabit different regions of the world is linked with climatic adaptation. This work provides an examination of two hypotheses. The first hypothesis is that the correlation between basicranial breadth and ambient temperature is stronger than the correlation between temperature and other neurocranial variables, such as maximum cranial breadth, maximum neurocranial length, and the endocranial volume. The second hypothesis is that the correlation between the breadth of the cranial base and the ambient temperature is significant even when other neurocranial features used in this study (including the size of the neurocranium) are constant. For the sake of this research, the necessary neurocranial variables for fourteen human populations living in diverse environments were obtained from Howells' data (except for endocranial volume which was obtained by means of estimation). The ambient temperature (more precisely, the mean yearly temperature) of the environments inhabited by these populations was used as a major climatic factor. Data were analysed using Pearson correlation coefficients, linear regression and partial correlation analyses. The results supported the two hypotheses, thus suggesting that ambient temperature may contribute to the observed differences in the breadth of the cranial base in the studied modern humans.
C1 [Nowaczewska, Wioletta; Dabrowski, Pawel] Univ Wroclaw, Dept Anthropol, PL-50138 Wroclaw, Poland.
   [Kuzminski, Lukasz] Wroclaw Univ Econ, Inst Econ Sci, Dept Quantitat Methods Econ, Wroclaw, Poland.
C3 University of Wroclaw; Wroclaw University of Economics & Business
RP Nowaczewska, W (corresponding author), Univ Wroclaw, Dept Anthropol, Kuznicza 35, PL-50138 Wroclaw, Poland.
EM nowacz@antropo.uni.wroc.pl
RI Nowaczewska, Wioletta/AFV-3344-2022
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NR 49
TC 6
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 13
PU COLLEGIUM ANTROPOLOGICUM
PI ZAGREB
PA INST ANTHROPOLOGICAL RESEARCH, GAJEVA 32, PO BOX 290, HR-10000 ZAGREB,
   CROATIA
SN 0350-6134
J9 COLLEGIUM ANTROPOL
JI Coll. Anthropol.
PD SEP
PY 2011
VL 35
IS 3
BP 625
EP 636
PG 12
WC Anthropology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Anthropology
GA 837PC
UT WOS:000296214700001
PM 22053534
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Balde, H
   Hmimina, G
   Goulas, Y
   Latouche, G
   Soudani, K
AF Balde, Hamadou
   Hmimina, Gabriel
   Goulas, Yves
   Latouche, Gwendal
   Soudani, Kamel
TI Synergy between TROPOMI sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence and
   MODISspectral reflectance for understanding the dynamics of gross
   primaryproductivity at Integrated Carbon Observatory System (ICOS)
   ecosystem fluxsites
SO BIOGEOSCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
ID LIGHT-USE EFFICIENCY; PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY; SEASONAL-VARIATIONS; CANOPY
   LEVEL; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; LEAF; FOREST; INDEX; RED; RETRIEVAL
AB An accurate estimation of vegetation gross primary productivity (GPP), which is the amount of carbon taken up by vegetation through photosynthesis for a given time and area, is critical for understanding terrestrial-atmosphere CO2 exchange processes and ecosystem functioning, as well as ecosystem responses and adaptations to climate change. Prior studies, based on ground, airborne, and satellite sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) observations, have recently revealed close relationships with GPP at different spatial and temporal scales and across different plant functional types (PFTs). However, questions remain regarding whether there is a unique relationship between SIF and GPP across different sites and PFTs and how we can improve GPP estimates using solely remotely sensed data. Using concurrent measurements of daily TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) SIF (daily SIFd); daily MODIS Terra and Aqua spectral reflectance; vegetation indices (VIs, notably normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), near-infrared reflectance of vegetation (NIRv), and photochemical reflectance index (PRI)); and daily tower-based GPP across eight major different PFTs, including mixed forests, deciduous broadleaf forests, croplands, evergreen broadleaf forests, evergreen needleleaf forests, grasslands, open shrubland, and wetlands, the strength of the relationships between tower-based GPP and SIFd at 40 Integrated Carbon Observation System (ICOS) flux sites was investigated. The synergy between SIFd and MODIS-based reflectance (R) and VIs to improve GPP estimates using a data-driven modeling approach was also evaluated. The results revealed that the strength of the hyperbolic relationship between GPP and SIFd was strongly site-specific and PFT-dependent. Furthermore, the generalized linear model (GLM), fitted between SIFd, GPP, and site and vegetation type as categorical variables, further supported this site- and PFT-dependent relationship between GPP and SIFd. Using random forest (RF) regression models with GPP as output and the aforementioned variables as predictors (R, SIFd, and VIs), this study also showed that the spectral reflectance bands (RF-R) and SIFd plus spectral reflectance (RF-SIF-R) models explained over 80 % of the seasonal and interannual variations in GPP, whereas the SIFd plus VI (RF-SIF-VI) model reproduced only 75 % of the tower-based GPP variance. In addition, the relative variable importance of predictors of GPP demonstrated that the spectral reflectance bands in the near-infrared, red, and SIFd appeared as the most influential and dominant factors determining GPP predictions, indicating the importance of canopy structure, biochemical properties, and vegetation functioning on GPP estimates. Overall, this study provides insights into understanding the strength of the relationships between GPP and SIF and the use of spectral reflectance and SIFd to improve estimates of GPP across sites and PFTs.
C1 [Balde, Hamadou; Hmimina, Gabriel; Goulas, Yves] Sorbonne Univ, Ecole Polytech, Lab Meteorol Dynam, IPSL,CNRS, F-91128 Palaiseau, France.
   [Balde, Hamadou; Latouche, Gwendal; Soudani, Kamel] Univ Paris Saclay, AgroParisTech, CNRS, Ecol Systemat & Evolut, F-91190 Gif Sur Yvette, France.
   [Balde, Hamadou] Ctr Natl Etud Spatiales CNES, 18 Av Edouard Belin, F-31400 Toulouse, France.
   [Balde, Hamadou] ACRI ST, 260 Route Pin Montard, BP 234, F-06904 Sophia Antipolis, France.
C3 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Institut
   Polytechnique de Paris; Ecole Polytechnique; Sorbonne Universite;
   Universite Paris Saclay; AgroParisTech; Centre National de la Recherche
   Scientifique (CNRS)
RP Balde, H (corresponding author), Sorbonne Univ, Ecole Polytech, Lab Meteorol Dynam, IPSL,CNRS, F-91128 Palaiseau, France.
EM hamadou.balde@lmd.ispl.fr
RI Hm, Gab/AAK-1999-2020; SOUDANI, KAMEL/P-4707-2014
OI Hmimina, Gabriel/0000-0001-7683-6750
FU Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES); ACRI-ST (Toulouse, France)
   (contract CNES-ACRI-ST-Ecole polytechnique-CNRS) [3425]; CNES through
   the VELIF project focused on the FLEX mission [4500073234, 4500073501];
   Programme National de Teledetection Spatiales (PNTS) across the C-FLEX
   project; EIT Climate-KIC project via the Agriculture Resilience,
   Inclusive, and Sustainable Enterprise (ARISE) project [EIT 190733]
FX This ongoing PhD work is jointly funded by the Centre National d'Etudes
   Spatiales (CNES) and ACRI-ST (Toulouse, France) (contract
   CNES-ACRI-ST-Ecole polytechnique-CNRS no. 3425). This work was also
   supported by CNES through the VELIF project focused on the FLEX mission
   (contracts 4500073234 and 4500073501), the Programme National de
   Teledetection Spatiales (PNTS) across the C-FLEX project and EIT
   Climate-KIC project via the Agriculture Resilience, Inclusive, and
   Sustainable Enterprise (ARISE) project (EIT 190733).
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NR 100
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 21
PU COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
PI GOTTINGEN
PA BAHNHOFSALLEE 1E, GOTTINGEN, 37081, GERMANY
SN 1726-4170
EI 1726-4189
J9 BIOGEOSCIENCES
JI Biogeosciences
PD APR 14
PY 2023
VL 20
IS 7
BP 1473
EP 1490
DI 10.5194/bg-20-1473-2023
PG 18
WC Ecology; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology
GA D8FQ1
UT WOS:000971034100001
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Monzón, VCH
   Ventura, CE
AF Hernandez Monzon, Victor Carol
   Ventura, Carlos E.
BE Ventura, CE
   Motamedi, M
   Mendler, A
   Aenlle-Lopez, M
TI AMBIENT VIBRATION TEST AND MODAL RESPONSE ANALYSIS OF A UNIVERSITY
   BUILDING IN A SEISMIC REGION
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 9TH INTERNATIONAL OPERATIONAL MODAL ANALYSIS
   CONFERENCE, IOMAC 2022
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 9th International Operational Modal Analysis Conference (IOMAC)
CY JUL 03-06, 2022
CL Vancouver, CANADA
AB This article emphasizes the analysis of environmental vibration and its response of an educational building that has been developed by the University of San Carlos de Guatemala - USAC - [1], since 1970. This structural model has been used as a parameter for most of their constructions in many buildings nationwide. For this project one of the main approaches is to be able to carry out a modal response analysis of this type of building. Considering that the study carried out is located in a seismic zone with a very high frequency of seismic events, such as the expulsion of degassing from the Santiaguito volcano which is located in the south of Quetzaltenango city. And also the movement of tectonic plates, in this particular case The Cocos subduction plate, which is a young oceanic tectonic plate beneath the Pacific Ocean off the west coast of Central America where there is a frecuent sismic activity.
   The building taken as a sample is a 3-level reinforced concrete building consisting of moment-resistant frames, with a flat slab, which is symmetrical in its structural footprint as well as vertically in its main elements, and also has an opening of 18 x 36 m., to separate the rooms (classrooms and laboratories) of the building. Masonry walls were done in its construction, which were decoupled from the main elements such as beams and columns.
   For this, environmental vibration tests were carried out to obtain natural frequencies, mode shapes and damping ratios. These parameters have been obtained using the Artemis software version 7.2.0.0 Likewise, an FEM model of the structure is established for which the ETABS - CSI- [2] software was used in order to compare the results obtained from the environmental vibrations, for this several hypotheses and comparisons of the analytical and experimental results are presented.
   This work has been developed with professors of the Civil Engineering department who have helped to take the corresponding captures. As well the Consejo Superior Universitario Centroamericano -CSUCA- [3] Dr. Carlos Alvarado Cerezo and Centro de Coordinacion para la Prevencion de los Desastres en America Central y Republica Dominicana [4] and its Executive Secretary Licda. Claudia Herrera, as well as the Swiss Cooperation- COSUDE- [5] for the equipment and software donated to the Civil Engineering course at the Centro Universitario De Occidente, within the framework of the Effect 3 Project "Project to strengthen the governance of Disaster Risk Management in Central America" as part of the Insertion of Gestion Integral de Riesgo (GIRD) and resilient adaptation to climate change (ACC) as a transversal axis of the Civil Engineering career".
C1 [Hernandez Monzon, Victor Carol] USAC CUNOC Guatemala, Dept Civil Engn, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
   [Ventura, Carlos E.] Univ British Columbia, Dept Civil Engn, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
C3 University of British Columbia
RP Monzón, VCH (corresponding author), USAC CUNOC Guatemala, Dept Civil Engn, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
EM hernandez.victor@usac.edu.gt; ventura@ubc.ca
CR [Anonymous], 2018, NSE 2
   Asociacion Guatemalteca de Ingenieria Estructural y Sismica -AGIES, About us
   Centro Universitario de Occidente-CUNOCwww, About us
   cepredenac, Centro de coordinacion para la Prevencion de los Desastres en America Central y Republica Dominicana -CEPREDENAC
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   Cooperacion Suiza para America Central -COSUDE, About us
   Coordinadora para la Reduccion de Desastres -CONRED, About us
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   Ventura C., 2015, INTRO OPERATIONAL MO
   Ventura CE, 2001, PROC SPIE, V4359, P324
   ViewWave, About us
NR 15
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU INT GROUP OPERATIONAL MODAL ANALYSIS
PI GIJON
PA CAMPUS DE GIJON, C/PEDRO PUIG ADAM S-N EDIFICIO 7, GIJON, SPAIN
BN 978-84-09-44336-9
PY 2022
BP 50
EP 63
PG 14
WC Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Civil; Engineering,
   Mechanical
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering
GA BX0AY
UT WOS:001227352400006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tschora, H
   Cherubini, F
AF Tschora, Heloise
   Cherubini, Francesco
TI Co-benefits and trade-offs of agroforestry for climate change mitigation
   and other sustainability goals in West Africa
SO GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Agroforestry; Sustainable agriculture; Climate change mitigation;
   Co-benefits; West Africa
ID CARBON SEQUESTRATION; TREE DIVERSITY; FOOD SECURITY; FOREST; COCOA;
   BIODIVERSITY; SYSTEMS; COVER; AGRICULTURE; SHADE
AB Agroforestry is a land management practice where trees are grown around or among crops or pastureland. This integration of agriculture and forestry is frequently seen as an option that can secure food security and co-deliver a range of environmental benefits. However, quantitative studies simultaneously integrating multiple aspects of agroforestry are rare. Focusing on four sustainability goals, namely adaptation to climate change, biodiversity conservation, climate change mitigation and rural development, this study investigated co-benefits and adverse side-effects of shaded agroforests above cocoa, coffee, oil palm, banana and citrus plantations in tropical humid West Africa. Time series of remote sensing land cover datasets were used to quantify and map recent land cover transitions in the region, and a field study in 25 agroforestry plots in Togo provided biomass carbon measurements in over 3000 trees, in addition to local farmers interviews. Estimates of theoretical agroforestry expansion and associated carbon sequestration potential in the region were compared to regional emissions from fossil fuels and deforestation. We found that about 1.6 Mha of losses in evergreen forests occurred between 1992 and 2015 (corresponding to 17% of the forest area originally present in 1992), while agricultural areas increased by 2.4 Mha (+5% relative to 1992). On average, trees in the studied agroforestry plots store 83.7 +/- 7.0 t C/ha. We found synergies between rural development and adaptation benefits, no clear relationship between biodiversity and carbon storage, and a tradeoff between high carbon stocks and crop yields. This trade-off can be minimized with an optimal management of agroforestry by using a mix of tree species that store medium carbon stocks and can enhance yields, soil fertility and climate resilience. In general, plant functional diversity, i.e. a balanced mix of shade trees, fruit trees, palms and bananas, emerged as a key feature of successful agroforestry systems. Besides, agroforestry trees coproducts are reported as an additional, diversified source of income for local farmers. A large-scale deployment of agroforestry over seven countries in West Africa can sequester up to 135 Mt CO2/year over two decades, corresponding to about 166% of the carbon emissions from fossil fuels and deforestation in the region. Overall, agroforestry practices in tropical humid West Africa offer multiple-win solutions that are relevant to address major local and global environmental challenges. Increasing cooperation among local farmer communities, national authorities, and international organizations are instrumental to overcome the barriers for a future expansion of agroforestry systems in the region. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
C1 [Tschora, Heloise; Cherubini, Francesco] Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol NTNU, Dept Energy & Proc Engn, Ind Ecol Programme, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway.
C3 Norwegian University of Science & Technology (NTNU)
RP Tschora, H (corresponding author), Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol NTNU, Dept Energy & Proc Engn, Ind Ecol Programme, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway.
EM heloise-tschora@laposte.net
RI Cherubini, Francesco/AFS-6064-2022
OI Cherubini, Francesco/0000-0002-7147-4292; Tschora,
   Heloise/0000-0003-4879-1713
FU Norwegian Research Council [.286773]; Academy of Finland (AKA) [286773]
   Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)
FX We thank the whole APAF team for enabling the field study in Togo, and
   in particular Kwamy Logan for the insights on Togo's agricultural
   landscapes. We also thank Rodolpho Logan and Julien Guironnet for their
   help in carbon measurements, field survey and data processing, Jan
   Sandstad Naes (NTNU) for pre-processing the ESA CCI-LC dataset, Julien
   Guironnet and Florence Deleglise for the comments to the paper. F.C.
   acknowledges the support of the Norwegian Research Council (project
   Nr.286773).
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NR 75
TC 73
Z9 74
U1 7
U2 125
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2351-9894
J9 GLOB ECOL CONSERV
JI Glob. Ecol. Conserv.
PD JUN
PY 2020
VL 22
AR e00919
DI 10.1016/j.gecco.2020.e00919
PG 13
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LW6OP
UT WOS:000539263800013
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fortini, LB
   Kaiser, LR
   LaPointe, DA
AF Fortini, Lucas Berio
   Kaiser, Lauren R.
   LaPointe, Dennis A.
TI Fostering real-time climate adaptation: Analyzing past, current, and
   forecast temperature to understand the dynamic risk to Hawaiian
   honeycreepers from avian malaria
SO GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Avian malaria; Mosquito-borne disease; Forest birds; Climate change;
   Climate change adaptation
ID CULEX-QUINQUEFASCIATUS DIPTERA; PLASMODIUM-RELICTUM; TRANSMISSION;
   CULICIDAE; BIRDS; EPIZOOTIOLOGY; PATHOGENICITY; RESPONSES; SURVIVAL;
   IMPACTS
AB Various vector control options are increasingly being considered to safeguard forest birds in their natural habitats from avian malaria transmission. However, vector control options require localized deployment that is not logistically, ethically, ecologically, nor economically viable everywhere and all the time. Based on thermal tolerances of the sporogonic stages of avian malaria (Plasmodium relictum) parasite and its vector, the southern house mosquito (Culex quinquefasciatus), we examined the long-term weather trends for three high value, forest bird refuges (Alakai Wilderness Preserve on Kaua'i, Hanawi Natural Area Reserve on Maui, and Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge on Hawai'i Island) to understand the temporal and site-specific differences of temperature-driven suitability for localized avian malaria transmission.
   On average, Alakai had mean ambient temperatures suitable for both the vector's immature stage development and parasite sporogonic development most of the time (85.3%), indicating that observed variability in vector abundance or disease transmission may be driven by other factors. At higher elevation sites like Hakalau and Hanawi, current mean ambient temperatures suitable only for vector development prevail (91.7% and 96.6%, respectively), while mean ambient temperatures for both vector and parasite sporogonic development seldom occur (4.4% and 0% respectively). Our results not only show differences in the temperature suitability for transmission across elevation, but also different levels of vulnerability to avian malaria transmission with any additional projected increase in temperature. For instance, under a conservative warming scenario of 1.0 degrees C, the joint temperature suitability of parasite and vector development increases at higher elevation sites such as Hakalau (+35.8%) and Hanawi (+15.4%). While mean ambient temperatures suitable for both vector and parasite development already occur most of the time at Alakai, the occurrence also increases (+8.4%) as well under this conservative warming scenario. By linking current site-specific weather data to real-time weather forecasts, we developed a real-time avian malaria warning system to assist managers in identifying conditions when vector control is most needed at these three selected study sites. This online tool determines when conditions are likely to be suitable for local development of P. relictum and C. quinquefasciatus at Alakai, Hanawi, and Hakalau. This tool illustrates how managers can incorporate climate and current weather patterns into decision making without having to consider the uncertainties of long-term climatic and ecological projections. Published by Elsevier B.V.
C1 [Fortini, Lucas Berio; LaPointe, Dennis A.] US Geol Survey, Pacific Isl Ecosyst Res Ctr, Reston, VA 20192 USA.
   [Kaiser, Lauren R.] Univ Hawaii, Hawaii Cooperat Studies Unit, Hilo, HI 96720 USA.
C3 United States Department of the Interior; United States Geological
   Survey; University of Hawaii System; University Hawaii Hilo
RP Fortini, LB (corresponding author), US Geol Survey, Pacific Isl Ecosyst Res Ctr, Reston, VA 20192 USA.
EM lfortini@usgs.gov
FU U.S. Geological Survey Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center
FX We would like to thank Chris Farmer and Hanna Mounce for their valuable
   feedback. We are grateful for the support of the U.S. Geological Survey
   Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center and the Pacific Islands
   Climate Change Cooperative for making this research possible. Any use of
   trade, firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does
   not imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.
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NR 44
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 3
U2 16
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
EI 2351-9894
J9 GLOB ECOL CONSERV
JI Glob. Ecol. Conserv.
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 23
AR e01069
DI 10.1016/j.gecco.2020.e01069
PG 10
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA NN3ZR
UT WOS:000568729900014
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Yoon, J
AF Yoon, Jungwon
BE Ng, E
   Fong, S
   Ren, C
TI Climate-adaptive Facade Design with Smart Materials: Evaluation and
   Strategies of Thermo-Responsive Smart Material Applications for Building
   Skins in Seoul
SO 34TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PASSIVE AND LOW ENERGY ARCHITECTURE:
   SMART AND HEALTHY WITHIN THE TWO-DEGREE LIMIT, VOL 2 (PLEA 2018)
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 34th International Conference on Passive and Low Energy Architecture
   (PLEA) - Smart and Healthy Within the Two-Degree Limit
CY DEC 10-12, 2018
CL Hong Kong, HONG KONG
SP Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Inst Future Cities, Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Inst Energy Environm & Sustainabil
DE Climate-adaptive; Thermo-responsive; Smart Material; Building Skin;
   Facade
AB Smart materials are often studied in architecture due to their internal changeable properties stimulated by various material-specific input or operating factors. Meanwhile, climate-adaptive facades have been investigated for design and simulation to achieve dynamic aesthetics satisfying environmental performance for energy efficiency and indoor comfort. This paper presents a design exploration framework for climate-adaptive facades with thermally responsive smart materials, limiting the scope of study to a pilot study of facades in Seoul, South Korea. The proposed smart material building skins are discussed for further simulation and validation to assess multiple criteria to verify their environmental performance and implementation for practical use. The paper is concluded by providing selected thermo-responsive smart material facade types and directions for future work.
C1 [Yoon, Jungwon] Univ Seoul, Dept Architecture, Seoul, South Korea.
C3 University of Seoul
RP Yoon, J (corresponding author), Univ Seoul, Dept Architecture, Seoul, South Korea.
FU Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation
   of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science, ICT, and Future Planning
   [NRF-2017R1C1B5015080]
FX This research was supported by the Basic Science Research Program
   through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the
   Ministry of Science, ICT, and Future Planning (NRF-2017R1C1B5015080).
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NR 31
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 3
U2 13
PU CHINESE UNIV HONG KONG, SCH ARCHITECTURE
PI SHATIN
PA LEE SHAU KEE ARCHITECTURE BUILDING, SHATIN, HONG KONG
BN 978-962-8272-36-5
PY 2018
BP 620
EP 626
PG 7
WC Architecture; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Architecture; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA BQ5SS
UT WOS:000607252600021
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hu, Q
   Tang, ZH
   Shulski, M
   Umphlett, N
   Abdel-Monem, T
   Uhlarik, FE
AF Hu, Qiao
   Tang, Zhenghong
   Shulski, Martha
   Umphlett, Natalie
   Abdel-Monem, Tarik
   Uhlarik, Frank E.
TI An examination of midwestern US cities' preparedness for climate change
   and extreme hazards
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Extreme hazards; Local comprehensive plan; Local hazard
   mitigation plan; Local emergency operations plan
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; ACTION PLANS; LEVEL; STATE; RISK; RESPONSES;
   BARRIERS; IMPACTS; POLICY
AB The increasing occurrence of extreme weather and climate events raised concerns in regard to hazard mitigation and climate adaptation. Local municipal planning mechanisms play a fundamental role in increasing a community's capacity toward long-term resiliency. This study employs the content analysis method to evaluate the 95 selected cities located in the US Federal Emergency Management Agency Region VII and examine how these local plans, including local comprehensive plans (CPs), hazard mitigation plans (HMPs), and local emergency operations plans (EOPs), prepare communities for climate change and possible extreme events. Results indicate that local plans delineated multiple resources and diverse strategies to reduce community climatic risks, where HMPs have medium-level preparation, and CPs and EOPs have limited level preparation. Local HMPs lead in mitigating for impacts from potential extreme events, but both local CPs and EOPs are proactively adapted for climatic risks. Common strengths and weaknesses exist between different planning mechanisms. Large variations exist among plans due to varying jurisdictions among cities. However, the plans score similarly overallhigher on strategies and factual base but are short of clear and detailed goals, objectives, and agendas. Finally, despite the diverse vertical and horizontal outreach, there is inadequate integration among local planning mechanisms to share climate hazard information.
C1 [Hu, Qiao; Tang, Zhenghong] Univ Nebraska, Community & Reg Planning Program, Lincoln, NE USA.
   [Shulski, Martha; Umphlett, Natalie] UNL, Sch Nat Resources, HARH 153B, Lincoln, NE 68583 USA.
   [Abdel-Monem, Tarik] Univ Nebraska, Publ Policy Ctr, Lincoln, NE USA.
C3 University of Nebraska System; University of Nebraska Lincoln;
   University of Nebraska System; University of Nebraska Lincoln
RP Shulski, M (corresponding author), UNL, Sch Nat Resources, HARH 153B, Lincoln, NE 68583 USA.
EM mshulski3@unl.edu
FU National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) [NA16OAR4210123]
FX This paper is funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
   Administration (NOAA) (Award Number: NA16OAR4210123). The contents do
   not necessarily reflect the views and policies of the funding agencies,
   and mention of trade names or commercial products do not constitute
   endorsement or recommendation for use.
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NR 58
TC 8
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 33
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD NOV
PY 2018
VL 94
IS 2
BP 777
EP 800
DI 10.1007/s11069-018-3420-y
PG 24
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA GY8AA
UT WOS:000448838400015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Moore, MP
   Hersch, K
   Sricharoen, C
   Lee, SR
   Reice, C
   Rice, P
   Kronick, S
   Medley, KA
   Fowler-Finn, KD
AF Moore, Michael P.
   Hersch, Kaitlyn
   Sricharoen, Chanont
   Lee, Sarah
   Reice, Caitlin
   Rice, Paul
   Kronick, Sophie
   Medley, Kim A.
   Fowler-Finn, Kasey D.
TI Sex-specific ornament evolution is a consistent feature of climatic
   adaptation across space and time in dragonflies
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF
   AMERICA
LA English
DT Article
DE citizen science; global warming; parallel evolution; sexual selection;
   temperature
ID WING PIGMENTATION; RAPID EVOLUTION; SELECTION; REGRESSION; DAMSELFLIES;
   ECOLOGY; SIZE
AB Adaptation to different climates fuels the origins and maintenance of biodiversity. Detailing how organisms optimize fitness for their local climates is therefore an essential goal in biology. Although we increasingly understand how survival-related traits evolve as organisms adapt to climatic conditions, it is unclear whether organisms also optimize traits that coordinate mating between the sexes. Here, we show that dragonflies consistently adapt to warmer climates across space and time by evolving less male melanin ornamentation-a mating-related trait that also absorbs solar radiation and heats individuals above ambient temperatures. Continent-wide macroevolutionary analyses reveal that species inhabiting warmer climates evolve less male ornamentation. Communityscience observations across 10 species indicate that populations adapt to warmer parts of species' ranges through microevolution of smaller male ornaments. Observations from 2005 to 2019 detail that contemporary selective pressures oppose male ornaments in warmer years; and our climate-warming projections predict further decreases by 2070. Conversely, our analyses show that female ornamentation responds idiosyncratically to temperature across space and time, indicating the sexes evolve in different ways to meet the demands of the local climate. Overall, these macro- and microevolutionary findings demonstrate that organisms predictably optimize their mating-related traits for the climate just as they do their survival-related traits.
C1 [Moore, Michael P.; Medley, Kim A.; Fowler-Finn, Kasey D.] Washington Univ, Living Earth Collaborat, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
   [Hersch, Kaitlyn; Sricharoen, Chanont; Lee, Sarah; Reice, Caitlin; Rice, Paul] Washington Univ, Dept Biol, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
   [Kronick, Sophie] Washington Univ, Dept Earth & Planetary Sci, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
   [Medley, Kim A.] Washington Univ, Tyson Res Ctr, Eureka, MO 63025 USA.
   [Fowler-Finn, Kasey D.] St Louis Univ, Dept Biol, St Louis, MO 63103 USA.
C3 Washington University (WUSTL); Washington University (WUSTL); Washington
   University (WUSTL); Washington University (WUSTL); Saint Louis
   University
RP Moore, MP (corresponding author), Washington Univ, Living Earth Collaborat, St Louis, MO 63130 USA.
EM moore.evo.eco@gmail.com
RI Moore, Michael/JJD-3293-2023
OI Sricharoen, Chanont/0000-0003-1395-659X; Reice,
   Caitlin/0000-0002-0407-0642; Moore, Michael/0000-0002-8255-4247; Hersch,
   Kaitlyn/0000-0002-5152-7529; Lee, Sarah/0000-0002-1475-7368
FU Living Earth Collaborative; Tyson Research Center; Saint Louis
   University Research Institute
FX This work would not have been possible without the thousands of
   iNaturalist users who photograph dragonflies. Conversations and feedback
   from C. Donihue, M. Ohmer, H. Rollins, B. Seymoure, the K.D.F.-F.
   laboratory, E. Svensson, and an anonymous referee improved the study. M.
   Piper provided technical assistance. Support was generously provided by
   G. Kornblum and the Living Earth Collaborative (M.P.M.) , the Tyson
   Research Center (K.A.M.) , and the Saint Louis University Research
   Institute (K.D.F.-F.) .
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NR 51
TC 33
Z9 35
U1 1
U2 24
PU NATL ACAD SCIENCES
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2101 CONSTITUTION AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20418 USA
SN 0027-8424
EI 1091-6490
J9 P NATL ACAD SCI USA
JI Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A.
PD JUL 13
PY 2021
VL 118
IS 28
AR e2101458118
DI 10.1073/pnas.2101458118
PG 7
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA UA2YE
UT WOS:000685028700013
PM 34260398
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Howarth, C
   Viner, D
AF Howarth, Candice
   Viner, David
TI Integrating adaptation practice in assessments of climate change
   science: The case of IPCC Working Group II reports
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE IPCC; AR6; Practitioners; Climate change; Climate adaptation
ID INTERGOVERNMENTAL PANEL
AB The delivery of effective climate adaptation on the ground requires that the (climate adaptation) practitioner community be better incorporated into the process of producing, gathering and synthesizing evidence on adaptation as part of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) process. This is not a recent issue and the co-production of knowledge, that goes beyond the traditional realms of 'science speaks to power', can only fully inform adequate and robust adaptation if it incorporates more practitioners, end-users, and those working at the interface of science, policy and practice. Through a high-level analysis of authors of the IPCC's Working Group II reports and special reports of AR6, we explore the evolution of representation of practitioners in IPCC WGII author teams from AR5 to AR6 and we find that practitioner representation has increased in AR6, however this remains low. We discuss how this low representation can affect readership and the potential to inform climate adaptation practice. As the IPCC evolves and reflects on its own practices, we seek to inform this process by providing further reflection on how the IPCC outputs can continue to be policy-relevant and maintain neutrality while ensuring accesibility and usability by climate adaptation practitioners.
C1 [Howarth, Candice] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, London, England.
   [Viner, David] CGG, Crompton Way, Crawley RH10 9QN, West Sussex, England.
C3 University of London; London School Economics & Political Science
RP Howarth, C (corresponding author), London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, London, England.
EM c.howarth@lse.ac.uk
OI Howarth, Candice/0000-0003-2132-5747
FU UK Economic and Social Research Council [ES/S008381/1]; ESRC
   [ES/S008381/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX The authors gratefully acknowledge support from the UK Economic and
   Social Research Council through the Place-Based Climate Action Network
   (PCAN) (Ref. ES/S008381/1) .
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NR 24
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 4
U2 38
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD SEP
PY 2022
VL 135
BP 1
EP 5
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2022.04.009
EA APR 2022
PG 5
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 1M5QQ
UT WOS:000800024000001
OA Green Accepted, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nonkes, C
   Lauzon, R
   Redford, B
   Duncan, AT
AF Nonkes, Charity
   Lauzon, Ryan
   Redford, Breanna
   Duncan, Alexander T.
TI Adaptation through knowledge coexistence: insights for environmental and
   sea lamprey stewardship
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Knowledge coexistence; indigenous partnership; sea lamprey; climate
   change adaptation; two-eyed seeing
ID MANAGEMENT
AB Strategies for tackling environmental issues, including the consequences of invasive species and corresponding control efforts, are frequently approached through a Western scientific lens that often overlooks Indigenous rights and Indigenous knowledge systems. This can cause numerous issues from costly delays in implementing control programmes, overlooking vital ecosystem information and alternative options, legal action due to infringement on rights, and perpetuating systems of oppression. This research uses social science and Indigenous methodologies to understand the Denny's Dam rehabilitation (DDR) as a case study for relationship-building and knowledge coexistence between the Saugeen Ojibway Nation and the Great Lakes Fisheries Commission in controlling sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus), an invasive species in the Laurentian Great Lakes. To evaluate the successes and shortcomings of the project, virtual semi-structured interviews (n = 14) were conducted with key decision-makers and others involved in the rehabilitation of Denny's Dam, a sea lamprey barrier. Analysis of these interviews identify four main factors that were crucial in the success of the DDR partnership: meaningful communication, funding and capacity, going beyond duty to consult requirements, and early engagement. The DDR shows how knowledge coexistence approaches, including Two-Eyed Seeing, can lead to equitable decision-making, foster collaboration, and contribute to addressing challenges like climate change, invasive species, and various environmental degradation.
C1 [Nonkes, Charity] Univ Ottawa, Inst Environm, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
   [Lauzon, Ryan; Redford, Breanna] Fisheries Assessment Program, Chippewas Nawash Unceded Nation 1, Neyaashiinigmiing, ON, Canada.
   [Duncan, Alexander T.] Univ British Columbia, Inst Oceans & Fisheries, Ctr Indigenous Fisheries, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
   [Nonkes, Charity] Univ Ottawa, Inst Environm, 1 Stewart St, Ottawa, ON K1N 7M9, Canada.
C3 University of Ottawa; University of British Columbia; University of
   Ottawa
RP Nonkes, C (corresponding author), Univ Ottawa, Inst Environm, 1 Stewart St, Ottawa, ON K1N 7M9, Canada.
EM cnonk064@uottawa.ca
OI Nonkes, Charity/0000-0002-6226-2335
FU Great Lakes Fishery Commission10.13039/100006788
FX No Statement Available
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NR 52
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 5
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PD JUL 2
PY 2024
VL 29
IS 7
BP 951
EP 968
DI 10.1080/13549839.2024.2320820
EA FEB 2024
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA UO0J1
UT WOS:001169184400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bell, W
   Hoffman, MT
   Visser, V
   Kirsten, T
AF Bell, Wesley
   Hoffman, M. Timm
   Visser, Vernon
   Kirsten, Tim
TI Modelling land condition to augment Land Degradation Neutrality
   assessments - The succulent Karoo biome of South Africa as a case study
SO JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS
LA English
DT Article
DE Land Degradation Neutrality; Random forest; Land condition assessment;
   Succulent karoo
ID SEMIARID RANGELAND; NAMAQUALAND; PASTORALISM
AB Land degradation is a threat to ecosystems and to already vulnerable people who live in dryland environments. The United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) has been tasked with addressing the global challenges posed by land degradation. Although the complexities around land degradation have more recently been acknowledged, spatial modelling of this phenomenon remains a global challenge. In this study, measures of productivity derived from Landsat 8 and Sentinel-2A data have been integrated with local climate, land use, and socio-economic data to provide a more meaningful regional conceptual framework for land degradation. We create a novel method to map land condition utilising a set of 26 biological, topographic, climatic and land use covariates. The model results can be viewed in isolation as a measure of vegetation cover but are more useful when interpreted within the context of the environmental covariates. This can be accomplished through the Succulent Karoo Land Condition Inspector Google Earth Engine application. The data are intended to assist conservation planners in providing spatial data related to the current condition of the land in the biome, as well as to highlight areas where biodiversity is potentially at greater threat and where restoration initiatives or climate change adaptation are most needed.
C1 [Bell, Wesley; Hoffman, M. Timm; Kirsten, Tim] Univ Cape Town, Dept Biol Sci, Plant Conservat Unit, ZA-7701 Rondebosch, South Africa.
   [Visser, Vernon] Univ Cape Town, Ctr Stat Ecol Environm & Conservat, ZA-7701 Rondebosch, South Africa.
   [Visser, Vernon] Natl Inst Theoret & Computat Sci NITheCS, Cape Town, South Africa.
C3 University of Cape Town; University of Cape Town
RP Bell, W (corresponding author), Univ Cape Town, Dept Biol Sci, Plant Conservat Unit, ZA-7701 Rondebosch, South Africa.
EM wesleydbell@gmail.com
RI Visser, Vernon/M-2118-2016; Hoffman, Michael Timm/K-4937-2016
OI Visser, Vernon/0000-0003-2444-5015; Hoffman, Michael
   Timm/0000-0002-5843-2397
FU Leslie Hill Succulent Karoo Trust; Plant Conservation Unit, University
   of Cape Town - NRF [118593, 114696]; JRS Biodiversity Foundation
   [60908]; IDRC grant [109567-001]
FX The authors are grateful for funding provided by the Leslie Hill
   Succulent Karoo Trust, administered by WWF South Africa, as well as
   equipment provided by the Plant Conservation Unit, University of Cape
   Town. Dr Vernon Visser was partly funded by the NRF (Grant/Award
   Numbers: #118593, #114696) , JRS Biodiversity Foundation grant #60908
   and IDRC grant #109567-001. We would also like to acknowledge the
   valuable contributions made by two anonymous reviewers.
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NR 55
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 4
U2 10
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0140-1963
EI 1095-922X
J9 J ARID ENVIRON
JI J. Arid. Environ.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 219
AR 105086
DI 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2023.105086
EA NOV 2023
PG 8
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA Y7NQ6
UT WOS:001107095900001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ellis, M
   Bajracharya, B
AF Ellis, Mark
   Bajracharya, Bhishna
TI Reducing community risk to coastal erosion with managed relocation
SO AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION
AB As climate change escalates and coastal populations increase, adaptation to ongoing risks to coastal communities due to rising sea levels and storm surges must be reassessed. In Australia, over $25 billion of coastal property is at substantial risk from inundation and erosion. The response by governments to coastal hazards has been to construct artificial sea barriers in a hold-the-line approach of investing in sea walls and beach nourishments1to protect beachfront residential properties. However, are such structures reducing the long-term risk in an era of climate uncertainty? Is sand renourishment of beaches a sustainable solution to increasing erosion on the coast? Can planned relocations be implemented in planning policies? Sea walls perpetuate ongoing threats to coastal development and a shift in the methodology of land-use planning and adaptation for coastal communities must occur. This would be in line with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030 (UNDRR 2015) goal of strengthening disaster risk governance. A greater emphasis must be placed on strategic planning that directs people away from high-risk beachfronts. This research uses qualitative case studies to understand how local governments in New South Wales address the increasing risks to coastal residential development and the connection between government and risk hierarchies. A framework is proposed to integrate national risk hierarchies into state and local government planning to assist in managing strategic relocations and implementing nature-based solutions.
C1 [Ellis, Mark] Bond Univ, Climate Change Coastal Eros & Land Use Planning, Gold Coast, Qld, Australia.
   [Bajracharya, Bhishna] Bond Univ, Urban Planning, Gold Coast, Qld, Australia.
C3 Bond University; Bond University
RP Ellis, M (corresponding author), Bond Univ, Climate Change Coastal Eros & Land Use Planning, Gold Coast, Qld, Australia.
RI Bajracharya, Bhishna/ABC-6656-2021
OI Bajracharya, Bhishna/0000-0003-2560-468X
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NR 33
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U1 4
U2 4
PU AUSTRALIAN EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT INST
PI EAST MELBOURNE
PA LEVEL 1, 340 ALBERT ST, EAST MELBOURNE, VIC 3002, AUSTRALIA
SN 1324-1540
J9 AUST J EMERG MANAG
JI Aust. J. Emerg. Manag.
PD OCT
PY 2023
VL 38
IS 4
BP 52
EP 58
DI 10.47389.38.4.52
PG 7
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA CR8Z2
UT WOS:001127074000013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schneider-Valenzuela, I
   Brito-Escudero, C
   Aguilera-Betti, I
   Klock-Barria, K
   Saldes-Cortes, A
   Celis-Diez, JL
   Ugalde, A
   Jorquera-Martinez, L
   Venegas-Gonzalez, A
   Carvallo, GO
   Munoz, AA
AF Schneider-Valenzuela, Isadora
   Brito-Escudero, Conny
   Aguilera-Betti, Isabella
   Klock-Barria, Karin
   Saldes-Cortes, Andrea
   Celis-Diez, Juan L.
   Ugalde, Antonio
   Jorquera-Martinez, Lorena
   Venegas-Gonzalez, Alejandro
   Carvallo, Gaston O.
   Munoz, Ariel A.
TI Nature-based Solutions (NbS) for addressing water scarcity in the
   Mediterranean Ecoregion of Chile
SO REVISTA DE GEOGRAFIA NORTE GRANDE
LA English
DT Article
DE nature-based solutions; water scarcity; climate change adaptation;
   drought; Mediterranean Ecoregion of Chile
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; SNOW COVER; SOIL; HYDROCLIMATE; MEGADROUGHT;
   DECLINE; AREAS; ANDES; FOOD
AB Natural-based Solutions (NbS) allow us to face socio-environmental challenges and risks through the protection, restoration and sustainable management of ecosystems, providing human well-being and increasing biodiversity. In the last decade, the Mediterranean Ecoregion of Chile (EMC, 29-37oS) has experienced a continuous drought and numerous water conflicts associated with the development of industrial activities in areas that provide ecosystem services of water supply and regulation. In this context, the use of NBS in water scarcity conflicts in the CME was evaluated as a way to support the design of public policies that incorporate this approach. For this, conflicts associated with water scarcity in the CME were collected and NBS were identified to face similar conflicts in other regions of the world. Three categories of NBS were identified: (i) watershed restoration and green infrastructure, (ii) ancestral and natural infrastructure, and (iii) integrated agricultural practices. This analysis indicates that the simultaneous use of these three strategies can contribute to the resolution of water conflicts in CME. NBS are projected as an efficient and integrating option to face the problems of water scarcity, since they are considered within national policies and designed according to the environmental conditions and social context of each sector in conflict.
C1 [Schneider-Valenzuela, Isadora; Aguilera-Betti, Isabella; Klock-Barria, Karin; Saldes-Cortes, Andrea; Munoz, Ariel A.] Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Lab Dendrocronol & Estudios Ambientales, Inst Geog, Valparaiso, Chile.
   [Schneider-Valenzuela, Isadora; Ugalde, Antonio; Munoz, Ariel A.] Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Ctr Accion Climat, Valparaiso, Chile.
   [Schneider-Valenzuela, Isadora; Brito-Escudero, Conny; Aguilera-Betti, Isabella; Klock-Barria, Karin; Celis-Diez, Juan L.; Jorquera-Martinez, Lorena; Venegas-Gonzalez, Alejandro; Carvallo, Gaston O.; Munoz, Ariel A.] Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Nucleo Invest Soluc base Nat Desafios Ambientales, Valparaiso, Chile.
   [Aguilera-Betti, Isabella] Cape Horn Int Ctr CHIC, Puerto Williams, Chile.
   [Aguilera-Betti, Isabella] Univ Magallanes, Ctr Invest GAIA Antart, Punta Arenas, Chile.
   [Klock-Barria, Karin] Univ Austral Chile, Escuela Grad, Fac Ciencias Forestales & Recursos Nat, Valdivia, Chile.
   [Saldes-Cortes, Andrea] Inst Ecol & Biodivers, Lab Conversac & Bienestar Humano, IEB, Concepcion, Chile.
   [Saldes-Cortes, Andrea] Univ La Frontera, Programa Magister Manejo Recursos Nat, Menc Anal & Gobernanza Sistemas Socioecol, Temuco, Chile.
   [Celis-Diez, Juan L.] Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Escuela Agron, Quillota, Chile.
   [Ugalde, Antonio] Univ Autonoma Chile, Inst Iberoamer Desarrollo Sostenible, Unidad Cambio Climat & Medioambiente, Temuco, Chile.
   [Jorquera-Martinez, Lorena] Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Escuela Ingn Construcc & Transporte, Fac Ingn, Valparaiso, Chile.
   [Venegas-Gonzalez, Alejandro] Univ OHiggins, Inst Ciencas Agrolimentarias Anim & Ambientales IC, San Fernando, Chile.
   [Venegas-Gonzalez, Alejandro] Univ Mayor, Escuela Ingn Forestal, Fac Ciencias, Hemera Ctr Observac Tierra, Santiago, Chile.
   [Carvallo, Gaston O.] Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Fac Ciencias, Inst Biol, Valparaiso, Chile.
   [Carvallo, Gaston O.] Barrio Univ, Inst Ecol & Biodivers IEB, Concepcion, Chile.
   [Munoz, Ariel A.] Ctr Clima & Resiliencia CR 2, Santiago, Chile.
C3 Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso; Pontificia Universidad
   Catolica de Valparaiso; Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso;
   Universidad de Magallanes; Universidad Austral de Chile; Universidad de
   La Frontera; Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso; Universidad
   Autonoma de Chile; Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Valparaiso;
   Universidad de O'Higgins; Universidad Mayor; Pontificia Universidad
   Catolica de Valparaiso; Universidad de Concepcion
RP Schneider-Valenzuela, I (corresponding author), Pontificia Univ Catolica Valparaiso, Lab Dendrocronol & Estudios Ambientales, Inst Geog, Valparaiso, Chile.
EM isadora.schneider@pucv.cl; connybritoescudero@gmail.com;
   isabella.aguilerab@gmail.com; karin.klock@gmail.com;
   saldes.cortes.a@gmail.com; juan.celis@pucv.cl;
   antonio.ugalde@quilpue.cl; lorena.jorquera@pucv.cl;
   alejandro.venegas@uoh.cl; gaston.carvallo@pucv.cl; ariel.munoz@pucv.cl
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NR 152
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 10
PU PONTIFICA UNIV CATOLICA CHILE, INST GEOGRAFIA
PI SANTIAGO
PA AV VICUNA MACKENNA 4860, SANTIAGO, 00000, CHILE
SN 0379-8682
EI 0718-3402
J9 REV GEOGR NORTE GD
JI Rev. Geogr. Norte Gd.
PY 2023
IS 85
AR 29093
PG 35
WC Geography; Geography, Physical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Physical Geography
GA W0HM7
UT WOS:001088526700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wienrich, N
   Buschman, VQ
   Coon, C
   Fuller, S
   Hennicke, J
   Humrich, C
   Prip, C
   Wenzel, L
AF Wienrich, Nicole
   Buschman, Victoria Qutuuq
   Coon, Catherine
   Fuller, Susanna
   Hennicke, Janos
   Humrich, Christoph
   Prip, Christian
   Wenzel, Lauren
TI The ecosystem approach to marine management in the Arctic: Opportunities
   and challenges for integration
SO FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE ecosystem approach; ecosystem-based management (EBM); Arctic; Arctic
   Council; marine conservation; regional ocean governance; sectoral
   integration; multi-level integration
AB Climate change is strongly impacting Arctic marine ecosystems, and the Arctic coastal communities whose identities, traditions and livelihoods are closely interconnected with the marine environment. The Ecosystem Approach (EA) is a promising approach for understanding and managing the occurring shifts in the Arctic marine ecosystems. Based on our analysis, we find that assessments conducted by international and regional instruments and institutions, most notably the Arctic Council, as well as the wealth of Indigenous knowledge present in the region, provide valuable starting points for the implementation of EA in the Arctic. Yet, mechanisms for translating knowledge into joint coordinated and integrated action in accordance with EA are currently lacking. Our analysis suggests that incremental steps can be taken now to promote the implementation of EA, while working to establish a more comprehensive governance framework. In our view, bottom-up initiatives may provide the most promising avenue for promoting the application of EA in the region under the current geopolitical circumstances. Support by civil society, Indigenous and conservation organizations, as well as global momentum will be necessary to coordinate, finance and elevate community-driven initiatives. Other opportunities we identify for advancing EA is to engage with sectoral management bodies and to advance EA through climate change adaptation measures.
C1 [Wienrich, Nicole] Inst Adv Sustainabil Studies IASS, Arctic Governance & Ocean Governance Grp, Potsdam, Germany.
   [Buschman, Victoria Qutuuq] Univ Alaska, Int Arctic Res Ctr, Fairbanks, AK USA.
   [Buschman, Victoria Qutuuq] Greenland Inst Nat Resources, Nuuk, Greenland.
   [Coon, Catherine] Bur Ocean Energy Management, Dept Interior, Anchorage, AK USA.
   [Fuller, Susanna] Oceans North, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Hennicke, Janos] Fed Agcy Nat Conservat, Head Div, Putbus, Germany.
   [Humrich, Christoph] Univ Groningen, Dept Int Relat & Int Org, Groningen, Netherlands.
   [Prip, Christian] Fridtjof Nansen Inst Polhogda, Lysaker, Norway.
   [Wenzel, Lauren] NOAA, Natl Marine Protected Areas Ctr, Silver Spring, MD USA.
C3 University of Alaska System; University of Alaska Fairbanks; Greenland
   Institute of Natural Resources; United States Department of the
   Interior; University of Groningen; National Oceanic Atmospheric Admin
   (NOAA) - USA
RP Wienrich, N (corresponding author), Inst Adv Sustainabil Studies IASS, Arctic Governance & Ocean Governance Grp, Potsdam, Germany.
EM nicole.wienrich@iass-potsdam.de
OI Buschman, Victoria Qutuuq/0000-0002-0781-642X; Humrich,
   Christoph/0000-0002-2914-7001
FU German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation,
   Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection (BMUV) through the German Federal
   Agency for Nature Conservation (BfN) [351983100A]; R&D project on marine
   conservation in the Arctic - German Federal Ministry for the
   Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection
   (BMUV) through the German Federal Agency for Nature Conservation (BfN)
   [351983100A]
FX NWs work on this paper was funded by an R&D project on marine
   conservation in the Arctic, funded by the German Federal Ministry for
   the Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer
   Protection (BMUV) through the German Federal Agency for Nature
   Conservation (BfN) (grant agreement no. 351983100A).
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NR 46
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 5
U2 14
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-7745
J9 FRONT MAR SCI
JI Front. Mar. Sci.
PD NOV 23
PY 2022
VL 9
AR 1034510
DI 10.3389/fmars.2022.1034510
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA 6U0PF
UT WOS:000894072300001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chung, JH
AF Chung, Jin-ho
TI Who defines community in community-based adaptation: different
   perceptions of community between government and citizens in Ethiopia
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Community-based adaptation; politics; power dynamics; climate change;
   adaptive capacity; UNDP-GEF Small Grants Programme; Ethiopia
ID POLITICS; SINGULARITY; RESILIENCE; STRUGGLES
AB Community-based adaptation (CBA) has become an increasingly popular mechanism for incorporating climate change adaptation into local development work. However, the term 'community' in CBA has been frequently used without rigorous reflection on its own meaning, boundary and governance, assuming that a moral license is intuitively granted. The article sets out to critically examine, through a study of the UNDP-GEF Small Grants Programme (SGP), how the concept of community is framed within the paradigm of CBA in Ethiopia and to what extent Ethiopian peasants articulate a shape of community that they consider they belong to. This article contributes to the field of community development in general, and specifically CBA, by exploring a fundamental difference between the governmental construction of community and the practices of community governance by citizens on the ground. Overall, I argue that communities are neither an actor nor a place, but the outcomes of a complex set of power-laden relationships, built on the unique mix of norms, customs, history and private interests. Community boundaries are therefore fluid with heterogeneity inside, and the individual perceptions of the community tend to be idiosyncratic. However, the definition of a community is frequently imposed upon in CBA practice, rather than generated by the groups themselves.
C1 [Chung, Jin-ho] Univ Oxford, Sch Geog & Environm, Transport Studies Unit, South Parks Rd, Oxford OX1 3QY, England.
C3 University of Oxford
RP Chung, JH (corresponding author), Univ Oxford, Sch Geog & Environm, Transport Studies Unit, South Parks Rd, Oxford OX1 3QY, England.
EM jin-ho.chung@ouce.ox.ac.uk
OI Chung, Jin-ho/0000-0002-3587-7676
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NR 71
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 4
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD FEB 7
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 2
BP 122
EP 131
DI 10.1080/17565529.2022.2061894
EA APR 2022
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA I4OE2
UT WOS:000782857200001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Veeran, Y
   Bose, RSJ
   Kandasamy, S
AF Veeran, Yoganandan
   Bose, R. S. John
   Kandasamy, Selvaraj
TI Local Knowledge of Coastal Population to Sea Level Rise and Climate
   Change - A Case Study in Fishermen Community, Kanyakumari District,
   Tamil Nadu, India
SO JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Sea-level rise; Coastal community; Adaptation;
   Awareness; Impacts
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY; PERCEPTIONS; PROJECTIONS; RESOURCE
AB This research synthesises two evaluations of a local level climate change adaptation and planning process in the southernmost coastal region, Kanyakumari, India which was supported through community-based appraisals. First, understanding the public perception of climate change factors is crucial in generating support for climate change response. Second, generating enough grass-root level support from the local population to assess the long-term climate change impacts on decision-making to design the adaptation strategies for sea-level rise. These two results highlight the level of understanding and awareness of climate change's impact by the local population in the coastal region of Kanyakumari. A well-designed questionnaire with structured interviews, to collect data on local knowledge and local perception of climate change and sea-level rise from 100 respondents was distributed each in 44 coastal villages in the study area. The finding showed that 20.7% of the local population have knowledge of climate change and its impacts and 18.4% of the population agreed that the impact of sealevel rise is experienced in the coastal region. This study is to provide insight into the communities' knowledge of the adaptive capacity of the local population to cope with climate change towards the treaty of sea-level rise.
C1 [Veeran, Yoganandan; Bose, R. S. John] Bharathidasan Univ, Dept Marine Sci, Tiruchirappalli 620024, Tamil Nadu, India.
   [Kandasamy, Selvaraj] Xiamen Univ, Dept Geol Oceanog, Xiamen 361104, Peoples R China.
   [Kandasamy, Selvaraj] Xiamen Univ, State Key Lab Marine Environm Sci, Xiamen 361104, Peoples R China.
C3 Bharathidasan University; Xiamen University; Xiamen University
RP Veeran, Y (corresponding author), Bharathidasan Univ, Dept Marine Sci, Tiruchirappalli 620024, Tamil Nadu, India.
EM yoganandan@bdu.ac.in
RI Kandasamy, Selvaraj/JJD-9543-2023
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NR 51
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 6
PU IOS PRESS
PI AMSTERDAM
PA NIEUWE HEMWEG 6B, 1013 BG AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2395-7611
EI 2395-7697
J9 J CLIM CHANG
JI J. Clim. Chang.
PY 2022
VL 8
IS 2
BP 23
EP 34
DI 10.3233/JCC220011
PG 12
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 2C3QT
UT WOS:000810787400004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McConnell, K
   Braneon, CV
   Glenn, E
   Stamler, N
   Mallen, E
   Johnson, DP
   Pandya, R
   Abramowitz, J
   Fernandez, G
   Rosenzweig, C
AF McConnell, Kathryn
   Braneon, Christian V.
   Glenn, Equisha
   Stamler, Natasha
   Mallen, Evan
   Johnson, Daniel P.
   Pandya, Raaghav
   Abramowitz, Jacob
   Fernandez, Gabriel
   Rosenzweig, Cynthia
TI A quasi-experimental approach for evaluating the heat mitigation effects
   of roofs in Illinois
SO SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Green roofs; Green infrastructure; Urban Heat Island; Heat mitigation;
   Land surface temperature; Climate change adaptation; Remote sensing
ID GREEN ROOFS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; URBAN; ISLAND; INFRASTRUCTURE;
   URBANIZATION; TEMPERATURES; PERFORMANCE; ADAPTATION; INDICATORS
AB In the coming decades, millions of urban residents will be exposed to increasingly deadly heat extremes. As an adaptive response to rising temperatures, many cities have begun to install vegetated "green" roofs, which now vary widely in structure and size, and have generally been shown to have cooling capacity. Yet, little research has been done to differentiate which types of green roofs are most effective at reducing urban heat. We present a method to evaluate the cooling effects associated with green infrastructure that draws on publicly available satellite imagery and open-source software for analysis. Based on a quasi-experimental research design that integrates social and physical science approaches, this technique is able to identify the cooling effects of green infrastructure against background warming trends associated with urbanization and climate change. We demonstrate this method at three green roof sites across the City of Chicago, finding that the study sites with larger, intensive green roofs accompanied by diverse plant species have greater cooling benefits than the extensive, monoculture green roof. Our low-cost method can aid policymakers and planners in empirically evaluating the cooling capacity of green roofs in their own communities.
C1 [McConnell, Kathryn] Yale Univ, Sch Environm, 195 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511 USA.
   [Braneon, Christian V.; Glenn, Equisha; Rosenzweig, Cynthia] NASA Goddard Inst Space Studies, 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10025 USA.
   [Braneon, Christian V.] SciSpace LLC, 6550 Rock Spring Dr,Suite 600, Bethesda, MD 20817 USA.
   [Glenn, Equisha] CUNY City Coll, 160 Convent Ave, New York, NY 10031 USA.
   [Stamler, Natasha] MIT, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
   [Mallen, Evan] Georgia Inst Technol, Coll Design, 245 Fourth St NW, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA.
   [Johnson, Daniel P.] Indiana Univ, 425 Univ Blvd, Indianapolis, IN 46202 USA.
   [Pandya, Raaghav] Columbia Univ Teachers Coll, 525 West 120th St, New York, NY 10027 USA.
   [Abramowitz, Jacob] Univ Alabama, 301 Sparkman Dr, Huntsville, AL 35899 USA.
   [Fernandez, Gabriel] Columbia Univ, 1130 Amsterdam Ave, New York, NY 10027 USA.
   [Rosenzweig, Cynthia] Columbia Univ, Earth Inst, Ctr Climate Syst Res, 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10025 USA.
C3 Yale University; National Aeronautics & Space Administration (NASA);
   NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; Goddard Institute for Space Studies;
   City University of New York (CUNY) System; City College of New York
   (CUNY); Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT); University System
   of Georgia; Georgia Institute of Technology; Indiana University System;
   Indiana University Indianapolis; Columbia University Teachers College;
   University of Alabama System; University of Alabama Huntsville; Columbia
   University; Columbia University
RP McConnell, K (corresponding author), Yale Univ, Sch Environm, 195 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511 USA.; Braneon, CV (corresponding author), NASA Goddard Inst Space Studies, 2880 Broadway, New York, NY 10025 USA.; Braneon, CV (corresponding author), SciSpace LLC, 6550 Rock Spring Dr,Suite 600, Bethesda, MD 20817 USA.
EM kathryn.mcconnell@yale.edu; christian.v.braneon@nasa.gov
OI Johnson, Daniel/0000-0002-9949-7584; Stamler,
   Natasha/0000-0002-1499-4427; Glenn, Equisha/0000-0002-6081-6074;
   Abramowitz, Jacob/0000-0003-2729-0901; Mallen, Evan/0000-0001-6151-752X;
   Braneon, Christian/0000-0003-1878-1397; McConnell,
   Kathryn/0000-0003-4395-5483
FU National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) Earth Science
   Division; NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies through the
   NASA-Microsoft partnership; NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
   through Climate Change Research Initiative (CCRI); Peter J. Eloranta
   Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship at MIT's Undergraduate Research
   Opportunities Program (UROP); Jeffrey L. Pressman Award from MIT's
   Department of Political Science
FX Support was provided by the National Aeronautics and Space
   Ad-ministration's (NASA) Earth Science Division and NASA Goddard
   Institute for Space Studies through the NASA-Microsoft partnership and
   Climate Change Research Initiative (CCRI) respectively. Additional
   sup-port was provided by the Peter J. Eloranta Summer Undergraduate
   Research Fellowship at MIT's Undergraduate Research Opportunities
   Program (UROP) and the Jeffrey L. Pressman Award from MIT's Department
   of Political Science. We thank the City of Chicago's Department of
   Planning and Development for providing data from the City of Chicago
   Green Roof Database and Raed Mansour at the Chicago Department of Public
   Health for his comments. Special thanks to Matthew Pearce and Rosalba
   Giarratano for their programmatic support which made this research
   possible, and to Dr. Karen Seto for providing feedback on the
   manuscript.
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NR 83
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 7
U2 58
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2210-6707
EI 2210-6715
J9 SUSTAIN CITIES SOC
JI Sust. Cities Soc.
PD JAN
PY 2022
VL 76
AR 103376
DI 10.1016/j.scs.2021.103376
EA OCT 2021
PG 12
WC Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Energy & Fuels
GA XO6QI
UT WOS:000730307100004
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sanchez-Plaza, A
   Broekman, A
   Retana, J
   Bruggeman, A
   Giannakis, E
   Jebari, S
   Krivograd-Klemencic, A
   Libbrecht, S
   Magjar, M
   Robert, N
   Verkerk, PJ
AF Sanchez-Plaza, Anabel
   Broekman, Annelies
   Retana, Javier
   Bruggeman, Adriana
   Giannakis, Elias
   Jebari, Sihem
   Krivograd-Klemencic, Aleksandra
   Libbrecht, Steven
   Magjar, Manca
   Robert, Nicolas
   Verkerk, Pieter Johannes
TI Participatory Evaluation of Water Management Options for Climate Change
   Adaptation in River Basins
SO ENVIRONMENTS
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; stakeholder engagement; participatory
   evaluation; river basin; water management
ID FUZZY COGNITIVE MAPS; KNOWLEDGE; STAKEHOLDERS; SUPPORT; RISK
AB Climate and other human-induced changes will increase water scarcity in world areas such as in the Mediterranean. Adaptation principles need to be urgently incorporated into water management and stakeholder engagement needs to be strengthened at all steps of the management cycle. This study aimed to analyse and compare stakeholder-preferred water management options (WMOs) to face climate change related challenges and to foster adaptation in four Mediterranean river basins. The challenges and WMOs of the four river basins identified by stakeholders were analysed examining to what extent the WMOs tackled the identified challenges. The impact of the WMOs resulting from a participatory modelling method was included in a comparative analysis of the stakeholders' WMOs preferences. The results indicate the participatory approach that was applied allowed local priorities and real-world challenges to be defined with adequate detail as well as the definition of tailored responses. The participatory impact analysis provided an integrated view of the river basin as an interrelated system. The participatory evaluation of the WMOs was able to consider a wide range of elements and was able reflect the combined preferences of the stakeholders. Moreover, it allowed groups of basin actors with highly diverse profiles and concerns to further promote sets of these WMOs as input into decision making processes.
C1 [Sanchez-Plaza, Anabel; Broekman, Annelies; Retana, Javier] Ctr Recerca Ecol & Aplicac Forestals, Cerdanyola De Valles 08193, Spain.
   [Retana, Javier] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Unitat Ecol, Cerdanyola Del Valles 08193, Spain.
   [Bruggeman, Adriana; Giannakis, Elias] Cyprus Inst, Energy Environm & Water Res Ctr, 20 Konstantinou Kavafi St, CY-2121 Nicosia, Cyprus.
   [Jebari, Sihem] Natl Res Inst Rural Engn Water & Forests, Rue Hedi Karray, Ariana 2080, Tunisia.
   [Krivograd-Klemencic, Aleksandra] Univ Ljubljana, Fac Civil & Geodet Engn, Hajdrihova 28, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
   [Libbrecht, Steven] Prospex BVBA, Vlugestal 6, B-3140 Keerbergen, Belgium.
   [Libbrecht, Steven] ESSET BVBA, Nieuwelaan 61, B-1860 Meise, Belgium.
   [Magjar, Manca] Inst Water Republ Slovenia, Einspielerjeva Ulica 6, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia.
   [Robert, Nicolas; Verkerk, Pieter Johannes] European Forest Inst, St Antoni M Claret 167, Barcelona 08025, Spain.
   [Verkerk, Pieter Johannes] European Forest Inst, Yliopistokatu 6B, Joensuu 80100, Finland.
C3 Centro de Investigacion Ecologica y Aplicaciones Forestales
   (CREAF-CERCA); Autonomous University of Barcelona; Universite de
   Carthage; University of Ljubljana
RP Sanchez-Plaza, A (corresponding author), Ctr Recerca Ecol & Aplicac Forestals, Cerdanyola De Valles 08193, Spain.
EM a.sanchez@creaf.uab.es; a.broekman@creaf.uab.es; javier.retana@uab.cat;
   a.bruggeman@cyi.ac.cy; e.giannakis@cyi.ac.cy; sihem.jebari@gmail.com;
   aleksandra.krivograd-klemencic@fgg.uni-lj.si;
   steven.libbrecht@esset.eu.com; manca.magjar@gmail.com;
   nicolas.robert@gmx.net; hans.verkerk@efi.int
RI Giannakis, Elias/AFT-5927-2022; Libbrecht, Sasha/AAW-8186-2021;
   Bruggeman, Adriana/J-6345-2013
OI JEBARI, Sihem/0000-0002-4086-3244; Giannakis, Elias/0000-0002-1779-9811;
   Verkerk, Pieter Johannes/0000-0001-5322-8007; Broekman,
   Annelies/0000-0002-8961-0467; Bruggeman, Adriana/0000-0002-6475-5221;
   Sanchez-Plaza, Anabel/0000-0001-6676-5119
FU European Union [612385]
FX This work has been funded through the European Union 7th Framework
   Programme, project BeWater (grant agreement 612385). The opinions
   expressed in this paper are those of the authors only.
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NR 49
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 2
U2 8
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2076-3298
J9 ENVIRONMENTS
JI Environments
PD SEP
PY 2021
VL 8
IS 9
AR 93
DI 10.3390/environments8090093
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA UV7VA
UT WOS:000699679700001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Meo, B
   Graham, S
   Ariza, E
   Casellas, A
   Delfino, D
AF Meo, Beatrice
   Graham, Sonia
   Ariza, Eduard
   Casellas, Antonia
   Delfino, Deisiane
TI The resident and visitor gaze: A comparison of coastal social values at
   risk due to sea-level rise
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Vulnerability; Coastal-zone management; Tourism; Local users;
   Destination; Climate change impacts
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; PLACE ATTACHMENT; RESOURCE-MANAGEMENT; LOCAL
   VALUES; TOURISM; VULNERABILITY; PERCEPTIONS; PREFERENCES; MEANINGS
AB Climate change will have a significant impact on coastal locations, affecting visitors' and residents' values and experiences. Yet, we know little about the ways visitors value the coast and how they may be affected by climate change impacts. There is a need for place-based studies, where residents and visitors are studied alongside one another to inform more comprehensive and socially-inclusive adaptation strategies. This study sought to understand the lived and landscape values that visitors and residents attribute to the natural reserves and beach of the Llobregat Delta in the densely built-up environment of Barcelona, Spain, as well as their concerns about the impacts of climate change. Results of our survey (n = 133) showed that residents and visitors alike highly valued the natural environment, biodiversity and therapeutic aspects. Residents placed more importance on the biodiversity, safety and sense of identity and pride that the area provides. Visitors were just as likely as residents to be concerned about the effects of climate change on the region. This concern reveals that visitors are key stakeholders with coastal place attachments that need to be integrated into future adaptation research and practice.
C1 [Meo, Beatrice; Graham, Sonia] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Inst Ciencia & Technol Ambientals, Bellaterra 08193, Spain.
   [Ariza, Eduard; Casellas, Antonia; Delfino, Deisiane] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Dept Geog, Bellaterra 08193, Spain.
   [Graham, Sonia] Univ Wollongong, Sch Geog & Sustainable Communities, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia.
C3 Autonomous University of Barcelona; Autonomous University of Barcelona;
   University of Wollongong
RP Graham, S (corresponding author), Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Inst Ciencia & Technol Ambientals, Bellaterra 08193, Spain.; Graham, S (corresponding author), Univ Wollongong, Sch Geog & Sustainable Communities, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia.
EM sgraham@uow.edu.au
RI CASELLAS, ALBA/AAG-6719-2020; Graham, Sonia/G-4399-2012
OI Casellas, Antonia/0000-0002-5252-1399; Graham, Sonia/0000-0003-4195-4559
FU Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities, through the
   "Maria de Maeztu" program for Units of Excellence [MDM20150552,
   CSO2016-76842-C2-1-R]; Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
FX We acknowledge the financial support from the Spanish Ministry of
   Science, Innovation and Universities, through the "Maria de Maeztu"
   program for Units of Excellence (MDM20150552) . This research was also
   developed under the framework of the POLICLIMA project
   (CSO2016-76842-C2-1-R) funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and
   Competitiveness. Thank you to Anna Marin Puig for creating the map,
   Claudia Graham and Daniel BenSefer for piloting the interviews, and to
   Mabel Lizbeth Martinez Carpeta for helping to conduct the facetoface
   surveys. We also appreciate the time that the respondents took to
   participate in the semistructured interviews and survey.
CR ACN, 2020, CATALAN NEWS 0301
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NR 49
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 25
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD SEP
PY 2021
VL 123
BP 202
EP 209
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2021.05.017
EA JUN 2021
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SP7QZ
UT WOS:000659860700003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Susanto, J
   Zheng, XZ
   Liu, Y
   Wang, C
AF Susanto, Jimmy
   Zheng, Xinzhu
   Liu, Yuan
   Wang, Can
TI The impacts of climate variables and climate-related extreme events on
   island country's tourism: Evidence from Indonesia
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Tourism; Extreme events; Impact
ID DEMAND
AB Tourism is one of the main economic sectors, which is impacted by climate change on a global scale. Yet, whether and to what extent climate change influences tourism in island countries with tropical weather has not been fully understood. Here, we seek to fill this gap by evaluating the role of climate variables and climate-related extreme events on the number of international tourists in Indonesia empirically. A panel dataset of 5 provinces in Indonesia, which accounted for more than 80 percent of international tourists traveling to Indonesia between 2008 and 2018, was used to perform a feasible generalized least square (FGLS) regression. Consistent with previous findings, the empirical results show that both temperature and relative humidity particularly explain the variations in the number of international tourists in Indonesia. Every 1% increment of temperature and relative humidity is associated with a decrease in the number of international tourists in Indonesia by 1.37% and 0.59%, respectively. This study also suggests that the effect of climate change and climate-related extreme events is not homogeneous among tourists from different regions. These findings develop novel insights for climate change adaptation for policymakers and the tourism industry in Indonesia as well as in other warm destinations. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Susanto, Jimmy; Wang, Can] Tsinghua Univ, Sch Environm, State Key Joint Lab Environm Simulat & Pollut Con, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China.
   [Zheng, Xinzhu] China Univ Petr, Sch Econ & Management, Beijing 102249, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Yuan] Hitotsubashi Univ, Sch Econ, Tokyo 1868601, Japan.
C3 Tsinghua University; China University of Petroleum; Hitotsubashi
   University
RP Zheng, XZ (corresponding author), China Univ Petr, Fuxue Ave 18, Beijing 102249, Peoples R China.
EM xinzhuzheng@cup.edu.cn
RI WANG, CAN/GWV-0969-2022
FU National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFA0603602];
   National Natural Science Foundation of China [71773062, 71525007,
   71904201]; Science Foundation of China University of Petroleum-Beijing
   [2462018YJRC026]
FX This work was supported by the National Key Research and Development
   Program of China [No. 2017YFA0603602]; the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China [No. 71773062, No. 71525007, and No. 71904201]; and
   the Science Foundation of China University of Petroleum-Beijing [No.
   2462018YJRC026].
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NR 69
TC 27
Z9 27
U1 2
U2 55
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD DEC 10
PY 2020
VL 276
AR 124204
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.124204
PG 9
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA OC9UG
UT WOS:000579500800178
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU An, DT
AF Dang Truong An
TI Shifting crop planting calendar as a climate change adaptation solution
   for rice cultivation region in the Long Xuyen Quadrilateral of Vietnam
SO CHILEAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; crop model; grain yield; Oryza sativa; shift
ID YIELD; WATER; MODEL; STRATEGY; IMPACTS; DATE
AB Rice (Oryza sativa L.) paddies in the Long Xuyen Quadrilateral Region of Vietnam have regularly met the increased risks under the impacts of climate change (ICC), resulting in a decline in crop productivity. The objective of this study was to determine the suitable times for broadcasting rice crops in the rice cultivation paddies belonging to Long Xuyen Quadrilateral as a mitigation solution to the negative ICC. To conduct this research, crop model namely the FAO-AquaCrop (Version 6.0) was selected to simulate grain yields of rice crops based on different scenarios of crop broadcasting calendar (CBC). The results point out that the grain yield of winter-spring (WS) and summer-autumn (SA) cropping seasons can increase up to 6.2% and 5.3% if the CBC is delayed from 7 to 14 d compared to the current broadcasting calendar (baseline) in the two experimental areas while the grain yield of the autumn-winter (AW) cropping season can increase 6.4% if the CBC is shifted 14 d compared to the baseline. In general, a shift in the CBC for all rice broadcasting crops compared to the baseline can be considered as an effective solution to minimize the negative impacts of weather factors as well as contribute to improve rice productivity.
C1 [Dang Truong An] Ton Duc Thang Univ, Fac Environm & Labour Safety, Sustainable Management Nat Resources & Environm R, Ho Chi Minh City 070000, Vietnam.
C3 Ton Duc Thang University
RP An, DT (corresponding author), Ton Duc Thang Univ, Fac Environm & Labour Safety, Sustainable Management Nat Resources & Environm R, Ho Chi Minh City 070000, Vietnam.
EM dangtruongan@tdtu.edu.vn
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NR 30
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 6
PU INST INVESTIGACIONES AGROPECUARIAS
PI CHILLAN
PA CENTRO REGIONAL DE INVESTIGACION QUILAMAPU, CASILLA 426, CHILLAN, 00000,
   CHILE
SN 0718-5839
J9 CHIL J AGR RES
JI Chil. J. Agric. Res.
PD OCT-DEC
PY 2020
VL 80
IS 4
BP 468
EP 477
DI 10.4067/S0718-58392020000400468
PG 10
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA OK1TF
UT WOS:000584433900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Koenigstein, S
   Hentschel, LH
   Heel, LC
   Drinkorn, C
AF Koenigstein, Stefan
   Hentschel, Lisa-Henrike
   Heel, Lena Christin
   Drinkorn, Catherine
TI A game-based education approach for sustainable ocean development
SO ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE environmental education; game-based learning; marine social-ecological
   systems; marine sustainability; ocean literacy; sustainable development
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SIMULATION GAMES; MARINE; MANAGEMENT;
   IMPACTS; TOOLS
AB The goods and services of the ocean are increasingly threatened by anthropogenic pressures and climate change. Novel approaches for an integrated education for sustainable ocean development are needed, to teach an understanding of ocean systems and their sustainable governance to future generations of users and consumers. We developed a table-top, role-playing game for marine sustainability education at the high school level and above. Ocean Limited lets players negotiate their uses and interactions as ocean stakeholders, providing a comprehensive social-ecological integration of global ocean systems, marine sustainability challenges, and climate change impacts. Observations of in-game player behaviour, game results, and player feedback indicate that players understood the game world, identified with their roles, and actively engaged as ocean stakeholders. Ocean Limited stimulated empathy for other actors, systemic and foresighted thinking, and the development of sustainability-oriented cooperation and agreements. The game can demonstrate and teach real-world marine sustainability issues, and could support collective learning of problem-solving capacities for social-ecological conflicts and trade-offs in ocean uses. We suggest using role-playing game-based approaches for an integrated marine sustainability education, to train students the skills needed to participate in and support sustainable ocean development.
C1 [Koenigstein, Stefan] Univ Bremen, Sustainabil Res Ctr Artec, Bremen, Germany.
   [Koenigstein, Stefan] Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Inst Marine Sci, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA.
   [Hentschel, Lisa-Henrike] Heinrich Boll Fdn Schleswig Holstein, Kiel, Germany.
   [Heel, Lena Christin] Bremen Soc Nat Sci, ICYMARE, Bremen, Germany.
   [Drinkorn, Catherine] Helmholtz Ctr Potsdam, GFZ German Res Ctr Geosci, Earth Syst Modelling, Potsdam, Germany.
C3 University of Bremen; University of California System; University of
   California Santa Cruz; Helmholtz Association; Helmholtz-Center Potsdam
   GFZ German Research Center for Geosciences
RP Koenigstein, S (corresponding author), Univ Bremen, Sustainabil Res Ctr Artec, Bremen, Germany.; Koenigstein, S (corresponding author), Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Inst Marine Sci, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA.
EM stkoenig@ucsc.edu
OI Drinkorn, Catherine/0000-0001-7456-0893
FU Seas and Oceans" by the German Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
FX The development of Ocean Limited was funded under the "Science Year
   2016-2017: Seas and Oceans" by the German Ministry of Education and
   Research (BMBF).
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NR 65
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 5
U2 44
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 1054-3139
EI 1095-9289
J9 ICES J MAR SCI
JI ICES J. Mar. Sci.
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 77
IS 5
BP 1629
EP 1638
DI 10.1093/icesjms/fsaa035
PG 10
WC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology; Oceanography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology; Oceanography
GA OH6QK
UT WOS:000582719500004
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rasul, G
   Pasakhala, B
   Mishra, A
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AF Rasul, Golam
   Pasakhala, Binaya
   Mishra, Arabinda
   Pant, Sakhie
TI Adaptation to mountain cryosphere change: issues and challenges
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; mountain cryosphere change; climate change; barriers to
   adaptation; vulnerable communities; policy response; sustainable
   development goals
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ARTIFICIAL GLACIERS; HYDROLOGICAL CHANGE;
   HUMAN VULNERABILITY; POLICY PROCESSES; WATER-RESOURCES; TROPICAL ANDES;
   EUROPEAN ALPS; MASS-BALANCE; IMPACTS
AB The cryosphere provides multiple services to society, but mountain cryosphere is shrinking at an alarming rate worldwide due to climate change, threatening natural and human systems. Adaptation to cryosphere change is essential to avoid irreversible damage and to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. Although documenting adaptation actions and challenges is vital for preparing and implementing adaptation strategies, efforts to document and understand current adaptation practices specifically in response to cryosphere change have been limited. This paper synthesizes adaptation actions currently practiced in the mountain ranges of the Andes, Alps, Pamir, Tien Shan and Himalaya in response to cryosphere change, discusses common constraints and suggests actions for creating an enabling environment for adaptation. It identifies various adaptation measures adopted by different actors. These range from changing current practices and behaviour at household level to collaborative monitoring at regional level. However, most adaptation measures are autonomous, narrowly focused and short term, without adequate planning and government support. The physical challenges of mountain terrain, low adaptive capacities, limited knowledge and high uncertainty about future risks constrain widespread adoption of adaptation measures. Further research is needed to better understand factors influencing adaptation actions, and the policy options and responses that can overcome existing barriers.
C1 [Rasul, Golam; Pasakhala, Binaya; Mishra, Arabinda; Pant, Sakhie] Int Ctr Integrated Mt Dev, GPO Box 3226, Kathmandu, Nepal.
RP Rasul, G (corresponding author), Int Ctr Integrated Mt Dev, GPO Box 3226, Kathmandu, Nepal.
EM golam.rasul@icimod.org
RI Rasul, Golam/AAV-2646-2020
OI Rasul, Golam/0000-0002-5972-5036; Pasakhala, Binaya/0000-0001-9454-2772
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NR 121
TC 26
Z9 26
U1 5
U2 43
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD APR 20
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 4
BP 297
EP 309
DI 10.1080/17565529.2019.1617099
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LE4PH
UT WOS:000526701100001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Abeje, MT
   Tsunekawa, A
   Haregeweyn, N
   Nigussie, Z
   Adgo, E
   Ayalew, Z
   Tsubo, M
   Elias, A
   Berihun, D
   Quandt, A
   Berihun, ML
   Masunaga, T
AF Abeje, Misganaw Teshager
   Tsunekawa, Atsushi
   Haregeweyn, Nigussie
   Nigussie, Zerihun
   Adgo, Enyew
   Ayalew, Zemen
   Tsubo, Mitsuru
   Elias, Asres
   Berihun, Daregot
   Quandt, Amy
   Berihun, Mulatu Liyew
   Masunaga, Tsugiyuki
TI Communities' Livelihood Vulnerability to Climate Variability in Ethiopia
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; drought; livelihood vulnerability; Shannon-entropy index
ID FOOD SECURITY; SMALLHOLDER; ADAPTATION; HOUSEHOLDS; HIGHLANDS; DROUGHT;
   STRATEGIES; RESPONSES; DISTRICT; RAINFALL
AB Ethiopia has experienced more than 10 major drought episodes since the 1970s. Evidence has shown that climate change exacerbates the situation and presents a daunting challenge to predominantly rain-fed agricultural livelihoods. The aim of this study was to analyze the extent and sources of smallholder famers' livelihood vulnerability to climate change/variability in the Upper Blue Nile basin. We conducted a household survey (n = 391) across three distinct agroecological communities and a formative composite index of livelihood vulnerability (LVI) was constructed. The Mann-Kendall test and the standard precipitation index (SPI) were employed to analyze trends of rainfall, temperature, and drought prevalence for the period from 1982 to 2016. The communities across watersheds showed a relative difference in the overall livelihood vulnerability index. Aba Gerima (midland) was found to be more vulnerable, with a score of 0.37, while Guder (highland) had a relatively lower LVI with a 0.34 index score. Given similar exposure to climate variability and drought episodes, communities' livelihood vulnerability was mainly attributed to their low adaptive capacity and higher sensitivity indicators. Adaptive capacity was largely constrained by a lack of participation in community-based organizations and a lack of income diversification. This study will have practical implications for policy development in heterogeneous agroecological regions for sustainable livelihood development and climate change adaptation programs.
C1 [Abeje, Misganaw Teshager; Berihun, Mulatu Liyew] Tottori Univ, United Grad Sch Agr Sci, 4-101 Koyama Minami, Tottori 6808553, Japan.
   [Abeje, Misganaw Teshager] Bahir Dar Univ, Inst Disaster Risk Management & Food Secur Studie, POB 79, Bahir Dar 6000, Ethiopia.
   [Tsunekawa, Atsushi; Nigussie, Zerihun; Tsubo, Mitsuru] Tottori Univ, Arid Land Res Ctr, 1390 Hamasaka, Tottori 6800001, Japan.
   [Haregeweyn, Nigussie] Tottori Univ, Int Platform Dryland Res & Educ, 1390 Hamasaka, Tottori 6800001, Japan.
   [Nigussie, Zerihun; Adgo, Enyew; Ayalew, Zemen] Bahir Dar Univ, Coll Agr & Environm Sci, Bahir Dar 5501, Ethiopia.
   [Elias, Asres] Tottori Univ, Fac Agr, 4-101 Koyama Minami, Tottori 6808550, Japan.
   [Berihun, Daregot] Bahir Dar Univ, Coll Business & Econ, POB 79, Bahir Dar 6000, Ethiopia.
   [Quandt, Amy] San Diego State Univ, Dept Geog, San Diego, CA 92182 USA.
   [Berihun, Mulatu Liyew] Bahir Dar Univ, Bahir Dar Inst Technol, Fac Civil & Water Resource Engn, POB 26, Bahir Dar 6000, Ethiopia.
   [Masunaga, Tsugiyuki] Shimane Univ, Fac Life & Environm Sci, Matsue, Shimane 6900823, Japan.
C3 Tottori University; Bahir Dar University; Tottori University; Tottori
   University; Bahir Dar University; Tottori University; Bahir Dar
   University; California State University System; San Diego State
   University; Bahir Dar University; Shimane University
RP Abeje, MT (corresponding author), Tottori Univ, United Grad Sch Agr Sci, 4-101 Koyama Minami, Tottori 6808553, Japan.; Abeje, MT (corresponding author), Bahir Dar Univ, Inst Disaster Risk Management & Food Secur Studie, POB 79, Bahir Dar 6000, Ethiopia.
EM tmisganaw16@gmail.com; tsunekawa@tottori-u.ac.jp;
   nigussie_haregeweyn@yahoo.com; zeriye@gmail.com; enyewadgo@gmail.com;
   zayalew@gmail.com; tsubo@tottori-u.ac.jp; asres97@yahoo.com;
   daregot21@gmail.com; Amy.Quandt@colorado.edu; mulatuliyew@yahoo.com;
   masunaga@life.shimane-u.ac.jp
RI Elias, Asres/D-4847-2019; Abeje, Misganaw/AAH-7923-2019; Tsubo,
   Mitsuru/C-4027-2016; Berihun, Mulatu/AAC-9461-2019; Quandt,
   Amy/AAP-1716-2021; Nigussie, Zerihun/AAV-9190-2020; Haregeweyn,
   Nigussie/J-5616-2015; Tsunekawa, Atsushi/L-8526-2013
OI Adgo, Enyew/0000-0001-6824-5037; Tsubo, Mitsuru/0000-0002-8729-2215;
   Liyew Berihun, Mulatu/0000-0003-4101-1518; Haregeweyn,
   Nigussie/0000-0003-2920-8094; Tsunekawa, Atsushi/0000-0002-7690-0633;
   Abeje, Misganaw/0000-0001-6271-6459; Quandt, Amy/0000-0001-7434-1500;
   Nigussie, Zerihun/0000-0002-8001-2073
FU Science and Technology Research Partnership for Sustainable Development
   (SATREPS)-Development of a Next-Generation Sustainable Land Management
   (SLM) Framework to Combat Desertification project, Japan Science and
   Technology Agency (JST)/Japan International [JPMJSA1601]
FX This research was funded by the Science and Technology Research
   Partnership for Sustainable Development (SATREPS)-Development of a
   Next-Generation Sustainable Land Management (SLM) Framework to Combat
   Desertification project, Grant Number JPMJSA1601, Japan Science and
   Technology Agency (JST)/Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA).
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NR 89
TC 35
Z9 35
U1 0
U2 18
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD NOV
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 22
AR 6302
DI 10.3390/su11226302
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA JW8DR
UT WOS:000503277900115
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sangha, KK
   Maynard, S
   Pearson, J
   Dobriyal, P
   Badola, R
   Hussain, SA
AF Sangha, Kamaljit K.
   Maynard, Simone
   Pearson, Jasmine
   Dobriyal, Pariva
   Badola, Ruchi
   Hussain, Syed Ainul
TI Recognising the role of local and Indigenous communities in managing
   natural resources for the greater public benefit: Case studies from Asia
   and Oceania region
SO ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; ISLAND; PACIFIC;
   CONSERVATION; MANGROVES; FRAMEWORK; PAYMENTS; FIJI; ECONOMY
AB Many local and Indigenous communities across the globe afford ecosystem services to the wider global public through maintaining natural resources because of their duteous usage and astute management. However there is barely any recognition or financial support for them to continue maintaining or enhancing the flow of ecosystem services from their finely managed Indigenous and local lands. This paper offers insights using three case studies from the Oceania-Asia region-i.e. Australia, India and Fiji-that supports the highest Indigenous and local communities population. It describes the main cultural values and traditions, and land rights of Indigenous and local communities in relation to their natural systems, and the key issues and challenges that people experience in their respective regions. Lack of recognition of peoples' land rights, unregulated and exploitative use of resources, and inequitable distribution of benefits that accrue to private (often corporate) enterprises from using natural resources were the common issues among all case studies. To support conservative use and management of Indigenous and local lands, this paper argues to establish monetary mechanisms i.e. Payments for Ecosystem Services, Green Funds, Common Trusts, etc. to enable Indigenous and local communities to continue managing natural resources for the greater public benefit.
C1 [Sangha, Kamaljit K.] Charles Darwin Univ, Res Inst Environm & Livelihoods, DCBR, Darwin, NT 0810, Australia.
   [Maynard, Simone] Simone Maynard Consulting, Redbank Plains, Qld 4301, Australia.
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NR 102
TC 23
Z9 26
U1 2
U2 28
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0416
J9 ECOSYST SERV
JI Ecosyst. Serv.
PD OCT
PY 2019
VL 39
AR 100991
DI 10.1016/j.ecoser.2019.100991
PG 12
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA JA4TY
UT WOS:000487830600008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Clissold, R
   McNamara, KE
AF Clissold, Rachel
   McNamara, Karen E.
TI Exploring local perspectives on the performance of a community-based
   adaptation project on Aniwa, Vanuatu
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; adaptation; Vanuatu; community; vulnerability
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; ISLAND; OPPORTUNITIES;
   VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; GENDER; CONSTRAINTS; FRAMEWORK; JUSTICE
AB Adaptation has become an unavoidable priority. Failures of historically dominant top-down approaches have prompted a shift towards bottom-up approaches such as community-based adaptation, despite the scholarly lacuna around its effectiveness. This paper has endeavoured to respond to this gap through evaluating how an adaptation project on Aniwa, Vanuatu reduces people's vulnerability. Drawing from interviews and focus groups conducted across three communities on Aniwa, this study explored local perspectives around the appropriateness, effectiveness, equity and sustainability of the project, as well as impacts on livelihoods assets. Specific nuances and differences in perspectives between women and men were also explored. This study found that there were negative outlooks on sustainability, a lack of improvement in natural assets, as well as issues with exclusion based on religion and timings of activities with the daily schedules of women. Factors that support vulnerability reduction, however, included equal participation and benefit among those of Christian faith, appropriateness of the activities to aspects of the socio-cultural context, as well as improvements in several social and human assets. Two overarching recommendations emerged: (1) ensuring in-depth understandings of underlying contexts, and (2) mainstreaming gender considerations. This paper concludes by encouraging further studies that evaluate adaptation in the longer-term.
C1 [Clissold, Rachel; McNamara, Karen E.] Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
C3 University of Queensland
RP Clissold, R (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
EM rachel.clissold@uq.net.au
RI McNamara, Karen/D-7322-2013
OI McNamara, Karen/0000-0002-4511-8403
FU ARC Linkage project [LP160100941]; Australian Research Council
   [LP160100941] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
FX This work was supported by ARC Linkage project [grant number
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U2 13
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD MAY 27
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 5
BP 457
EP 468
DI 10.1080/17565529.2019.1640656
EA JUL 2019
PG 12
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LS9SM
UT WOS:000479400400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hudson, P
   De Ruig, LT
   de Ruiter, MC
   Kuik, OJ
   Botzen, WJW
   Le Den, X
   Persson, M
   Benoist, A
   Nielsen, CN
AF Hudson, P.
   De Ruig, L. T.
   de Ruiter, M. C.
   Kuik, O. J.
   Botzen, W. J. W.
   Le Den, X.
   Persson, M.
   Benoist, A.
   Nielsen, C. N.
TI An assessment of best practices of extreme weather insurance and
   directions for a more resilient society
SO ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Extreme weather; insurance; resilience; climate change adaptation; risk
   management
ID DISASTER RISK REDUCTION; FLOOD RISK; MITIGATION; PARTNERSHIPS; RECOVERY;
   GERMANY
AB Extreme weather resilience has been defined as being based on three pillars: resistance (the ability to lower impacts), recovery (the ability to bounce back), and adaptive capacity (the ability to learn and improve). These resilience pillars are important both before and after the occurrence of extreme weather events. Extreme weather insurance can influence these pillars of resilience depending on how particular insurance mechanisms are structured. We explore how the lessons learnt from the current best insurance practices can improve resilience to extreme weather events. We employ an extensive inventory of private property and agricultural crop insurance mechanisms to conduct a multi-criteria analysis of insurance market outcomes. We draw conclusions regarding the patterns in the best practice from six European countries to increase resilience. We suggest that requirements to buy a bundle extreme weather event insurance with general insurance packages are strengthened and supported with structures to financing losses through public-private partnerships. Moreover, support for low income households through income vouchers could be provided. Similarly, for the agricultural sector we propose moving towards comprehensive crop yield insurance linked to general agricultural subsidies. In both cases a nationally representative body can coordinate the various stakeholders into acting in concert.
C1 [Hudson, P.] Univ Potsdam, Inst Environm Sci & Geog, Potsdam, Germany.
   [De Ruig, L. T.; de Ruiter, M. C.; Kuik, O. J.; Botzen, W. J. W.] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, W. J. W.] Univ Utrecht, Sch Econ USE, Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, W. J. W.] Univ Penn, Risk Management & Decis Proc Ctr, Wharton Sch, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
   [Le Den, X.; Persson, M.; Benoist, A.; Nielsen, C. N.] Ramboll Consulting, Copenhagen S, Denmark.
C3 University of Potsdam; Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Utrecht University;
   University of Pennsylvania
RP Hudson, P (corresponding author), Univ Potsdam, Inst Environm Sci & Geog, Potsdam, Germany.
EM phudson@uni-potsdam.de
RI Hudson, Paul/GPS-9348-2022; Hudson, Paul/L-1491-2013; Kuik,
   Onno/K-9530-2013; Botzen, Wouter/L-3123-2013
OI de Ruig, Lars/0000-0003-4991-7605; Hudson, Paul/0000-0001-7877-7854;
   Kuik, Onno/0000-0001-7495-2934; Botzen, Wouter/0000-0002-8563-4963
FU Climate Adaption Unit, DG CLIMA, European Comission; Netherlands
   Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) VIDI Grant [452.14.005];
   European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
   [776479]; H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [776479] Funding Source:
   H2020 Societal Challenges Programme
FX This work was supported by Climate Adaption Unit, DG CLIMA, European
   Comission. Botzen has recieved support from the Netherlands Organisation
   for Scientific Research (NWO) VIDI Grant (452.14.005) and the European
   Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant
   agreement No 776479.
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NR 52
TC 32
Z9 35
U1 3
U2 114
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1747-7891
EI 1878-0059
J9 ENVIRON HAZARDS-UK
JI Environ. Hazards
PD MAY 26
PY 2020
VL 19
IS 3
SI SI
BP 301
EP 321
DI 10.1080/17477891.2019.1608148
EA APR 2019
PG 21
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LP7ZC
UT WOS:000470567700001
OA Green Published, hybrid, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, Q
   Zhang, JQ
AF Zhang, Qi
   Zhang, Jiquan
TI Drought hazard assessment in typical corn cultivated areas of China at
   present and potential climate change
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Drought hazard; SPEI; Climate change; Typical areas of corn cultivation
ID RISK-ASSESSMENT; REGION; IMPACTS; INDEX; YIELD
AB Drought hazard is the main restrictive factor in the field of food production in China, and climate change may aggravate it over the long run. The present study aims to assess the potential drought hazard at present, as well as determine future different climate change scenarios based on the data of monthly precipitation and temperature. Drought is defined using the Standardized Precipitation-Evapotranspiration Index. The probability density function of SPEI was used to create the drought hazard index (DH), which provides a comprehensive overview of the frequency and intensity of drought events. The statistical downscale method was used to convert the regional climate model output grid data into meteorological station data for the near future (2020-2050) under three Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs). The results showed that in the baseline (1981-2010), DH is much serious in Jilin compared with Henan. In the near future (2020-2050), DH increases in the case of RCP8.5, and the increased scale is larger in Henan. In the case of RCP4.5, the DH will be flat with baseline in Jilin and slightly increase in Henan. DH may relieve in case of RCP2.6. The results can help to optimize agriculture allocation and policy making with regard to climate change adaptation.
C1 [Zhang, Qi] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Coll Appl Meteorol, Jiangsu Key Lab Agr Meteorol, Nanjing 210044, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Jiquan] NE Normal Univ, Sch Environm, Changchun 130024, Peoples R China.
C3 Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology; Northeast Normal
   University - China
RP Zhang, JQ (corresponding author), NE Normal Univ, Sch Environm, Changchun 130024, Peoples R China.
EM zhangjq022@nenu.edu.cn
RI Zhang, Ji-Quan/AAA-5049-2021
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41501553, 41571491,
   31400416]; Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu [BK20150898]; Startup
   Foundation for Introducing Talent of NUIST [2014r052]; National Key
   Technology R&D Program of China [2011BAD32B00-04]
FX This study is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China under Grant Nos. 41501553, 41571491 and 31400416, the Natural
   Science Foundation of Jiangsu under Grant No. BK20150898, the Startup
   Foundation for Introducing Talent of NUIST under Grant No. 2014r052 and
   National Key Technology R&D Program of China under Grant No.
   2011BAD32B00-04.
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NR 23
TC 39
Z9 42
U1 0
U2 68
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD MAR
PY 2016
VL 81
IS 2
BP 1323
EP 1331
DI 10.1007/s11069-015-2137-4
PG 9
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA DD6XT
UT WOS:000370068700033
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Harvey, B
   Burns, D
   Oswald, K
AF Harvey, Blane
   Burns, Danny
   Oswald, Katy
TI Linking Community, Radio, and Action Research on Climate Change:
   Reflections on a Systemic Approach
SO IDS BULLETIN-INSTITUTE OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
ID RESILIENCE
AB This article reflects upon the opportunities and challenges of using Participatory Action Research (PAR) with community radio broadcasters in southern Ghana to investigate the impacts of climate change. Through a detailed outline of the methodological approach employed in this initiative as well as the findings that it produced, we consider how action research might serve to reveal the power relations, systemic drivers of vulnerability, and opportunities for sustainable action for social change related to climate impacts. As co-facilitators of this process based in a Northern research institution, we reflect upon the challenges, limitations and benefits of the approach used in order to identify potential areas for improvement and to understand how the dynamics of this partnership shaped collaboration. We also discuss how employing a systemic approach to action research helped to provide insights into the interactions between the physical and environmental impacts of climate change and related systems such as land tenure and agricultural production. A systemic approach to PAR, we argue, lends itself especially well to analysis of climate change adaptation and resilience, both of which are embedded within complex systems of institutions, assets, individuals and structures, and therefore not appropriate for narrow or one-dimensional analyses. Finally, we consider the specific contributions and challenges that engaging community radio as a research partner may offer to investigations on climate change.
C1 [Harvey, Blane] IDS Climate Change Team, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
   [Burns, Danny; Oswald, Katy] IDS, Participat Power & Social Change Team, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
   [Burns, Danny] Univ W England, SOLAR Act Res Ctr, Bristol BS16 1QY, Avon, England.
   [Burns, Danny] Univ Bristol, Sch Policy Studies, Bristol BS8 1TH, Avon, England.
   [Burns, Danny] Tenant Participat Advisory Serv, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.
   [Burns, Danny] Decentralisat Res & Informat Ctr, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.
C3 University of Sussex; University of West England; University of Bristol
RP Harvey, B (corresponding author), IDS Climate Change Team, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
OI Harvey, Blane/0000-0002-6626-4290; Burns, Danny/0000-0002-0001-6171
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NR 39
TC 5
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 21
PU WILEY-BLACKWELL
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0265-5012
J9 IDS BULL-I DEV STUD
JI IDS Bull.-Inst. Dev. Stud.
PD MAY
PY 2012
VL 43
IS 3
SI SI
BP 101
EP 117
DI 10.1111/j.1759-5436.2012.00326.x
PG 17
WC Area Studies; Development Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies; Development Studies
GA 933TZ
UT WOS:000303387200009
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barbosa, HP
   Roué-Le Gall, A
   Thomas, MF
AF Barbosa, Hiago Pereira
   Roue-Le Gall, Anne
   Thomas, Marie-florence
TI Multi-criteria model to characterise and reduce municipal vulnerability
   to the potential health impacts of climate change on population health
SO ENVIRONNEMENT RISQUES & SANTE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; public health; municipal vulnerability; decision support
   techniques
AB Climate change is a threat to public health that is increasingly recognised by the scientific community. It has both direct and indirect impacts on the health and well-being of populations through a variety of exposure pathways and can exacerbate spatial inequalities in health. To assess the vulnerability of 59 municipalities in Brittany to the potential health impacts of climate change, this article presents a multi-criteria decision support model. The model includes 24 criteria describing climate exposure, environmental sensitivity, and the socio-economic sensitivity of each municipality. These criteria serve as either risk or protective factors for health and can be used as levers of action for local authorities striving to reduce their vulnerability. The modeling results provide a relative ranking of the 59 municipalities according to their exposure and sensitivity, from the most vulnerable to the least vulnerable. This vulnerability assessment is the first step in developing a local climate change adaptation plan
C1 [Barbosa, Hiago Pereira; Thomas, Marie-florence] Univ Rennes, EHESP, Irset Inst Rech Sante Environm & Travail, Inserm,UMR S 1085,LERES, Batiment IRSET,9 Ave Prof Leon Bernard, F-35043 Rennes, France.
   [Roue-Le Gall, Anne] Univ Rennes, EHESP, CNRS, UMR 6051,Arenes,Dept Sci Sante Environm DEESSE, 15 Ave Prof Leon Bernard, F-35043 Rennes, France.
C3 Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sante Publique (EHESP); Universite de Rennes;
   Institut National de la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale (Inserm);
   Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); CNRS - Institute
   for Humanities & Social Sciences (INSHS); Ecole des Hautes Etudes en
   Sante Publique (EHESP); Universite de Rennes
RP Barbosa, HP (corresponding author), Univ Rennes, EHESP, Irset Inst Rech Sante Environm & Travail, Inserm,UMR S 1085,LERES, Batiment IRSET,9 Ave Prof Leon Bernard, F-35043 Rennes, France.
EM pbhiago@outlook.com; anne.roue-legall@ehesp.fr;
   marie-florence.thomas@ehesp.fr
FX Financements : reseau doctoral en sante publique anime par l'Ecole des
   hautes etudes en sante publique (EHESP) , Agence regionale de sante (ARS
   Bretagne) , Direction regionale de l'environnement, de l'amenage-ment et
   du logement (DREAL Bretagne) ; liens d'interets :les auteurs declarent
   ne pas avoir de lien d'interet.
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NR 13
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU JLE
PI ARCUEIL
PA 30, RUE BERTHOLLET, BATIMENT A, 94110 ARCUEIL, ?, FRANCE
SN 1635-0421
EI 1952-3998
J9 ENVIRON RISQUE SANTE
JI Environ. Risque Sante
PD JUL-AUG
PY 2024
VL 23
IS 4
BP 199
EP 206
DI 10.1684/ers.2024.1813
PG 8
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA I6D4K
UT WOS:001331142800004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nguyen-Anh, T
   Leu, S
   Nguyen-Thi-Phuong, A
   Ngo-Dang, T
   To-The, N
AF Nguyen-Anh, Tuan
   Leu, Shawn
   Nguyen-Thi-Phuong, Anh
   Ngo-Dang, Thanh
   To-The, Nguyen
TI Adapting to the new normal: A sustainable livelihood framework for the
   informal sectors during COVID-19
SO REVIEW OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE COVID-19; informal sector; mitigation; new normal
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; INCOME DIVERSIFICATION; FINANCIAL LITERACY;
   RURAL LIVELIHOODS; GREEN SPACES; FARMERS; VULNERABILITY; DETERMINANTS;
   HOUSEHOLDS; ACCESS
AB The extraordinary COVID-19 outbreak has heightened the existential dangers to the informal sector. This study explores the informal sector's tactics in Vietnam for mitigating the pandemic's effects and better adapting to the new normal. Using a sustainable livelihood approach (SLA) and multivariate model for ordered choices (MVOC) to conduct surveys on 513 subjects from the informal labor, our findings indicate that financial management is the most prevalent technique for mitigating the effects of COVID-19. Notably, the perception of the COVID-19 pandemic's impact on income and health is crucial to the adoption of mitigation efforts. The Vietnamese government, State Bank, and financial institutions should provide more help to the informal sector, particularly those operating in remote locations so that they can increase their resilience through mitigating measures. In parallel, the informal sector should participate in more deliberate forward mitigation planning in the anticipation of inevitable future shocks.
C1 [Nguyen-Anh, Tuan; Nguyen-Thi-Phuong, Anh; To-The, Nguyen] Vietnam Natl Univ, VNU Univ Econ & Business, Hanoi, Vietnam.
   [Leu, Shawn] Univ New England, UNE Business Sch, Armidale, Australia.
   [Ngo-Dang, Thanh] Massey Univ, Sch Aviat, Palmerston North, New Zealand.
   [To-The, Nguyen] Thang Long Univ, TIMAS, Hanoi, Vietnam.
   [To-The, Nguyen] Vietnam Natl Univ, VNU Univ Econ & Business, 144 Xuan Thuy, Hanoi, Vietnam.
C3 Vietnam National University Hanoi (VNU Hanoi) System; VNU University of
   Economics & Business (VNU-UEB); University of New England; Massey
   University; Vietnam National University Hanoi (VNU Hanoi) System; VNU
   University of Economics & Business (VNU-UEB)
RP To-The, N (corresponding author), Vietnam Natl Univ, VNU Univ Econ & Business, 144 Xuan Thuy, Hanoi, Vietnam.
EM tothenguyen@vnu.edu.vn
RI Nguyen, Tuan/HDO-5946-2022; Leu, Shawn/AAW-2148-2021; Nguyen,
   Tuan/AAC-8994-2021; Ngo, Thanh/N-6656-2016
OI To-The, Nguyen/0000-0002-8839-255X; Ngo, Thanh/0000-0002-6090-8067; Leu,
   Shawn/0000-0002-3620-537X; Nguyen-Thi-Phuong, Anh/0000-0002-5598-7215
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NR 97
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 11
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1363-6669
EI 1467-9361
J9 REV DEV ECON
JI Rev. Dev. Econ.
PD MAY
PY 2023
VL 27
IS 2
BP 1092
EP 1112
DI 10.1111/rode.12974
EA FEB 2023
PG 21
WC Development Studies; Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Business & Economics
GA C5OD8
UT WOS:000931914300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kesik, T
   O'brien, W
   Ozkan, A
AF Kesik, Ted
   O'brien, William
   Ozkan, Aylin
TI Toward a standardized framework for thermal resilience modelling and its
   practical application to futureproofing
SO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY FOR THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; BUILDINGS; ENERGY; HEAT
AB Recent extreme weather events and expert forecasts of a sharp increase in the frequency and severity of future extreme weather events due to climate change have signaled the need to futureproof our buildings and make them more resilient. Thermal resilience is among the many aspects of overall building resilience that has the co-benefit of reducing energy demands and carbon emissions. Thermal resilience of buildings is commonly assessed using two indicators: thermal autonomy (TA) and passive habitability (PH). An emerging body of research has identified these two indicators as being significantly correlated to energy efficient building performance. However, there remains a need to achieve consensus about how to coherently and consistently model TA and PH during the early stages of design to better inform decision making. This paper proposes a framework to establish a common set of building energy modeling conventions, comfort and habitability thresholds, and selection criteria for weather data to promote useful TA and PH indicators. It concludes by proposing practical applications of thermal resilience modeling to help address climate change adaptation and futureproofing in codes and standards.
C1 [Kesik, Ted; Ozkan, Aylin] Univ Toronto, Daniels Fac Architecture Landscape & Design, Toronto, ON, Canada.
   [Kesik, Ted] Univ Toronto, Dept Civil & Mineral Engn, Toronto, ON, Canada.
   [O'brien, William] Carleton Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
   [Ozkan, Aylin] RWDI Consulting Engineers & Scientists, Toronto, ON, Canada.
C3 University of Toronto; University of Toronto; Carleton University
RP Kesik, T (corresponding author), Univ Toronto, Daniels Fac Architecture Landscape & Design, Toronto, ON, Canada.; Kesik, T (corresponding author), Univ Toronto, Dept Civil & Mineral Engn, Toronto, ON, Canada.
EM ted.kesik@daniels.utoronto.ca
RI Ozkan, Aylin/AAD-2702-2021; O'Brien, William/E-5475-2018; Kesik,
   Ted/GXM-7122-2022
FU BC Housing and ROCKWOOL North America
FX The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support of BC Housing
   and ROCKWOOL North America for the research underlying this paper.
   Special thanks to Chris Mackey for making available scripting to create
   an EPW file for an Actual Meteorological Year (AMY) from an existing
   Typical Meteorological Year (TMY) EPW file and publicly available data
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NR 32
TC 11
Z9 13
U1 4
U2 15
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 2374-4731
EI 2374-474X
J9 SCI TECHNOL BUILT EN
JI Sci. Technol. Built Environ.
PD JUL 19
PY 2022
VL 28
IS 6
SI SI
BP 742
EP 756
DI 10.1080/23744731.2022.2043069
EA FEB 2022
PG 15
WC Thermodynamics; Construction & Building Technology; Engineering,
   Mechanical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Thermodynamics; Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA 3F9YQ
UT WOS:000764960000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McNamara, KE
   Clissold, R
   Westoby, R
AF McNamara, Karen E.
   Clissold, Rachel
   Westoby, Ross
TI Marketplaces as sites for the development-adaptation-disaster trifecta:
   Insights from Vanuatu
SO ASIA PACIFIC VIEWPOINT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptive capacity; development; gender; inequality; markets; Vanuatu
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK REDUCTION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY;
   VULNERABILITY; COMMUNITY; FRAMEWORK; SYSTEMS
AB Faced with the pressing challenges of poverty, climate change and disasters, identifying opportunities for interventions that offer positive outcomes across the trifecta of development, adaptation and disaster risk reduction is critically needed. While the overlaps between these streams can be straightforward in theory, practical opportunities for convergence are often lacking. Drawing on 10 focus groups with women market vendors who are part of the UN Women's Markets for Change programme in Vanuatu, this paper explores how marketsas placescan be useful entry points for this trifecta. Marketplaces can be important sites for developing capabilities and empowering women. As transient and interactive spaces, marketplaces also have inherent strengths that can be built upon and utilised to heighten intervention reach and foster positive outcomes across the development-adaptation-disaster trifecta. This paper encourages further exploration into the capacity of marketplaces to achieve this trifecta of outcomes across various scales and locations, and to find solutions to existing challenges.
C1 [McNamara, Karen E.; Clissold, Rachel] Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Westoby, Ross] Griffith Univ, Griffith Inst Tourism, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
C3 University of Queensland; Griffith University
RP McNamara, KE (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
EM karen.mcnamara@uq.edu.au
RI Westoby, Ross/G-8895-2019; McNamara, Karen/D-7322-2013
OI McNamara, Karen/0000-0002-4511-8403; Westoby, Ross/0000-0001-9868-2246;
   Clissold, Rachel/0000-0001-9669-8746
FU ARC Linkage project [LP160100941]; Australian Research Council
   [LP160100941] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
FX We are grateful to the market vendors for their openness to share their
   stories and perspectives, and we are very grateful for the time they
   gave to us in doing so. We also wish to thank UN Women for supporting
   and helping to facilitate this study. This work was supported by an ARC
   Linkage project (grant number LP160100941).
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NR 48
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 1
U2 8
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1360-7456
EI 1467-8373
J9 ASIA PAC VIEWP
JI Asia Pac. Viewp.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 61
IS 3
SI SI
BP 566
EP 576
DI 10.1111/apv.12293
EA OCT 2020
PG 11
WC Area Studies; Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies; Geography
GA PE4IS
UT WOS:000575314700001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Walshe, RA
   Stancioff, CE
AF Walshe, Rory A.
   Stancioff, Charlotte Eloise
TI Small island perspectives on climate change
SO ISLAND STUDIES JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; interdisciplinary research; island studies; perceptions;
   small islands
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; DEVELOPING STATES; NATURAL HAZARDS; GUEST EDITORIAL;
   KNOWLEDGE; VULNERABILITIES; DISASTERS; REFUGEES; PACIFIC; IMPACTS
AB Islands and islanders are often misrepresented in the climate change discourse, oversimplifying their experiences and interactions with climate change. In reality, islands and islanders have far more complex relationships with climate change. This special thematic section presents eight papers that highlight local responses and localized impacts of climate change on islands, reiterating the importance of considering local community perspectives in small island contexts to overcome simplistic viewpoints. Such perceptions and perspectives are increasingly being recognized as offering a valuable contribution to climate change adaptation, particularly to counter the misrepresentation of small islands as vulnerable or passive, and the disregard for the fact that climate change is a global, as well as continual process. This special thematic section further demonstrates that island research is well placed to address the disproportionate concentration of perspectives and opinions of climate change from the Global North and adds to the calls for increased efforts to give a voice to island communities of all kinds.
C1 [Walshe, Rory A.] Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, London, England.
   [Walshe, Rory A.] UCL, Inst Risk & Disaster Reduct, London, England.
   [Stancioff, Charlotte Eloise] Leiden Univ, Leiden, Netherlands.
C3 University of London; King's College London; University of London;
   University College London; Leiden University; Leiden University - Excl
   LUMC
RP Walshe, RA (corresponding author), Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, London, England.; Walshe, RA (corresponding author), UCL, Inst Risk & Disaster Reduct, London, England.
EM rory.walshe@kcl.ac.uk; c.e.stancioff@arch.leidenuniv.nl
FU University College London (UCL) Global Governance Institute
FX The authors wish to thank the University College London (UCL) Global
   Governance Institute for funding and supporting a workshop which lead to
   this special section, as well as Adam Grydehoj for his assistance as
   Island Studies Journal executive editor, Ilan Kelman for support
   throughout the process from its conception, and George Adamson for
   valuable constructive feedback on this guest editorial introduction.
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NR 79
TC 34
Z9 37
U1 6
U2 48
PU UNIV PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, INST ISLAND STUDIES
PI CHARLOTTETOWN
PA 550 UNIV AVE, CHARLOTTETOWN, PE C1A 4P3, CANADA
SN 1715-2593
J9 ISL STUD J
JI Isl. Stud. J.
PD MAY
PY 2018
VL 13
IS 1
BP 13
EP 24
DI 10.24043/isj.56
PG 12
WC Geography; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA GQ1BV
UT WOS:000441359900002
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carter, JG
   Handley, J
   Butlin, T
   Gill, S
AF Carter, Jeremy G.
   Handley, John
   Butlin, Tom
   Gill, Susannah
TI Adapting cities to climate change-exploring the flood risk management
   role of green infrastructure landscapes
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; climate change adaptation; land use change; green
   infrastructure; governance
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; STREET TREES; URBAN; FRAMEWORK; SURFACE; RUNOFF;
   IMPACT; WATER; GRASS
AB There is now an emerging sense of the scope and nature of response that can be implemented at building and neighbourhood scales to help adapt cities and urban areas to the changing climate. In comparison, the role of larger natural and semi-natural landscapes that surround and permeate cities is less well understood. Addressing this knowledge gap, this paper outlines two case studies that describe and map the flood risk management functions offered by green infrastructure landscapes situated within the Urban Mersey Basin in North West England. The case studies establish that areas potentially exposed to flooding can be located at some distance, and within different jurisdictions, from upstream areas where the flood hazard may be generated and could be moderated via functions provided by green infrastructure landscapes. This raises planning and governance challenges connected to supporting and enhancing flood risk management functions provided by green infrastructure landscapes.
C1 [Carter, Jeremy G.; Handley, John] Univ Manchester, Sch Environm Educ & Dev, Manchester, Lancs, England.
   [Butlin, Tom; Gill, Susannah] Mersey Forest, Risley Moss, Ordnance Ave, Warrington, Cheshire, England.
C3 University of Manchester
RP Carter, JG (corresponding author), Univ Manchester, Sch Environm Educ & Dev, Manchester, Lancs, England.
EM Jeremy.carter@manchester.ac.uk
OI Carter, Jeremy/0000-0003-1640-3747
FU Climate Proof Cities project
FX The research underpinning this project was undertaken within the Climate
   Proof Cities project. Climate Proof Cities sat within the Dutch
   Knowledge for Climate Research Programme. The funding provided by this
   project and the valuable collaborations made with the project team were
   much appreciated. Comments received from colleagues on earlier drafts of
   this paper, and by the reviewer, were gratefully received.
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NR 54
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Z9 59
U1 9
U2 90
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-0568
EI 1360-0559
J9 J ENVIRON PLANN MAN
JI J. Environ. Plan. Manag.
PY 2018
VL 61
IS 9
BP 1535
EP 1552
DI 10.1080/09640568.2017.1355777
PG 18
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA GI5XP
UT WOS:000434444200004
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Moftakhari, H
   AghaKouchak, A
   Sanders, BF
   Matthew, RA
   Mazdiyasni, O
AF Moftakhari, Hamed
   AghaKouchak, Amir
   Sanders, Brett F.
   Matthew, Richard A.
   Mazdiyasni, Omid
TI Translating Uncertain Sea Level Projections Into Infrastructure Impacts
   Using a Bayesian Framework
SO GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; DISASTER RISK REDUCTION; FLOOD RISK; COASTAL;
   VULNERABILITY; 21ST-CENTURY; EXPOSURE; EXTREMES; PACIFIC; COMMUNICATION
AB Climate change may affect ocean-driven coastal flooding regimes by both raising the mean sea level (msl) and altering ocean-atmosphere interactions. For reliable projections of coastal flood risk, information provided by different climate models must be considered in addition to associated uncertainties. In this paper, we propose a framework to project future coastal water levels and quantify the resulting flooding hazard to infrastructure. We use Bayesian Model Averaging to generate a weighted ensemble of storm surge predictions from eight climate models for two coastal counties in California. The resulting ensembles combined with msl projections, and predicted astronomical tides are then used to quantify changes in the likelihood of road flooding under representative concentration pathways 4.5 and 8.5 in the near-future (1998-2063) and mid-future (2018-2083). The results show that road flooding rates will be significantly higher in the near-future and mid-future compared to the recent past (1950-2015) if adaptation measures are not implemented.
C1 [Moftakhari, Hamed; AghaKouchak, Amir; Sanders, Brett F.; Mazdiyasni, Omid] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.
   [AghaKouchak, Amir] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Earth Syst Sci, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.
   [Sanders, Brett F.; Matthew, Richard A.] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Urban Planning & Publ Policy, Irvine, CA USA.
   [Matthew, Richard A.] Univ Calif Irvine, Blum Ctr Poverty Alleviat, Irvine, CA USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Irvine;
   University of California System; University of California Irvine;
   University of California System; University of California Irvine;
   University of California System; University of California Irvine
RP AghaKouchak, A (corresponding author), Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.; AghaKouchak, A (corresponding author), Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Earth Syst Sci, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.
EM amir.a@uci.edu
RI Sanders, Brett/K-7153-2012; Moftakhari, Hamed/K-4203-2019; AghaKouchak,
   Amir/ABH-2495-2022
OI Sanders, Brett/0000-0002-1592-5204; Moftakhari,
   Hamed/0000-0003-3170-8653; AghaKouchak, Amir/0000-0003-4689-8357
FU National Science Foundation Hazards-SEES Program [DMS 1331611]; National
   Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Ecological Effects of Sea Level
   Rise Program [NA16NOS4780206]; California Energy Commission award
   [500-15-005]
FX Financial support for this study was provided by the National Science
   Foundation Hazards-SEES Program (award DMS 1331611) and the National
   Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Ecological Effects of Sea Level
   Rise Program (award NA16NOS4780206). We also acknowledge California's
   Fourth Climate Change Assessment model simulations and California Energy
   Commission award 500-15-005. The data for road lengths exposed to
   flooding under different sea level rise scenarios are obtained from the
   risk finder tool provided by Climate Central
   (http://sealevel.climatecentral.org/). The hourly water level data for
   all tide gauges are provided by National Oceanic and Atmospheric
   Association (NOAA; http://tidesandcurrents.noaa.gov/). We also thank
   Daniel Cayan, David Pierce, and Julie Kalansky from Scripps Institution
   of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, for providing
   hourly sea level projections at the studied tide gauges.
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NR 60
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 4
U2 26
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
SN 0094-8276
EI 1944-8007
J9 GEOPHYS RES LETT
JI Geophys. Res. Lett.
PD DEC 16
PY 2017
VL 44
IS 23
BP 11914
EP 11921
DI 10.1002/2017GL076116
PG 8
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology
GA FR5JI
UT WOS:000419102400027
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ghanem, DA
   Mander, S
   Gough, C
AF Ghanem, Dana Abi
   Mander, Sarah
   Gough, Clair
TI "I think we need to get a better generator": Household resilience to
   disruption to power supply during storm events
SO ENERGY POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Power outage; Climate change adaptation; Electricity network resilience;
   UK storm; Everyday practices
ID COMMUNITY RESILIENCE; ENERGY; VULNERABILITY; CONSUMPTION; POVERTY; HEAT;
   CITY
AB Electricity is becoming ever more central to the everyday practices of households. As the energy system decarbonises, it is likely that electricity will supply even more services, thereby increasing the dependence of communities on reliable electricity supply. In this situation, the risk of power outages during extreme weather events poses a serious challenge to the safety and wellbeing of communities. However, little is known of the capacity of households to manage normal day-to-day life in such circumstances. This paper focuses on the UK winter storms that occurred in February 2014, the result of which 80,000 homes were left without power and communities not reconnected for several days. We outline the impacts these power outages had on households, describing the challenges faced and the strategies adopted to alleviate impacts. This provides insight into everyday household-level resilience achieved through social and material elements that constitute everyday life. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Ghanem, Dana Abi; Mander, Sarah] Univ Manchester, Sch Mech Aerosp & Civil Engn, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Sackville St, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England.
   [Gough, Clair] Univ Manchester, Manchester Business Sch, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Harold Hankins Bldg,Oxford Rd, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England.
C3 University of Manchester; University of Manchester
RP Ghanem, DA (corresponding author), Univ Manchester, Sch Mech Aerosp & Civil Engn, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Sackville St, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England.
EM Dana.abighanem@manchester.ac.uk
RI mander, sarah/KVZ-3247-2024; Abi Ghanem, Dana/N-1436-2015
OI Abi Ghanem, Dana/0000-0001-5050-4053; Gough, Clair/0000-0001-5063-9425;
   Mander, Sarah/0000-0001-8492-6246
FU UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/I035757/1];
   EPSRC [EP/I035781/1, EP/I035757/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX We would like to thank the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
   Council for the financial support of this research as part of the
   project RESNET, EP/I035757/1. Research for this paper would not have
   been possible without our participants who have kindly given us their
   time and have been patient with our questions on their experiences of
   the storm. We would also like to thank our partners and colleagues in
   RESNET and at Tyndall for their valuable comments and discussion points
   that have guided our work.
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NR 46
TC 63
Z9 70
U1 2
U2 35
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4215
EI 1873-6777
J9 ENERG POLICY
JI Energy Policy
PD MAY
PY 2016
VL 92
BP 171
EP 180
DI 10.1016/j.enpol.2016.02.003
PG 10
WC Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DJ0AK
UT WOS:000373863600016
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tan, RR
   Benjamin, MFD
   Cayamanda, CD
   Aviso, KB
   Razon, LF
AF Tan, Raymond R.
   Benjamin, Michael Francis D.
   Cayamanda, Christina D.
   Aviso, Kathleen B.
   Razon, Luis F.
TI P-Graph Approach to Optimizing Crisis Operations in an Industrial
   Complex
SO INDUSTRIAL & ENGINEERING CHEMISTRY RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
ID SYSTEMATIC WASTE MINIMIZATION; THEORETIC APPROACH; BIOCHEMICAL
   PRODUCTION; DOWNSTREAM PROCESS; CHEMICAL-PROCESSES; ENERGY;
   IDENTIFICATION; INOPERABILITY; INPUT; METHODOLOGY
AB Industrial complexes allow for efficient and sustainable production of various goods, but at the same time they are also vulnerable to cascading failures caused by disruptions in process capacity or resource availability. Climate change in particular may cause significant perturbations in the supply of important process inputs such as water, energy, or feedstocks. Thus, for industrial complexes, proper risk management strategies must be developed as part of overall climate change adaptation and resilience measures. Rigorous modeling approaches are needed to ensure that economic losses resulting from a disruption are minimized. In this paper, a P-graph-based methodology is used to determine optimal adjustments to crisis conditions in order to minimize manufacturing losses; this graph theoretic methodology has traditionally been used for process network synthesis problems but has recently proven to be useful for structurally analogous problem domains. Two case studies on the reallocation of production capacities and product streams in an aluminum production complex and a biomass processing complex are used to illustrate the methodology.
C1 [Tan, Raymond R.; Cayamanda, Christina D.; Aviso, Kathleen B.; Razon, Luis F.] De La Salle Univ, Dept Chem Engn, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
   [Benjamin, Michael Francis D.] Univ Santo Tomas, Res Ctr Nat & Appl Sci, Espana Blvd, Manila 1006, Philippines.
C3 De La Salle University; University of Santo Tomas
RP Tan, RR (corresponding author), De La Salle Univ, Dept Chem Engn, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
EM raymond.tan@dlsu.edu.ph
RI Aviso, Kathleen/ABA-4589-2020; Benjamin, Michael/AAF-9386-2020; Razon,
   Luis/AFM-3571-2022
OI Benjamin, Michael Francis/0000-0002-6189-1666; Cayamanda,
   Christina/0000-0002-5468-5557; Aviso, Kathleen/0000-0002-9994-5172
FU Philippine Commission on Higher Education (CHED) via the PHERNet
   Sustainability Studies Program
FX The authors are grateful for the financial support of the Philippine
   Commission on Higher Education (CHED) via the PHERNet Sustainability
   Studies Program.
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NR 64
TC 19
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 13
PU AMER CHEMICAL SOC
PI WASHINGTON
PA 1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA
SN 0888-5885
J9 IND ENG CHEM RES
JI Ind. Eng. Chem. Res.
PD MAR 30
PY 2016
VL 55
IS 12
BP 3467
EP 3477
DI 10.1021/acs.iecr.5b03205
PG 11
WC Engineering, Chemical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Engineering
GA DI5DO
UT WOS:000373519300022
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Webb, EL
   Friess, DA
   Krauss, KW
   Cahoon, DR
   Guntenspergen, GR
   Phelps, J
AF Webb, Edward L.
   Friess, Daniel A.
   Krauss, Ken W.
   Cahoon, Donald R.
   Guntenspergen, Glenn R.
   Phelps, Jacob
TI A global standard for monitoring coastal wetland vulnerability to
   accelerated sea-level rise
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID HIGH-PRECISION MEASUREMENTS; SURFACE ELEVATION; VERTICAL ACCRETION;
   SEDIMENT ELEVATION; MANGROVE FORESTS; MARSH ELEVATION; SALT-MARSH;
   CLIMATE; SUBSIDENCE; RESPONSES
AB Sea-level rise threatens coastal salt-marshes and mangrove forests around the world, and a key determinant of coastal wetland vulnerability is whether its surface elevation can keep pace with rising sea level. Globally, a large data gap exists because wetland surface and shallow subsurface processes remain unaccounted for by traditional vulnerability assessments using tide gauges. Moreover, those processes vary substantially across wetlands, so modelling platforms require relevant local data. The low-cost, simple, high-precision rod surface-elevation table-marker horizon (RSET-MH) method fills this critical data gap, can be paired with spatial data sets and modelling and is financially and technically accessible to every country with coastal wetlands. Yet, RSET deployment has been limited to a few regions and purposes. A coordinated expansion of monitoring efforts, including development of regional networks that could support data sharing and collaboration, is crucial to adequately inform coastal climate change adaptation policy at several scales.
C1 [Webb, Edward L.; Phelps, Jacob] Natl Univ Singapore, Dept Biol Sci, Singapore 117543, Singapore.
   [Friess, Daniel A.] Natl Univ Singapore, Dept Geog, Singapore 117570, Singapore.
   [Friess, Daniel A.] Natl Univ Singapore, Singapore Delft Water Alliance, Singapore 117576, Singapore.
   [Krauss, Ken W.] US Geol Survey, Natl Wetlands Res Ctr, Lafayette, LA 70506 USA.
   [Cahoon, Donald R.; Guntenspergen, Glenn R.] US Geol Survey, Patuxent Wildlife Res Ctr, Beltsville, MD 20705 USA.
C3 National University of Singapore; National University of Singapore;
   National University of Singapore; United States Department of the
   Interior; United States Geological Survey; United States Department of
   the Interior; United States Geological Survey
RP Webb, EL (corresponding author), Natl Univ Singapore, Dept Biol Sci, Sci Dr 4, Singapore 117543, Singapore.
EM ted.webb@nus.edu.sg; dan.friess@nus.edu.sg
RI Friess, Dan/G-2056-2011; Webb, Edward/E-8343-2011
OI Friess, Daniel/0000-0002-3087-5233; Phelps, Jacob/0000-0001-6489-1103;
   Webb, Edward/0000-0001-5554-9955
FU Singapore-Delft Water Alliance [R303-001-001-272, R303-001-024-414];
   Ministry of Education, Government of Singapore [R-154-000-400-133,
   R-109-000-141-133]; USGS Climate and Land Use Change RD Program
FX E.L.W. and D. A. F. were supported by the Singapore-Delft Water
   Alliance, grants R303-001-001-272 and R303-001-024-414. E. L. W. was
   supported by Ministry of Education, Government of Singapore grant
   R-154-000-400-133. D. A. F. was supported by Ministry of Education,
   Government of Singapore grant R-109-000-141-133. K. W. K., D. R. C., and
   G. R. G. were supported by the USGS Climate and Land Use Change R&D
   Program. The Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University and the South
   African Environmental Observation Network provided South African RSET
   data points. C. Lovelock provided the location of the RSET site in
   Indonesia. Any use of trade, product, or firm names is for descriptive
   purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the US Government.
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NR 88
TC 196
Z9 221
U1 10
U2 262
PU NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
PI LONDON
PA MACMILLAN BUILDING, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD MAY
PY 2013
VL 3
IS 5
BP 458
EP 465
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE1756
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 150PA
UT WOS:000319402000010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Huang, J
   Abt, B
   Kindermann, G
   Ghosh, S
AF Huang, Jin
   Abt, Bob
   Kindermann, Georg
   Ghosh, Sujit
TI EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT ON LOBLOLLY PINE PLANTATIONS
   IN THE SOUTHERN UNITED STATES
SO NATURAL RESOURCE MODELING
LA English
DT Article
DE Managed forests; loblolly pine; climate change; forest growth; site
   productivity; southern United States
ID DOUGLAS-FIR PLANTATIONS; SITE INDEX; FOREST; PRODUCTIVITY; MODEL; GROWTH
AB Few studies have empirically examined climate change impacts on managed forests in the southern United States. In this paper, we use the U. S. Forest Service's Forest Inventory and Analysis Database to fit two growth models across the South and apply the four Hadley III climate scenarios developed for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report to project future growth and site productivity on loblolly pine plantations. The static growth model provides a direct test of whether a significant climate influence on forest growth can be statistically derived, while the dynamic growth model estimates climate effects through site productivity. Results indicate considerable spatial variation in potential future growth and productivity change on loblolly pine plantations due to climate change in the southern United States, while overall regional effects are projected to be marginal. The pattern of climate change impacts is consistent across the growth models and climate scenarios. These findings have several implications for climate change adaptation policies.
C1 [Huang, Jin] Abt Associates Inc, Environm & Resources Div, Bethesda, MD 20814 USA.
   [Abt, Bob] N Carolina State Univ, Dept Forestry & Environm Resources, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
   [Kindermann, Georg] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
   [Ghosh, Sujit] N Carolina State Univ, Dept Stat, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
C3 ABT Associates; North Carolina State University; International Institute
   for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); North Carolina State University
RP Huang, J (corresponding author), Abt Associates Inc, Environm & Resources Div, Bethesda, MD 20814 USA.
EM jin_huang@abtassoc.com
RI Ghosh, Sujit/AAF-9590-2019
OI Kindermann, Georg Erich/0000-0003-4297-1318; Ghosh,
   Sujit/0000-0001-8351-408X
FU National Science Foundation; Abt Associates' Fellows Committee
FX We would like to thank Ellen Post for her helpful review and editorial
   changes; Robert Huggett for his kind assistance in the initial
   processing of the FIA data; Michael Roberts and Wolfram Schlenker for
   providing the raw future climate data; and the Young Scientist Summer
   Program (YSSP) offered by the International Institute for Applied
   Systems Analysis (IIASA) and funded by a National Science Foundation
   grant to the National Academy of Sciences for the research opportunity
   and financial assistance of part of this work. Finally, we thank Abt
   Associates' Fellows Committee for awarding grants to Dr. Jin Huang to
   partially support this work.
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NR 33
TC 14
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 17
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0890-8575
EI 1939-7445
J9 NAT RESOUR MODEL
JI Nat. Resour. Model.
PD NOV
PY 2011
VL 24
IS 4
BP 445
EP 476
DI 10.1111/j.1939-7445.2011.00098.x
PG 32
WC Environmental Sciences; Mathematics, Interdisciplinary Applications
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Mathematics
GA 836SP
UT WOS:000296131700002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tryhorn, LM
   Lynch, AH
AF Tryhorn, Lee M.
   Lynch, Amanda H.
TI Climate change adaptation in the Alpine Shire of Australia: a decision
   process appraisal
SO POLICY SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Extreme events; Decision process; Climate change; Vulnerability; Policy
   sciences; Adaptation
ID LOCAL-GOVERNMENT; SUSTAINABILITY
AB This study aims to integrate scientific knowledge from a variety of disciplines with local experience to describe, contextually and in detail, the impact of flood events on the community of the Alpine Shire and current mitigation efforts to alleviate and reduce these impacts. The Myrtleford Floodplain Management Study was the cornerstone of the strategy to address the goal of reducing flood damage in the community. It was found that the most consequential deficiencies in the Myrtleford flood mitigation scheme decision process are related to flaws in four elements of the process: the articulation of goals; the development of appropriate knowledge support; the effectiveness of promotion; and the ability to move from invocation to application. The Alpine Shire can be used as a microcosm that can represent adaptation challenges in other communities to climate change and extreme events. This research contributes to the development of the conceptual and analytical framework of integrated assessments, while making concrete contributions to the development of adaptive policies in Alpine Shire.
C1 [Tryhorn, Lee M.] Cornell Univ, NE Reg Climate Ctr, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.
   [Lynch, Amanda H.] Monash Univ, Sch Geog & Environm Sci, Reg Climate Grp, Clayton, Vic 3800, Australia.
C3 Cornell University; Monash University
RP Tryhorn, LM (corresponding author), Cornell Univ, NE Reg Climate Ctr, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA.
EM lmt72@cornell.edu
RI Tryhorn, Lee/C-6913-2008; Lynch, Amanda/B-4278-2011
OI Lynch, Amanda/0000-0003-2990-1016
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NR 71
TC 14
Z9 16
U1 0
U2 18
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0032-2687
J9 POLICY SCI
JI Policy Sci.
PD JUN
PY 2010
VL 43
IS 2
BP 105
EP 127
DI 10.1007/s11077-009-9088-0
PG 23
WC Public Administration; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA 593KK
UT WOS:000277453200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Neirotti, G
   Tomatis, A
   Germana, F
   Imparato, A
   Valisena, A
   Mellano, MG
   Ruffa, P
   Donno, D
   Marinoni, DT
   Beccaro, GL
   Gamba, G
AF Neirotti, Giovanna
   Tomatis, Alessandro
   Germana, Federica
   Imparato, Alessia
   Valisena, Andrea
   Mellano, Maria Gabriella
   Ruffa, Paola
   Donno, Dario
   Torello Marinoni, Daniela
   Beccaro, Gabriele Loris
   Gamba, Giovanni
TI A Multidisciplinary Approach for the Assessment of the Last Surviving
   'Marrone di Chiusa Pesio' Chestnut Trees in the Piemonte Region (Italy)
SO DIVERSITY-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE <italic>Castanea</italic> spp.; UPOV descriptors; phytochemicals;
   antioxidants; biodiversity conservation; multivariate analysis
ID CASTANEA-SATIVA MILL.; ANTIOXIDANT CAPACITY; IN-VITRO; GROWTH; ACID
AB Chestnut orchards are a multifunctional resource, providing not only fruit or wood but also playing a role in the conservation of mountain and hillside landscapes. In the Piemonte Region, Italy, a rich genetic heritage of chestnut genotypes has contributed to considerable biodiversity and environmental value. The study aimed to valorize an important example of the chestnut agrobiodiversity in the Piemonte Region by focusing on the 'Marrone di Chiusa Pesio' (MCP) cultivar (cv). A multidisciplinary approach was applied, involving genetic and morphological analyses, Visual Tree Assessment (VTA), and phytochemical and nutritional profiling. The plant census provided identification and geolocation of 187 MCP specimens; the 20 most representative trees were genetically analyzed, and then, through the VTA, their morpho-functional status was evaluated. The nutraceutical properties and phytochemical composition were assessed by measuring the total polyphenol content (TPC), antioxidant capacity (AOC), and other phytochemical classes through spectrophotometric and chromatographic methods. The results showed significantly higher TPC values (ranged from 36.51 +/- 1.60 mgGAE/100 g of dried weight-DW to 103.14 +/- 1.24 mgGAE/100 g DW) compared to other 'Marrone-type' cultivars, along with high levels of key phenolic markers, bioactive compounds, and nutritional substances. These included tannins (about 22-28 mg/100 g DW) and cinnamic acids (about 23-25 mg/100 g DW), followed by flavonols, benzoic acids, organic acids, monoterpenes, vitamin C, and catechins, listed in order of predominance. A Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was performed to observe the distribution of the samples and their correlations based on the chemical composition. The results confirmed the interesting phytochemical properties of the 'Marrone di Chiusa Pesio' nuts, together with their good morphological and functional properties. Given the ongoing genetic erosion of Castanea sativa cultivars, due to cultivation abandonment and climate change, the main factors contributing to the progressive loss of biodiversity worldwide, the presented approach aimed to provide an overview of the conservation status of the local agrobiodiversity. This study highlighted the value of a local chestnut cultivar, presenting the low conservation status of the few remaining specimens. The goal was to define the significant phenotypic variation regarding MCP in the considered area due to environmental variations, which may be of interest in its genetic adaptation to climate change. The study may potentially encourage the development of strategies for actively conserving the forest agrobiodiversity and hillside ecosystem services in the highly diverse landscapes of the Alpine valleys.
C1 [Neirotti, Giovanna; Germana, Federica; Imparato, Alessia; Valisena, Andrea; Mellano, Maria Gabriella; Ruffa, Paola; Donno, Dario; Torello Marinoni, Daniela; Beccaro, Gabriele Loris; Gamba, Giovanni] Univ Torino, Dipartimento Sci Agrarie Forestali & Alimentari, I-10095 Grugliasco, TO, Italy.
   [Tomatis, Alessandro] Reg Piemonte, I-12013 Chiusa Di Pesio, CN, Italy.
   [Tomatis, Alessandro; Mellano, Maria Gabriella; Donno, Dario; Torello Marinoni, Daniela; Beccaro, Gabriele Loris; Gamba, Giovanni] Chestnut R&D Ctr Piemonte, I-12013 Chiusa Di Pesio, CN, Italy.
RP Donno, D (corresponding author), Univ Torino, Dipartimento Sci Agrarie Forestali & Alimentari, I-10095 Grugliasco, TO, Italy.; Donno, D (corresponding author), Chestnut R&D Ctr Piemonte, I-12013 Chiusa Di Pesio, CN, Italy.
EM giovanna.neirotti@unito.it; alessandro.tomatis@regione.piemonte.it;
   federica.germana@unito.it; alessia.imparato@unito.it;
   andrea.valisena@unito.it; gabriella.mellano@unito.it;
   paola.ruffa@unito.it; dario.donno@unito.it; daniela.marinoni@unito.it;
   gabriele.beccaro@unito.it; giovanni.gamba@unito.it
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NR 52
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PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
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JI Diversity-Basel
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 12
AR 711
DI 10.3390/d16120711
PG 18
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA Q5E5B
UT WOS:001384910500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bustamante, MMC
   Silva, JS
   Scariot, A
   Sampaio, AB
   Mascia, DL
   Garcia, E
   Sano, E
   Fernandes, GW
   Durigan, G
   Roitman, I
   Figueiredo, I
   Rodrigues, RR
   Pillar, VD
   de Oliveira, AO
   Malhado, AC
   Alencar, A
   Vendramini, A
   Padovezi, A
   Carrascosa, H
   Freitas, J
   Siqueira, JA
   Shimbo, J
   Generoso, LG
   Tabarelli, M
   Biderman, R
   Salomao, RD
   Valle, R
   Junior, B
   Nobre, C
AF Bustamante, Mercedes M. C.
   Silva, Jose Salomao
   Scariot, Aldicir
   Sampaio, Alexandre Bonesso
   Mascia, Daniel Luis
   Garcia, Edenise
   Sano, Edson
   Fernandes, Geraldo Wilson
   Durigan, Giselda
   Roitman, Iris
   Figueiredo, Isabel
   Rodrigues, Ricardo Ribeiro
   Pillar, Valerio D.
   de Oliveira, Alba Orli
   Malhado, Ana Claudia
   Alencar, Ane
   Vendramini, Annelise
   Padovezi, Aurelio
   Carrascosa, Helena
   Freitas, Joberto
   Siqueira, Jose Alves
   Shimbo, Julia
   Generoso, Leonel Graca
   Tabarelli, Marcelo
   Biderman, Rachel
   Salomao, Rafael de Paiva
   Valle, Raul
   Junior, Brienza
   Nobre, Carlos
TI Ecological restoration as a strategy for mitigating and adapting to
   climate change: lessons and challenges from Brazil
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Landscape degradation; Forestry sector; Brazilian NDC; Environmental
   monitoring; Environmental policy
ID REFORESTATION POLICY INTEGRATION; LAND-USE CHANGE; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES;
   FOREST RESTORATION; ATLANTIC FOREST; GRASSLAND AFFORESTATION;
   DEFORESTATION SLOWDOWN; NATURAL REGENERATION; RIVER-BASIN; WATER YIELD
AB Climate change is a global phenomenon that affects biophysical systems and human well-being. The Paris Agreement of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change entered into force in 2016 with the objective of strengthening the global response to climate change by keeping global temperature rise this century well below 2 degrees C above pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase even further to 1.5 degrees C. The agreement requires all Parties to submit their "nationally determined contributions" (NDCs) and to strengthen these efforts in the years ahead. Reducing carbon emissions from deforestation and forest degradation is an important strategy for mitigating climate change, particularly in developing countries with large forests. Extensive tropical forest loss and degradation have increased awareness at the international level of the need to undertake large-scale ecological restoration, highlighting the need to identify cases in which restoration strategies can contribute to mitigation and adaptation. Here we consider Brazil as a case study to evaluate the benefits and challenges of implementing large-scale restoration programs in developing countries. The Brazilian NDC included the target of restoring and reforesting 12 million hectares of forests for multiple uses by 2030. Restoration of native vegetation is one of the foundations of sustainable rural development in Brazil and should consider multiple purposes, from biodiversity and ecosystem services conservation to social and economic development. However, ecological restoration still presents substantial challenges for tropical and mega-diverse countries, including the need to develop plans that are technically and financially feasible, as well as public policies and monitoring instruments that can assess effectiveness. The planning, execution, and monitoring of restoration efforts strongly depend on the context and the diagnosis of the area with respect to reference ecosystems (e.g., forests, savannas, grasslands, wetlands). In addition, poor integration of climate change policies at the national and subnational levels and with other sectorial policies constrains the large-scale implementation of restoration programs. The case of Brazil shows that slowing deforestation is possible; however, this analysis highlights the need for increased national commitment and international support for actions that require large-scale transformations of the forest sector regarding ecosystem restoration efforts. Scaling up the ambitions and actions of the Paris Agreement implies the need for a global framework that recognizes landscape restoration as a cost-effective nature-based solution and that supports countries in addressing their remaining needs, challenges, and barriers.
C1 [Bustamante, Mercedes M. C.; Silva, Jose Salomao; Roitman, Iris] Univ Brasilia, Dept Ecol, BR-70910900 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Scariot, Aldicir; Mascia, Daniel Luis] EMBRAPA Recursos Genet & Biotecnol, Lab Ecol & Conservat, POB 02372, BR-70770900 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Sampaio, Alexandre Bonesso] Inst Chico Mendes Conservacao Biodiversidade, Natl Ctr Res & Conservat, BR-70670350 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Garcia, Edenise] Nature Conservancy, BR-66035115 Belem, Para, Brazil.
   [Sano, Edson] Brazilian Inst Environm & Renewable Nat Resources, Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Fernandes, Geraldo Wilson] Univ Fed Minas Gerais, Dept Gen Biol, BR-30161970 Belo Horizonte, MG, Brazil.
   [Durigan, Giselda] Inst Florestal, Lab Ecol & Forest Hydrol, BR-19802970 Assis, SP, Brazil.
   [Durigan, Giselda] Univ Estadual Campinas, Lab Ecol & Forest Hydrol, BR-13083865 Campinas, SP, Brazil.
   [Figueiredo, Isabel] ISPN, BR-70750515 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Rodrigues, Ricardo Ribeiro] Univ Sao Paulo, Luiz de Queiroz Coll Agr, Dept Biol Sci, BR-13418900 Piracicaba, SP, Brazil.
   [Pillar, Valerio D.] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Dept Ecol, BR-91501970 Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.
   [de Oliveira, Alba Orli] Rede Sementes Cerrado, CLN 211,Bloco A,Sala 221, BR-70863530 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Malhado, Ana Claudia] Univ Fed Alagoas, Inst Biol & Hlth Sci, BR-57072900 Maceio, AL, Brazil.
   [Alencar, Ane; Shimbo, Julia] Amazon Environm Res Inst IPAM, BR-70863520 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Vendramini, Annelise] FGVces, Av Paulista 1294, BR-01310100 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.
   [Padovezi, Aurelio; Biderman, Rachel] World Resources Inst, BR-05466000 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.
   [Carrascosa, Helena] Secretary Environm, BR-05459900 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.
   [Freitas, Joberto] Minist Environm, Brazilian Forest Serv, BR-70818900 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Siqueira, Jose Alves] Univ Fed Vale do Sao Francisco, Reference Ctr Recovery Degraded Areas Caatinga, BR-56304917 Petrolina, PE, Brazil.
   [Generoso, Leonel Graca; Valle, Raul] Secretariat Environm, BR-70040020 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
   [Tabarelli, Marcelo] Univ Fed Pernambuco, Dept Appl Ecol, BR-50670901 Recife, PE, Brazil.
   [Salomao, Rafael de Paiva] Univ Fed Rural Amazonia CAPES, Av Presidente Tancredo Neves 2501, BR-66077530 Belem, Para, Brazil.
   [Junior, Brienza] EMBRAPA Amazonia Oriental, BR-66095903 Belem, Para, Brazil.
   [Nobre, Carlos] Univ Sao Paulo, Inst Adv Studies, BR-05508060 Sao Paulo, SP, Brazil.
C3 Universidade de Brasilia; Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuaria
   (EMBRAPA); Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais; Universidade Estadual
   de Campinas; Universidade de Sao Paulo; Universidade Federal do Rio
   Grande do Sul; Universidade Federal de Alagoas; Universidade Federal de
   Pernambuco; Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuaria (EMBRAPA);
   Universidade de Sao Paulo
RP Bustamante, MMC (corresponding author), Univ Brasilia, Dept Ecol, BR-70910900 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
EM mercedes@unb.br
RI Bustamante, Mercedes/AAQ-7231-2020; Garcia, Edenise/AAO-5834-2020;
   Fernandes, Geraldo/AAN-5602-2021; Sano, Edson/AAD-4150-2020; Scariot,
   Aldicir/N-3447-2019; SALOMÃO, RAFAEL/AAU-1306-2020; Alencar, Ane
   A.C/AAX-3684-2020; Vieira, Daniel/E-9094-2012; Durigan,
   Giselda/B-9657-2012; Mendes MALHADO, Ana Claudia/I-3089-2012; Fapesp,
   Biota/F-8655-2017; Rodrigues, Ricardo Ribeiro/D-5557-2012; Bustamante,
   Mercedes/H-7597-2015; Tabarelli, Marcelo/F-1088-2010; Pillar, Valerio
   D./B-9872-2008
OI Alencar, Ane Auxiliadora Costa/0000-0001-5605-7469; Mendes MALHADO, Ana
   Claudia/0000-0003-3621-779X; Vieira, Daniel/0000-0002-2709-5308; Paiva
   Salomao, Rafael/0000-0003-0947-0132; Fapesp, Biota/0000-0002-9887-8449;
   Fernandes, Geraldo/0000-0003-1559-6049; Rodrigues, Ricardo
   Ribeiro/0000-0003-4818-0736; Bustamante, Mercedes/0000-0003-1008-452X;
   Tabarelli, Marcelo/0000-0001-7573-7216; Scariot,
   Aldicir/0000-0003-0771-3073; Pillar, Valerio D./0000-0001-6408-2891
FU Climate Land Use Alliance; Rede Clima of Brazilian Ministry of Science,
   Technology and Innovation; National Council for Scientific and
   Technological Development [381528/2016-2]
FX This document is based on discussions held during the Workshop
   Vegetation Restoration and Mitigation of Climate Change, in Brasilia,
   Brazil (August 18-19, 2016) financed by the Climate Land Use Alliance.
   We would like to thank the financial support of the Rede Clima of
   Brazilian Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation. Jose Salomao
   Silva was supported by the National Council for Scientific and
   Technological Development (381528/2016-2).
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U1 7
U2 147
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD OCT
PY 2019
VL 24
IS 7
BP 1249
EP 1270
DI 10.1007/s11027-018-9837-5
PG 22
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA JM2AH
UT WOS:000496022700004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sayegh, F
AF Sayegh, Fadi
TI Leveraging emotional intelligence to foster proactive climate change
   adaptation: A study of engineering decision-making
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Proactive decision -making; Emotional intelligence; Climate change;
   Sustainability; Engineering; Anthropocene; Canada
ID THINKING STYLES; SELF-EFFICACY; MANAGEMENT; STRATEGIES; CHALLENGE
AB The impacts of climate change and development present significant challenges and complexities that require new solutions, wise choices, and multi-disciplinary integration. In this context, emotional intelligence (EI) plays a crucial role. However, traditional engineering education and practice overlook the importance of understanding and managing emotions. This research aims to determine the impact of EI as a tool to enhance proactive decisionmaking and implement sustainable measures within the engineering profession.The study makes three main research contributions. First, it confirms a positive relationship between EI and proactive sustainable decisionmaking among engineers. This means that engineers with high EI are more likely to consider the impacts of their decisions on various stakeholders and dimensions of sustainability. Second, it suggests that EI can enhance creativity and innovative thinking in engineering, helping engineers to develop effective solutions for challenges related to climate change. Third, the study advocates for incorporating EI training and assessment into engineering curriculums to foster a sustainable and ethical engineering culture. By improving EI, engineers can enhance their interpersonal skills, self-awareness, and emotional management, which in turn can significantly improve teamwork in addressing challenges related to climate change.
C1 [Sayegh, Fadi] UCAM Univ Catolica San Antonio Murcia, Murcia, Spain.
C3 Universidad Catolica de Murcia
RP Sayegh, F (corresponding author), UCAM Univ Catolica San Antonio Murcia, Murcia, Spain.
EM fadi_sayegh@hotmail.com
OI Sayegh, Fadi/0000-0003-3397-8518
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NR 85
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4797
EI 1095-8630
J9 J ENVIRON MANAGE
JI J. Environ. Manage.
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 365
AR 121669
DI 10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.121669
EA JUL 2024
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YB9O5
UT WOS:001266145900001
PM 38968887
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Liu, F
   Masago, Y
AF Liu, Fei
   Masago, Yoshifumi
TI An analysis of the spatial heterogeneity of future climate change
   impacts in support of cross-sectoral adaptation strategies in Japan
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation strategy; Climate change adaptation; Climate change impact;
   Japan; Spatial planning
ID TEMPERATURE; RESOLUTION; MORTALITY; HOTSPOTS; QUALITY; POLICY; YIELD;
   MODEL
AB Addressing climate change requires cross-cutting and effective adaptation strategies. We presented a scenario-based, cross-scale, and spatially explicit framework for analyzing multiple future climate change impacts in Japan. The correlation analysis of climatic and multisectoral impact indicators showed that a complex set of factors, including climate and other indicators used in impact assessment models and how they were used in these models, influenced the correlations. Then, we harmonized and mapped the future impacts in Japan by coupling the Kmeans multivariate clustering analysis with the similarity search approach. Seven indicators of climate change impacts were utilized to identify the homogeneous impact zones (HIZs) at the end of the 21st century. The homogeneous impact maps of Japan were composed of six HIZs and two isolated impact clusters characterized by varying degrees and combinations of climate change impacts. Changing climates and the cooccurrence of various impacts were context-sensitive. The relationships between the impacts and their coefficient strengths determined the cooccurrence direction. The findings of this study aid us in understanding the compound climate risks, enhancing the synergies and cohesions of adaptation measures, and accelerating science-based adaptation strategies.
C1 [Liu, Fei; Masago, Yoshifumi] Natl Inst Environm Studies, Ctr Climate Change Adaptat, 16-2 Onogawa, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 3058506, Japan.
C3 National Institute for Environmental Studies - Japan
RP Masago, Y (corresponding author), Natl Inst Environm Studies, Ctr Climate Change Adaptat, 16-2 Onogawa, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 3058506, Japan.
EM masago.yoshifumi@nies.go.jp
RI Liu, Feifei/AAP-9241-2021
FU Environment Research and Technology Development Fund by the Ministry of
   the Environment of Japan [JPMEERF20S11802]
FX This work was partially supported by the Environment Research and
   Technology Development Fund (JPMEERF20S11802), which is provided by the
   Ministry of the Environment of Japan and administered by the
   Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency. The authors thank the
   editors and reviewers for their valuable suggestions and comments on
   improving the manuscript draft.
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NR 79
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 5
U2 17
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2023
VL 41
AR 100528
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2023.100528
EA JUN 2023
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA M1MD6
UT WOS:001027861800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sekaranom, AB
   Nurjani, E
   Nucifera, F
AF Sekaranom, Andung Bayu
   Nurjani, Emilya
   Nucifera, Fitria
TI Agricultural Climate Change Adaptation in Kebumen, Central Java,
   Indonesia
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation strategies; agriculture sector; climate change; farmers'
   responses
ID IMPACTS; THORNTHWAITE; VARIABILITY; FARMERS; DROUGHT; REGIONS; RISK
AB Productive agricultural areas in Kebumen, Central Java, Indonesia are potentially vulnerable to the adverse impacts of climate change. We surveyed small-scale farmers to assess climate change-related perceptions and adaptations in the agriculture sector. The majority of the respondents agreed that there were changes in climatological variables affecting their farming activities, especially in terms of precipitation and temperature. However, the results also revealed that only 13% of respondents believed that human activities play a significant role. Three forms of adaptations have been developed by the farmers, namely: (1) agricultural diversification, (2) agricultural intensification, and (3) socioeconomic adaptation. Changing crops to more climate-tolerant varieties was one of the most common agricultural diversification practices (implemented by 88% of farmers). Most of the farmers also tried to maintain agricultural productivity by adjusting a local planting calendar (implemented by 94% of farmers). The use of machinery to intensify farming practice was an uncommon strategy (implemented by only 30% of farmers) because of expensive maintenance and small cultivation areas. The results suggested the importance of increasing farmers' knowledge and technological know-how related to climate change and its implications, developing effective adaptation and mitigation efforts, and constructing climate-resilient infrastructure in the agricultural sector.
C1 [Sekaranom, Andung Bayu; Nurjani, Emilya] Univ Gadjah Mada, Fac Geog, Dept Environm Geog, Yogyakarta 55281, Indonesia.
   [Sekaranom, Andung Bayu] Univ Gadjah Mada, Res Ctr Disaster, Yogyakarta 55281, Indonesia.
   [Nucifera, Fitria] Univ Amikom, Fac Sci & Technol, Dept Geog, Yogyakarta 55283, Indonesia.
C3 Gadjah Mada University; Gadjah Mada University
RP Sekaranom, AB (corresponding author), Univ Gadjah Mada, Fac Geog, Dept Environm Geog, Yogyakarta 55281, Indonesia.; Sekaranom, AB (corresponding author), Univ Gadjah Mada, Res Ctr Disaster, Yogyakarta 55281, Indonesia.
EM andungbayu@geo.ugm.ac.id; emilya.nurjani@ugm.ac.id;
   fnucifera@amikom.ac.id
RI Nurjani, Emilya/GOG-8233-2022; sekaranom, andung bayu/GLT-5087-2022
OI sekaranom, andung bayu/0000-0003-3497-0905; Nucifera,
   Fitria/0000-0001-8024-0845
FU Grant of "Prioritas Riset Nasional-SIMLITABMAS" from Indonesian Ministry
   of Education and Culture in 2021 [1736/UN1/DITLIT/DIT-LIT/2021]
FX This research was funded by Grant of "Prioritas Riset
   Nasional-SIMLITABMAS" from Indonesian Ministry of Education and Culture
   in 2021 with Dr. Emilya Nurjani as the principal investigator (Contract
   number: 1736/UN1/DITLIT/DIT-LIT/2021).
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NR 45
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 3
U2 8
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 13
AR 7069
DI 10.3390/su13137069
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TG3GG
UT WOS:000671295900001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Adams, S
AF Adams, Sophie
TI The pragmatic holism of social-ecological systems theory: Explaining
   adaptive capacity in a changing climate
SO PROGRESS IN HUMAN GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; adaptive capacity; climate change; pragmatic holism;
   social-ecological system
ID RESILIENCE THINKING; SOCIOECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS; SUSTAINABLE ADAPTATION;
   ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; CULTURAL-ECOLOGY; VULNERABILITY; GEOGRAPHY;
   SCIENCE; ADAPTABILITY; GOVERNANCE
AB Now ubiquitous in research on adaptation to the impacts of anthropogenic climate change is the aim of cultivating adaptive capacity. With its promise to expand the scope of transformative human response within the adaptive dynamics of the social-ecological system, this approach is built upon the integration of the social and ecological, reflecting the 'pragmatic holism' at the heart of the concept of the ecological system. This vision is undercut, however, by an ambivalence about the agency of humans to effect adaptive change. I argue that this threatens to recoup the environmental determinism that characterised mid-20th-century theories of adaptation in geography and cognate disciplines - albeit in a new form defined by an understanding of agency as distributed and emergent that is associated with developments in cybernetics and complexity science. This article charts how the currently dominant discourse centred on adaptive capacity has come about and explores what it might mean for the politics of climate change adaptation, as the scope of human action is circumscribed by the adaptive dynamics of the social-ecological system.
C1 [Adams, Sophie] Univ New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
C3 University of New South Wales Sydney
RP Adams, S (corresponding author), Univ New South Wales, Sch Humanities & Languages, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
EM s.m.adams@unsw.edu.au
RI Adams, Sophie/JMP-6414-2023
OI Adams, Sophie/0000-0002-6660-2640
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NR 142
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 5
U2 31
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0309-1325
EI 1477-0288
J9 PROG HUM GEOG
JI Prog. Hum. Geogr.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 45
IS 6
BP 1580
EP 1600
AR 03091325211016072
DI 10.1177/03091325211016072
EA MAY 2021
PG 21
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA XG8NH
UT WOS:000654515000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jerzy, Z
   Lukasz, S
   Anna, Z
   Kornelia, K
   Maksym, B
AF Jerzy, Zwozdziak
   Lukasz, Szalata
   Anna, Zwozdziak
   Kornelia, Kwiecinska
   Maksym, Byelyayev
TI Water Retention in Nature-Based Solutions-Assessment of Potential
   Economic Effects for Local Social Groups
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE nature-based solutions; sustainable development; climate change
   adaptation; water retention; economic effects
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; CITIES; FRAMEWORK; BENEFITS; EU
AB The upcoming trends related to climate change are increasing the level of interest of social groups in solutions for the implementation and the realization of activities that will ensure the change of these trends and can reduce the impact on the environment, including the health of the community exposed to these impacts. The implementation of solutions aimed at improving the quality of the environment requires taking into account not only the environmental aspects but also the economic aspect. Taking into account the analysis of solutions changing the current state of climate change, the article focuses on the analysis of the potential economic effect caused by the implementation of nature-based solutions (NBSs) in terms of reducing the operating costs related to water retention for local social groups. The analysis is based on a case study, one of the research projects studying nature-based solutions, created as part of the Grow Green project (H2020) in Wroclaw in 2017-2022. The results of the analysis are an observed potential positive change in economic effects, i.e., approximately 85.90% of the operating costs related to water retention have been reduced for local social groups by NBSs.
C1 [Jerzy, Zwozdziak; Kornelia, Kwiecinska] Wroclaw Univ Environm & Life Sci, Grow Green Project Team, PL-50375 Wroclaw, Poland.
   [Lukasz, Szalata; Anna, Zwozdziak; Maksym, Byelyayev] Wroclaw Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Environm Protect Engn, PL-50377 Wroclaw, Poland.
C3 Wroclaw University of Environmental & Life Sciences; Wroclaw University
   of Science & Technology
RP Lukasz, S (corresponding author), Wroclaw Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Environm Protect Engn, PL-50377 Wroclaw, Poland.
EM jerzy.zwozdziak@upwr.edu.pl; lukasz.szalata@pwr.edu.pl;
   anna.zwozdziak@pwr.edu.pl; kornelia.kwiecinska@upwr.edu.pl;
   223171@student.pwr.edu.pl
CR Advisor, 2018, GLOB VIEWS ENV 2018
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NR 22
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 20
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 12
AR 3347
DI 10.3390/w12123347
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA PK9RE
UT WOS:000602771800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Castro, B
AF Castro, Bernardo
BE Castro, P
   Azul, AM
   Filho, WL
   Azeiteiro, UM
TI Challenges, Futures and Possibilities of Land Use in Rural Areas of Cela
   Municipality: Risks, Climate Change Impacts, Adaptation and Links to
   Sustainability
SO CLIMATE CHANGE-RESILIENT AGRICULTURE AND AGROFORESTRY: ECOSYSTEM
   SERVICES AND SUSTAINABILITY
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Risk and vulnerability; Land use; Rural
   communities; Sustainability
ID VULNERABILITY
AB The management of community rural land in Angola is aggravated by recurrent drought cycles intensifying the risk factors that can compromise economic, social and environmental sustainability. This work seeks to emphasize the role of adaptation of community rural families in an environment marked by extreme weather events that defy local economies. Data were collected through fieldwork relying upon qualitative methods (semi-structured interviews and focus groups). In addition, during field research, participant observation was used to collect detailed information through informal conversations with local people and observations of everyday life. Different strategies for coping/adapting to environment changes were also registered. The key informants were primarily comprised of traditional leaders in the village-men, women of different ages-who generally engage in local adaptive measures. Regional and local farming practices, families' migrations and the conflicts over land use were studied (and assessed existing small-scale dynamics centred on sustainability and resilience objectives). The results indicated a significant local adaptation deficit, lack of integration of climate change adaptation strategies in public instruments decision and a systemic and integrated approach to the territory management.
C1 [Castro, Bernardo] ONG Rede Terra, Luanda, Angola.
RP Castro, B (corresponding author), ONG Rede Terra, Luanda, Angola.
EM bernardocastro9@gmail.com
CR AFDB, 2016, REL AN 2015 GRUP BAN
   [Anonymous], 2011, Integracao da Adaptacao as Alteracoes Climaticas na Cooperacao para o Desenvolvimento: Guia para o Desenvolvimento de Politicas", DOI [DOI 10.1787/9789264110618-PT, 10.1787/9789264110618-pt]
   Boko M, 2007, AR4 CLIMATE CHANGE 2007: IMPACTS, ADAPTATION, AND VULNERABILITY, P433
   Cain A., 2013, Land and Post-Conflict Peacebuilding
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   Castro B, 2018, CLIMATE CHANGE IMPAC
   Censo, 2014, RES DEF REC GER POP
   Chérif S, 2017, INT J GLOBAL WARM, V12, P483, DOI 10.1504/IJGW.2017.084793
   Collier P, 2008, OXFORD REV ECON POL, V24, P337, DOI 10.1093/oxrep/grn019
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   Lotz-Sisitka H, 2014, ASSOCIACAO REGIONAL
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   Patt AG, 2010, P NATL ACAD SCI USA, V107, P1333, DOI 10.1073/pnas.0910253107
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   UNEP/GEO5, 2012, CRESC URB GLOB FRAC
NR 25
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 10
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-75004-0; 978-3-319-75003-3
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2019
BP 115
EP 136
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-75004-0_7
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-75004-0
PG 22
WC Agronomy; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Ecology; Forestry
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology; Forestry
GA BQ8FX
UT WOS:000620171600008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Nehren, U
   Sattler, D
   Raedig, C
   Hissa, H
   Schlüter, S
AF Nehren, Udo
   Sattler, Dietmar
   Raedig, Claudia
   Hissa, Helga
   Schlueter, Sabine
BE Nehren, U
   Schluter, S
   Raedig, C
   Sattler, D
   Hissa, H
TI Rio de Janeiro: A State in Socio-ecological Transformation
SO STRATEGIES AND TOOLS FOR A SUSTAINABLE RURAL RIO DE JANEIRO
SE Springer Series on Environmental Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Rio de Janeiro state (RJ); Socio-ecological transformation; Rural
   development
AB Within the period of about 500 years since the European colonization, today's state of Rio de Janeiro has been transformed from a sparsely populated forest area to an economic and cultural hub of Brazil and the whole continent of South America. This development process is on the one hand characterized by technological progress and economic and population growth but on the other hand also accompanied by overexploitation of natural resources, land and ecosystem degradation, uncontrolled urban sprawl, and increasing social disparities. In the past few years, some efforts have been made to counteract these negative trends, but many challenges remain to keep pace with the rapidly changing demands and needs in a globalized world. In this introductory chapter, we provide an overview of the recent developments in the environmental and agricultural sectors in the state of Rio de Janeiro. We focus on the rural areas of the state that provide essential goods and services for the urban agglomerations. In this context we briefly introduce the chapters of the book that are divided into five main sections: (a) Agricultural Management; (b) Ecosystem Management and Biodiversity; (c) Integrated Water Management; (d) Land Restoration, Disaster Risk Reduction, and Climate Change Adaptation; as well as (e) Environmental Governance and Economic Instruments.
C1 [Nehren, Udo; Raedig, Claudia; Schlueter, Sabine] TH Koln Univ Appl Sci, Inst Technol & Resources Management Trop & Subtro, Cologne, Germany.
   [Sattler, Dietmar] Univ Leipzig, Inst Geog Phys Geog & Environm Res, Leipzig, Germany.
   [Hissa, Helga] Sustainable Rural Dev Program Microwatersheds Sta, Niteroi, RJ, Brazil.
C3 Leipzig University
RP Nehren, U (corresponding author), TH Koln Univ Appl Sci, Inst Technol & Resources Management Trop & Subtro, Cologne, Germany.
EM udo.nehren@th-koeln.de; sattler@uni-leipzig.de;
   claudia.raedig@th-koeln.de; sabine.schluter@th-koeln.de
RI Nehren, Udo/H-8192-2019; Sattler, Dietmar/L-1120-2016
OI Schluter, Sabine/0000-0002-5142-6218; Nehren, Udo/0000-0001-6236-3542;
   raedig, claudia/0000-0003-3315-0075
CR Abreu M. A., 2013, A evolucao urbana do Rio de Janeiro, V4
   [Anonymous], BIOD HOTSP
   [Anonymous], 2015, POP RES EST EST POP
   [Anonymous], STRATEGIES TOOLS SUS
   Dean W, 1995, FERRO FOGO HIST DEVA
   IBGE (Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatistica), 2016, EST POP RES BRAS UN
   Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estadistica (IBGE), 2010, SIN CENS DEM 2010 TA
   Leal CarlosGalindo., 2003, The Atlantic Forest of South America: biodiversity status, threats, and outlook
   MacLeod Hickie M, 2018, STRATEGIES TOOLS SUS
   Nehren U, 2013, AN ACAD BRAS CIENC, V85, P497, DOI 10.1590/S0001-37652013000200004
   Raedig C, 2009, BIODIVERSITY LAND US, P217
NR 11
TC 19
Z9 19
U1 1
U2 3
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 0172-6161
BN 978-3-319-89644-1; 978-3-319-89643-4
J9 SPRINGER SER ENV MAN
JI Springer Ser. Environ. Manag.
PY 2019
BP 1
EP 10
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-89644-1_1
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-89644-1
PG 10
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies; Geography, Physical; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Physical Geography; Public Administration
GA BN7ZK
UT WOS:000487753800002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Bostenaru Dan, M
AF Bostenaru Dan, Maria
BE Sandu, A
   Frunza, A
   Ciulei, T
   Gorghiu, L
TI Water as Hazard and Water as Heritage in Architecture for and by Women
SO MULTIDIMENSIONAL EDUCATION & PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT. ETHICAL VALUES
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 7th LUMEN International Scientific Conference on Multidimensional
   Education and Professional Development. Ethical Values (MEPDEV)
CY NOV 12-14, 2015
CL Targoviste, ROMANIA
SP LUMEN
DE women; architecture; water; tourism; hazard; leisure
AB The paper regards the issues connected to architecture at water for and by women. It is about two pillars: water as a hazard and the way gender issues are considered in climate change adaptation and post-disaster reconstruction and water as heritage: the design of leisure architecture next to water or architecture objects such as thermal bathes. The needs of women have to be included in the architecture programmes which react to the presence of water, as well as in research programme dealing with this (ex. Horizon 2020). Architects' and researchers' mobility contribute to the fact that little cultural differences can be observed between the countries. We will concentrate on Romania and Italy. From the historical evolution conclusions can be drawn regarding architecture design today. Women can take different roles in the project: expert, user or investor. Other countries comparison can be made with are: Hungary, Bulgaria, Poland, Estonia, Germany, Austria, considering thus both the East and the West, which is relevant from the point of view of participation. From the historical evolution conclusions can be drawn regarding architecture design today. For this reason, apart of the pioneers, also contemporary women figures in architecture, be it research or practice, are included.
C1 [Bostenaru Dan, Maria] Acad Romania Roma, Rome, Italy.
   [Bostenaru Dan, Maria] Marie Curie Fellows Assoc, Brussels, Belgium.
RP Bostenaru Dan, M (corresponding author), Acad Romania Roma, Rome, Italy.; Bostenaru Dan, M (corresponding author), Marie Curie Fellows Assoc, Brussels, Belgium.
EM maria.bostenaru@iaim.ro
RI Bostenaru Dan, Maria/B-6089-2011
OI Bostenaru Dan, Maria/0000-0002-0855-8979
CR Dumpelmann S, 2004, MARIA TERESA PARPAGL
   Fowler B, 2004, SOCIOLOGY, V38, P101, DOI 10.1177/0038038504039363
   Halbrooks MC, 2005, HORTTECHNOLOGY, V15, P196, DOI 10.21273/HORTTECH.15.2.0196
   Llewellyn M, 2004, CULT GEOGR, V11, P42, DOI 10.1191/1474474003eu292oa
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NR 8
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU MEDIMOND S R L
PI 40128 BOLOGNA
PA VIA MASERATI 5, 40128 BOLOGNA, 00000, ITALY
BN 978-88-7587-736-1
PY 2016
BP 59
EP 63
PG 5
WC Education & Educational Research; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Education & Educational Research; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA BG7OI
UT WOS:000391521600012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU MacDonald, JP
   Ford, J
   Willox, AC
   Mitchell, C
AF MacDonald, Joanna Petrasek
   Ford, James
   Willox, Ashlee Cunsolo
   Mitchell, Claudia
CA Konek Prod
   My Word Storytelling Digital
   Rigolet Inuit Community Govt
TI Youth-Led Participatory Video as a Strategy to Enhance Inuit Youth
   Adaptive Capacities for Dealing with Climate Change
SO ARCTIC
LA English
DT Article
DE participatory video; protective factors; resilience; adaptive capacity;
   climate change adaptation; youth; Inuit; Nunatsiavut; Arctic; Canada
ID INDIGENOUS SAMI; HEALTH; COMMUNITY; VULNERABILITY; ADAPTATION; IMPACTS;
   SUBSISTENCE; EXPERIENCES; NUNATSIAVUT; RESILIENCE
AB Rapid climatic and environmental changes experienced throughout the Canadian North are having significant impacts on the lives of Inuit, with implications for the future of the large Inuit youth population. Within the adaptation research and practitioner community, youth voices, perspectives, and involvement are essential in ensuring representative and sustainable adaptation strategies. This paper examines the potential of youth-led participatory video (PV) as a strategy to foster known protective factors that underpin the resilience of youth and their capacity to adapt to various stresses, including impacts of climate change. The work draws on a case study from the Inuit community of Rigolet, Nunatsiavut, Labrador, Canada, where a two-week PV workshop was conducted with seven youth and followed by in-depth interviews with participants and community members. The findings show that PV may be a pathway to greater adaptive capacities because the process connects to known protective factors that enhance resilience of circumpolar indigenous youth. PV also shows promise as a strategy to engage youth in sharing insights and knowledge, connect generations, and involve young Inuit in planning and decision making in general.
C1 [MacDonald, Joanna Petrasek; Ford, James] McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Montreal, PQ H3A 0B9, Canada.
   [Willox, Ashlee Cunsolo] Cape Breton Univ, Dept Nursing, Sydney, NS B1P 6L2, Canada.
   [Willox, Ashlee Cunsolo] Cape Breton Univ, Dept Indigenous Studies, Sydney, NS B1P 6L2, Canada.
   [Mitchell, Claudia] McGill Univ, Dept Integrated Studies Educ, Montreal, PQ H3A 1Y2, Canada.
C3 McGill University; Cape Breton University; Cape Breton University;
   McGill University
RP MacDonald, JP (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Dept Geog, 805 Sherbrooke St W, Montreal, PQ H3A 0B9, Canada.
EM joanna.petrasekmacdonald@mail.mcgill.ca
RI Ford, James/A-4284-2013
OI Ford, James/0000-0002-2066-3456
FU Nunatsiavut Department of Health and Social Development; Native Spirit
   Youth Centre in Rigolet; Air Labrador; First Air; Inuit Traditional
   Knowledge for Adapting to the Health Effects of Climate Change project
   (IK-ADAPT); Inuit Mental Health Adaptation to Climate Change project
   (IMHACC); Indigenous Health Adaptation to Climate Change project
   (IHACC); Health Canada's First Nations; Inuit Health Branch; Social
   Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC); ArcticNet; CIHR
   Applied Public Health Chair; Nasivvik Centre for Inuit Health and
   Changing Environments; Royal Canadian Geographic Society
FX We are extremely grateful to the community of Rigolet, in particular the
   young people who worked on this project with us, the parents that
   volunteered their time to accompany us on our boil-up, and all the
   community members who showed their support throughout the video
   workshop. Many thanks to Tom Mugford and the staff at the Northern
   Lights Academy; to the Rigolet Inuit Community Government; to Jordan and
   Curtis Konek from Konek Productions, along with Inez Shiwak and Marilyn
   Baikie of the My Word Storytelling and Digital Media Lab, for help
   facilitating the workshop and other assistance; and to the Nunatsiavut
   Department of Health and Social Development, the Native Spirit Youth
   Centre in Rigolet, Air Labrador, and First Air for their support of this
   project. We are very thankful for support from the Inuit Traditional
   Knowledge for Adapting to the Health Effects of Climate Change project
   (IK-ADAPT), the Inuit Mental Health Adaptation to Climate Change project
   (IMHACC), and the Indigenous Health Adaptation to Climate Change project
   (IHACC). We also thank Anna Bunce for her help in preparing the
   manuscript. Finally, we are grateful for a grant from Health Canada's
   First Nations and Inuit Health Branch and the funding provided through
   the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), ArcticNet,
   the CIHR Applied Public Health Chair, the Nasivvik Centre for Inuit
   Health and Changing Environments, and the Royal Canadian Geographic
   Society.
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NR 91
TC 21
Z9 24
U1 1
U2 41
PU ARCTIC INST N AMER
PI CALGARY
PA UNIV OF CALGARY 2500 UNIVERSITY DRIVE NW 11TH FLOOR LIBRARY TOWER,
   CALGARY, ALBERTA T2N 1N4, CANADA
SN 0004-0843
EI 1923-1245
J9 ARCTIC
JI Arctic
PD DEC
PY 2015
VL 68
IS 4
BP 486
EP 499
DI 10.14430/arctic4527
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Geography, Physical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography
GA DA0NN
UT WOS:000367494300007
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carlson, K
   McCormick, S
AF Carlson, Kathleen
   McCormick, Sabrina
TI American adaptation: Social factors affecting new developments to
   address climate change
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Urban; Social factors
ID RISK; IMPACTS; BARRIERS; VULNERABILITY; PERCEPTIONS; MITIGATION;
   FRAMEWORK; CAPACITY; WEATHER; HEALTH
AB Climate change and extreme weather events are expected to increase in frequency and intensity in the United States. The social factors that drive cities to adapt to and/or prepare for these impacts are largely unknown. Sixty-five qualitative interviews were conducted with multi-sectoral decision-makers to assess factors driving adaptation in six cities across the United States: Tucson, Arizona; Tampa, Florida; Raleigh, North Carolina; Boston, Massachusetts; Portland, Oregon; and Los Angeles, California. We find that there are three type of factors that affect adaptation: (1) swing characteristics of or events within localities that can lead toward or away from action; (2) inhibitors ways of thinking and framing climate change available to decision-makers that slow, but do not necessarily stop change; and (3) resource catalysts types of information and moral grounding that provide a rationale for change. These factors often intersect such that swing factors are only influential in cities with some political acceptance of climate change. In cities where public acceptance of climate change is slowly shifting, resource catalysts are more influential. This is the first qualitative study of climate change adaptation in American cities. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Carlson, Kathleen; McCormick, Sabrina] George Washington Univ, Milken Inst, Sch Publ Hlth, Washington, DC 20052 USA.
C3 George Washington University
RP Carlson, K (corresponding author), George Washington Univ, Milken Inst, Sch Publ Hlth, 950 New Hampshire Ave,Suite 400, Washington, DC 20052 USA.
EM kathleencarl@gwmail.gwu.edu; sabrina.mccormick@gmail.com
FU Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) [IP-C-09-009, 2-63]
FX The authors would like to acknowledge the support of the Environmental
   Protection Agency (EPA Contract #IP-C-09-009, Work Assignment #2-63) for
   this research, and the insights of one anonymous reviewer.
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NR 58
TC 21
Z9 25
U1 5
U2 51
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD NOV
PY 2015
VL 35
BP 360
EP 367
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.09.015
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA CZ0AI
UT WOS:000366767100032
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Adelle, C
AF Adelle, Camilla
TI Contexualising the tool development process through a knowledge
   brokering approach: The case of climate change adaptation and
   agriculture
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Knowledge brokering; Climate change; Landuse; Agriculture; Computer
   modelling
ID POLICY; SYSTEMS; COMPLEX
AB This article applies a 'knowledge brokering' approach to contextualise the development of an integrated computer modelling tool into the real world policy context of adaptation of agriculture to climate change at the EU level. In particular, the article tests a number of knowledge brokering strategies described and theorised in the literature, but seldom empirically tested. The article finds that while the policy context can be used to identify a theoretically informed knowledge brokering strategy, in practice a strategy's 'success' is more informed by practical considerations, such as whether the tool development process is knowledge or demand driven. In addition, in practice the knowledge brokering process is found to be dynamic and messy, which is not always apparent in the literature. The article goes on to question the perception that there is always a need (or a desire) to bridge the gap between researchers and policy makers in the tool development process. Rather than a problem of design and communication, the science policy interface may be characterised more by a high level of competition between researchers and research organisations to have their tool legitimised by its use in the policy making process. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Adelle, Camilla] Univ Pretoria, Ctr study Governance Innovat, Dept Polit Sci, ZA-0028 Pretoria, South Africa.
   [Adelle, Camilla] Univ E Anglia, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Sch Environm Sci, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
C3 University of Pretoria; University of East Anglia
RP Adelle, C (corresponding author), Univ Pretoria, Ctr study Governance Innovat, Old Coll House, Private Bag X20, ZA-0028 Pretoria, South Africa.
EM Camilla.adelle@up.ac.za
OI Adelle, Camilla/0000-0003-4500-0496
FU Linking Impact Assessment Instruments with Sustainability Expertise
   (LIAISE) Network of Excellence [243826]; University of Pretoria, South
   Africa
FX I would like to thank the team of LIAISE researchers and the policy
   makers within DG Agriculture who took part in the process described in
   this article. I would also like to thank John Turnpenny, Andrew Jordan,
   and Tarja Soderman as well as two anonymous referees for their
   constructive comments on an earlier draft. This paper was written with
   the financial support of the Linking Impact Assessment Instruments with
   Sustainability Expertise (LIAISE) Network of Excellence financed under
   the European Commission's Seventh Framework Programme (Project Number
   243826). In addition, I gratefully acknowledge the support of a
   Post-Doctoral Fellowship from the University of Pretoria, South Africa.
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NR 24
TC 16
Z9 17
U1 1
U2 21
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD AUG
PY 2015
VL 51
BP 316
EP 324
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2014.08.010
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CL7JB
UT WOS:000357147200028
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barrett, J
   Rose, JM
   Pagach, J
   Parker, M
   Deonarine, S
AF Barrett, Juliana
   Rose, Julie M.
   Pagach, Jennifer
   Parker, Mark
   Deonarine, Sarah
TI Development of an estuarine climate change monitoring program
SO ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
LA English
DT Article
DE Sentinel; Indicator; Estuarine management
ID MANAGEMENT
AB Numerous coastal and estuarine management programs around the world are developing strategies for climate change and priorities for climate change adaptation. A multi-state work group collaborated with scientists, researchers, resource managers and non-governmental organizations to develop a monitoring program that would provide warning of climate change impacts to the Long Island Sound estuarine and coastal ecosystems. The goal of this program was to facilitate timely management decisions and adaptation responses to climate change impacts. A novel approach is described for strategic planning that combines available regional-scale predictions and climate drivers (top down) with local monitoring information (bottom up) to identify candidate sentinels of climate change. Using this approach, 37 candidate sentinels of climate change were identified as well as a suite of core abiotic parameters that are drivers of environmental change. A process for prioritizing sentinels was developed and identified six of high priority for inclusion in pilot-scale monitoring programs. A monitoring strategy and an online sentinel data clearinghouse were developed. The work and processes presented here are meant to serve as a guide to other coastal and estuarine management programs seeking to establish a targeted monitoring program for climate change and to provide a set of "lessons learned." (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Barrett, Juliana] Univ Connecticut, UConn Extens, Connecticut Sea Grant Coll Program, Groton, CT 06340 USA.
   [Rose, Julie M.] NOAA Fisheries, Northeast Fisheries Sci Ctr, Milford Lab, Milford, CT 06460 USA.
   [Pagach, Jennifer; Parker, Mark] Bureau Water Protect & Land Reuse, Connecticut Dept Energy & Environm Protect, Hartford, CT 06106 USA.
   [Deonarine, Sarah] Bur Marine Resources, NYS Dept Environm Conservat, East Setauket, NY 11733 USA.
C3 University of Connecticut; National Oceanic Atmospheric Admin (NOAA) -
   USA
RP Barrett, J (corresponding author), Univ Connecticut, UConn Extens, Connecticut Sea Grant Coll Program, 1080 Shennecossett Rd, Groton, CT 06340 USA.
EM juliana.barrett@uconn.edu; julie.rose@noaa.gov; jennifer.pagach@ct.gov;
   mark.parker@ct.gov; Sarah.Deonarine@dec.ny.gov
OI Rose, Julie/0000-0001-9796-9974
FU EPA LISS; EPA CRE Program
FX The authors wish to acknowledge Mark Tedesco and the Management
   Committee of the LISS for their long-term support. Ron Rozsa, Sylvain De
   Guise and technical work group members provided guidance and insight
   throughout this process. Antoinette Clemetson aided in strategic plan
   development. Corinne Fitting and Jason Krumholz aided in program
   implementation. This project was funded by the EPA LISS and EPA CRE
   Program.
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NR 12
TC 3
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 16
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1470-160X
EI 1872-7034
J9 ECOL INDIC
JI Ecol. Indic.
PD JUN
PY 2015
VL 53
BP 182
EP 186
DI 10.1016/j.ecolind.2015.01.039
PG 5
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CF6JB
UT WOS:000352661900021
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schweikert, A
   Chinowsky, P
   Kwiatkowski, K
   Espinet, X
AF Schweikert, Amy
   Chinowsky, Paul
   Kwiatkowski, Kyle
   Espinet, Xavier
TI The infrastructure planning support system: Analyzing the impact of
   climate change on road infrastructure and development
SO TRANSPORT POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Development; Infrastructure; Roads; Measuring
   impact; Policy
AB This paper details the Infrastructure Planning Support System (IPSS), a software tool that incorporates five areas of analysis, including climate change, environment, and social impact, to provide a holistic, longer-term approach to the management and planning of road infrastructure. The system combines quantitative and qualitative analysis methods to develop an estimated fiscal cost, in addition to estimates of GHG emissions, transportation time and cost savings, and a prioritization metric focusing on social impact of road construction.
   The IPSS system has been applied in several case studies, including South Africa, Mozambique, Vietnam, a pan-African analysis, and several Asian countries including China, South Korea, Mongolia, and Japan. This paper serves as the first comprehensive explanation of the IPSS system, including the literature review, background, and methodology. The results section focuses on the costs of climate change in an illustrative case study of the State of Colorado in the United States, due to specific data and outputs required for the other analysis components. This paper focuses on the need for a holistic systems approach, its relevance to transportation planning and investment, and one example of how climate change considerations can be quantified and applied at the policy level. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Schweikert, Amy] Univ Colorado, Mortenson Ctr Engn Developing Communities, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Chinowsky, Paul] Univ Colorado, Inst Climate, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Chinowsky, Paul] Univ Colorado, Civil Syst Res Grp, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Kwiatkowski, Kyle; Espinet, Xavier] Univ Colorado, Dept Civil Environm & Architectural Engn, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
C3 University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder;
   University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder;
   University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder;
   University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder
RP Schweikert, A (corresponding author), Univ Colorado, Mortenson Ctr Engn Developing Communities, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
EM amy@clicslab.org
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NR 48
TC 53
Z9 63
U1 1
U2 52
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0967-070X
EI 1879-310X
J9 TRANSPORT POLICY
JI Transp. Policy
PD SEP
PY 2014
VL 35
SI SI
BP 146
EP 153
DI 10.1016/j.tranpol.2014.05.019
PG 8
WC Economics; Transportation
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Transportation
GA AP2KU
UT WOS:000341901900017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lash, D
   Ward, S
   Kershaw, T
   Butler, D
   Eames, M
AF Lash, Daniel
   Ward, Sarah
   Kershaw, Tristan
   Butler, David
   Eames, Matthew
TI Robust rainwater harvesting: probabilistic tank sizing for climate
   change adaptation
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; probabilistic; rainwater harvesting;
   resilient; tank sizing
AB Rainwater harvesting (RWH) systems are increasingly being implemented in buildings. It is common in the UK for simple RWH tank sizing methods to be utilised, and these do not consider future climate change. This paper describes the development of a tool, which integrates elements of basic and detailed sizing approaches from the British Standard for RWH, with the latest probabilistic UK Climate Projections data. The method was initially applied to the design of a university building in Cornwall, UK. The methodology utilises 3,000 equi-probable rainfall patterns for tank sizing for each time period. Results indicate that, to ensure that it is 'likely' that the same non-potable demand could be met in 2080 as in the present, a tank 112% larger would be required. This increases to a 225% over-sizing for a 'very likely' probability of meeting the same level of non-potable demand. The same RWH system design was then assessed for three further UK locations with different rainfall characteristics. From these assessments, a simplified method was developed to enable practitioners to size RWH system tanks for current and future climates. The method provides a new approach to meet present and future non-potable demands, while preventing excessive over-sizing of tanks.
C1 [Lash, Daniel; Eames, Matthew] Univ Exeter, Ctr Energy & Environm, Exeter EX4 4RN, Devon, England.
   [Ward, Sarah; Butler, David] Univ Exeter, Ctr Water Syst, Exeter EX4 4QF, Devon, England.
   [Kershaw, Tristan] Univ Bath, Dept Architecture & Civil Engn, Bath BA2 7AY, Avon, England.
C3 University of Exeter; University of Exeter; University of Bath
RP Lash, D (corresponding author), Univ Exeter, Ctr Energy & Environm, Rennes Dr, Exeter EX4 4RN, Devon, England.
EM d.lash@ex.ac.uk
RI González-Barrio, David/ABF-3593-2020; Kershaw, Tristan/D-2930-2012;
   Eames, Matthew/D-9175-2011; Ward, Sarah/AAK-5052-2020; Ward,
   Sarah/Q-2728-2015
OI kershaw, tristan/0000-0003-2148-5396; Ward, Sarah/0000-0002-1432-4204
FU Technology Strategy Board Design for Future Climate: Design for Future
   Climate 2 competition; UK Engineering and Physical Science Research
   Council, ReVISIONS consortia under the Sustainable Urban Environment
   programme [EP/F007566/1]; EPSRC [EP/K006924/1, EP/F007566/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX This work was funded through the Technology Strategy Board Design for
   Future Climate: Design for Future Climate 2 competition and the UK
   Engineering and Physical Science Research Council as part of the
   ReVISIONS consortia (EP/F007566/1) under the Sustainable Urban
   Environment programme.
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NR 29
TC 23
Z9 24
U1 1
U2 13
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PY 2014
VL 5
IS 4
BP 526
EP 539
DI 10.2166/wcc.2014.080
PG 14
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA AW6YQ
UT WOS:000346412000004
OA Green Submitted, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wu, JG
   Li, GQ
AF Wu, Jianguo
   Li, Guoqi
TI Detection of changes in local-scale statistical distribution of daily
   temperature and precipitation in dryland region: a case study of
   Ningxia, China
SO ARID LAND RESEARCH AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Climate change; detection; dryland; Ningxia; precipitation; statistical
   distribution; temperature
ID DAILY RAINFALL REGIME; REASSESSING CHANGES; DATA SET; TRENDS; EXTREMES;
   IMPACTS; VARIABILITY; CHOICE; RANGE; SPAIN
AB Identifying alterations in the local-scale statistical distributions of daily temperature indices and precipitation is crucial for adapting to climate change and combating desertification in arid regions. This study focuses on Ningxia, a representative dryland area in China, where we investigated changes in the statistical distributions of daily temperature and precipitation across ten weather stations over two 30-year periods: 1991-2020 compared to 1961-1990. From 1961 to 2020, annual air temperature indices (mean, maximum, and minimum) exhibited a significant upward trend at all ten weather stations (P < 0.05). Specifically, when comparing the decades of 1961-1970 with those of 2001-2020, annual air temperature indices increased by 1.2-2.2 degrees C for annual air temperatures, by 0.91-1.97 degrees C for maximum air temperature, and by 1.26-3.28 degrees C for minimum air temperature; these corresponded to rates of increase ranging from 0.20-0.40 degrees C per decade for mean air temperatures, from 0.15-0.33 degrees C per decade for maximum air temperatures, and from 0.21-0.55 degrees C per decade for minimum air temperatures, respectively during this period. The observed differences in the statistical distributions of daily temperature indices between the two periods were statistically significant (P < 0.05), indicating an increase rate of approximately 1 degrees C during the period from 1991 to 2020 relative to that from 1961 to 1990 across various weather stations. In contrast, there were no significant increasing or decreasing trends in annual precipitation (P > 0.05). Similarly, the changes in statistical distributions of daily precipitation also did not reach a significance level (P > 0.05) when comparing data from both periods within these stations. Furthermore, the correlation coefficients between daily temperature indices and daily precipitation have decreased across these stations during the later period compared to earlier years. These findings suggest that while there has been a notable shift toward higher values in the statistical distribution of daily temperature indices-indicating rising temperatures-the corresponding distribution patterns for daily precipitation have remained relatively stable between these time frames. Consequently, this research confirmed an escalation in localized drought conditions within certain dryland areas despite broader regional trends toward humidification observed over recent decades; thus implying an increased risk of desertification as aridity intensifies.
C1 [Wu, Jianguo] Chinese Res Inst Environm Sci, Inst Ecol, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Li, Guoqi] Ningxia Univ, Key Lab Recovery & Restorat Degraded Ecosyst North, Minist Educ, Yinchuan, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences; Ningxia University
RP Wu, JG (corresponding author), Chinese Res Inst Environm Sci, Inst Ecol, 8 da Yang Fang, Beijing 100012, Peoples R China.
EM wujg@craes.org.cn
FU National Key Research and Development Project [2022YFF0802304]; Projects
   of National Science and Technology Basic Resources Survey Special
   [2019FY101606]; Ministry of Science and Technology of the People's
   Republic of China
FX This work was supported by the National Key Research and Development
   Project [2022YFF0802304] and the Projects of National Science and
   Technology Basic Resources Survey Special [2019FY101606]. Jianguo Wu has
   received research support from the Ministry of Science and Technology of
   the People's Republic of China.
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NR 83
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 1532-4982
EI 1532-4990
J9 ARID LAND RES MANAG
JI Arid Land Res. Manag.
PD 2024 OCT 26
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/15324982.2024.2417746
EA OCT 2024
PG 37
WC Environmental Sciences; Soil Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Agriculture
GA K4K0J
UT WOS:001343568200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tao, FL
   Zhang, LL
   Zhang, Z
   Chen, Y
AF Tao, Fulu
   Zhang, Liangliang
   Zhang, Zhao
   Chen, Yi
TI Climate warming outweighed agricultural managements in affecting wheat
   phenology across China during 1981-2018
SO AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Agricultural managements; Adaptation; climate change; Crop cultivars;
   Phenology; Sowing date
ID PAST 3 DECADES; CROP MANAGEMENT; CULTIVAR SHIFTS; GROWTH DURATION;
   TEMPERATURE; IMPACTS; RICE; DAYTIME; MAIZE; RESPONSES
AB Investigating crop phenology change has important implications to understand crop response and adaptation to climate change. The spatiotemporal changes of wheat phenology had been investigated before, nevertheless some key scientific questions remain inconclusive. Here, the updated phenological observations with the longest time period (1981-2018) and the largest number of records (7,659 records at 357 stations) for wheat in China were applied to investigate whether the response of wheat phenology to recent climate warming declined, how wheat responded to asymmetric warming, and how different drivers affected wheat phenology change. The results showed wheat sowing date delayed but heading and maturity date advanced generally during 1981-2018. Trends in wheat sowing date, heading date, maturity date, vegetative growing period (VGP), reproductive growing period (RGP) and whole growing period (GP) between 1981-1999 and 2000-2018 changed heterogeneously across the agro-ecological zones. This inconsistence may be ascribed to the compound impacts of climate change and agricultural managements such as cultivar shifts. Climate warming impacts on GP increased for winter wheat but declined for spring wheat in most regions from 1981-1999 to 2000-2018. Daily minimum temperature increased more than mean and maximum temperature, however VGP, RGP and GP were more sensitive to mean and maximum temperature than to minimum temperature. Maximum and minimum temperature had contrasting effects. Spring wheat was more sensitive to temperature than winter wheat, and RGP was more sensitive to temperature than VGP and GP because the later was also subject to photoperiod and vernalization. During 1981-2018, climate warming shortened GP on average by 4.2 and 4.6 days/decade for winter and spring wheat, respectively. Cultivar shifts prolonged it by 2.0 and 2.9 days/decade, respectively. Changes in sowing date shortened it on average by 0.5 and 0.4 days/decade, respectively. The effects of other factors such as fertilization and irrigation changed it on average by 0.1 and -0.3 days/decade, respectively. And the effects of all agricultural managements together prolonged it on average by 1.6 and 2.4 days/decade, respectively. Our findings provide new insights into the spatiotemporal changes of wheat phenology, as well as their drivers, across China in the past four decades.
C1 [Tao, Fulu; Chen, Yi] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Land Surface Pattern & Simulat, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Liangliang; Zhang, Zhao] Beijing Normal Univ, Sch Natl Secur & Emergency Management, Acad Disaster Reduct & Emergency Management, Minist Emergency Management, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Liangliang; Zhang, Zhao] Beijing Normal Univ, Sch Natl Secur & Emergency Management, Minist Educ, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Tao, Fulu; Chen, Yi] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Resources & Environm, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.
   [Tao, Fulu] Nat Resources Inst Finland Luke, Helsinki 00790, Finland.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences & Natural
   Resources Research, CAS; Beijing Normal University; Beijing Normal
   University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy
   of Sciences, CAS; Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke)
RP Tao, FL (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Land Surface Pattern & Simulat, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.; Tao, FL (corresponding author), Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Resources & Environm, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.; Tao, FL (corresponding author), Nat Resources Inst Finland Luke, Helsinki 00790, Finland.
EM taofl@igsnrr.ac.cn
RI 张|Zhang, 朝|Zhao/AAF-8815-2019
OI Tao, F/0000-0001-8574-0080
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [31761143006, 42061144003,
   41977405]
FX Acknowledgments This work was supported by the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China (No. 31761143006, 42061144003, 41977405) .
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NR 31
TC 35
Z9 37
U1 13
U2 81
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0168-1923
EI 1873-2240
J9 AGR FOREST METEOROL
JI Agric. For. Meteorol.
PD APR 1
PY 2022
VL 316
AR 108865
DI 10.1016/j.agrformet.2022.108865
EA FEB 2022
PG 12
WC Agronomy; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 1G5PU
UT WOS:000795900600004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Singh, A
   Billa, L
   Sokoto, MB
   Lado, A
   Abdoul-Aziz, MI
   Singh, S
AF Singh, A.
   Billa, L.
   Sokoto, M. B.
   Lado, A.
   Abdoul-Aziz, M. I.
   Singh, S.
BE Edwards, D
   Oldroyd, G
TI Temperature and Precipitation Changes and Possible Threats to Crop
   Production in Arid, Semi-Arid and Tropical Forest Environment
SO AGRICULTURE AND CLIMATE CHANGE - ADAPTING CROPS TO INCREASED UNCERTAINTY
   (AGRI 2015)
SE Procedia Environmental Sciences
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 4th International Conference on Agriculture and Horticulture (AGRI)
CY FEB 15-17, 2015
CL Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS
DE Climate Change; Tempeature; Precipitation; Arid Climate; Semi-Arid
   Climate; Dry sub-humid climate; Tropical Forest; Crop Production
AB Changing climate presents one of the most challenging threats to food crop production throughout the agro-ecologies. Annual food crops on which we rely most on are sensitive to temperature and precipitation change as it not only affects the temperature and moisture of the surroundings but affects the levels in soils as well. While climate change will have global impacts on crop production, regional variation will be play significant role in tackling climate change problem. This study examines 10-30 years data on the regional variation in temperature and precipitation from one location each in Arid and semi-Arid climate, one location in Dry sub-Humid climate and six locations in the Tropical Forest climate. The data collected were critically analysed using 5-10 years moving average plots, linear trend analysis and t-test using SPSS (R) software. Depending on the location, results showed significant (P<0.05) increase in temperature ranging from 0.015-0.045 degrees C. Increase was mostly in the last 5-10 years compared to 1983-1990. Also, this increment was higher in semi-Arid & Dry-humid climate (0.044-0.087 degrees C) than in Tropical rainforest where the increase was 0.015 degrees C. No significant (P>0.05) increase in temperature was observed in the Arid climate in the last 10 years. In tropical rainforest climate, increase in temperature (0.044 degrees C) was higher in the metropolis area than the countryside. From the locations examined in this study, there was no significant change in the precipitation pattern in the last 10-30 years. Simple plots overlaying temperature changes on crop production data revealed mixed response. Groundnut (Arachis hypogea), Bambara groundnut (Vigna subterannea) and hungry rice (Digeteria exilis) showed tolerance to increased temperatures in the Semi-Arid tropics. Rice (Oryza sativa) in Tropical Malaysia showed increased in yield with temperature. What may be important to note here is the resilience of the genotypes to temperature changes so that these genotypes could be further studied for adaptation to climate change. No doubt that there is evidence of increase in temperature, regional variations will exist and will play an important role in mitigating climate change. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license
C1 [Singh, A.] Univ Nottingham, Sch Biosci, Malaysia Campus, Semenyih 43500, Selangor, Malaysia.
   [Billa, L.] Univ Nottingham, Sch Geog, Malaysia Campus, Semenyih 43500, Selangor, Malaysia.
   [Sokoto, M. B.] Usmanu Danfodiyo Univ, Dept Crop Sci, Sokoto, Nigeria.
   [Lado, A.] Bayero Univ, Dept Agron, Kano, Nigeria.
   [Abdoul-Aziz, M. I.] Welthungerhilfe Niger, BP 12 224, Niamey, Niger.
   [Singh, S.] Usmanu Danfodiyo Univ Teaching Hosp, Dept Obs & Gyn, Sokoto, Nigeria.
C3 University of Nottingham Malaysia; University of Nottingham Malaysia;
   Bayero University
RP Singh, A (corresponding author), Univ Nottingham, Sch Biosci, Malaysia Campus, Semenyih 43500, Selangor, Malaysia.
RI Singh, Ajit/N-9235-2015; Billa, Lawal/M-9523-2015
CR Christensen JH, 2007, AR4 CLIMATE CHANGE 2007: THE PHYSICAL SCIENCE BASIS, P847
   David P., 1993, Forum for Applied Research and Public Policy, V8, P54
NR 2
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 13
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1878-0296
J9 PROCEDIA ENVIRON SCI
PY 2015
VL 29
BP 26
EP 27
DI 10.1016/j.proenv.2015.07.137
PG 2
WC Agronomy
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture
GA BF4HW
UT WOS:000380953000015
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhao, JF
   Guo, JP
AF Zhao, Junfang
   Guo, Jianping
TI Multidecadal changes in moisture condition during climatic growing
   period of crops in Northeast China
SO PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY OF THE EARTH
LA English
DT Article
DE Multidecadal changes; Precipitation; Reference crop evapotranspiration;
   Relative moisture index; Climatic growth period; Northeast China
ID REFERENCE EVAPOTRANSPIRATION; PAN EVAPORATION; FOOD SECURITY; SPRING
   MAIZE; RIVER-BASIN; VARIABLES; TRENDS; YIELD; WATER
AB Investigating the spatiotemporal dynamics of agricultural water status during crop growth season can provide scientific evidences for more efficient use of water resources and sustainable development of agricultural production under climate change. In this study, the following were used to evaluate the multidecadal changes in moisture condition during climatic growth period of crops in Northeast China from 1961 to 2010: (1) the daily climate variables gathered from 101 meteorological stations in Northeast China for 1961-2010; (2) FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization) Penman-Monteith equation; (3) 80% guaranteed probability for agro-climatic indicators; and (4) the daily average temperature stably passing 0 degrees C, which is the threshold temperature of climatic growth period for crops. Reference crop evapotranspiration (ET0) and relative moisture index were further calculated. The results showed that Northeast China's climate in the main agricultural areas over the past 50 years was warmer and drier in general, with a growing range and intensity of drought. From 1961 to 2010, when the daily average temperature stably passed 0 degrees C, the average annual total precipitation (P) and ET with 80% guaranteed probability in Northeast China both emerged as decreasing trends with averages of 555.0 mm and 993.7 mm, respectively. However, the decline in P was greater than that of annual total ET0. As a result, the annual relative moisture indices sharply decreased with an average of -0.44, mostly fluctuating from -0.59 to -0.25. As far as spatial distributions were concerned, the inter-regional reductions in P and relative moisture index over the past 50 years were conspicuous, especially in some agricultural areas of central Heilong,jiang Province, northeastern Jilin Province and northeastern Liaoning Province. On the contrary, ET obviously increased in some agricultural areas of central and northwestern Heilongjiang Province (eg. Qiqiha'er, Shuangyashan, Hegang, Suihua, etc.), and northeastern Jilin Province (eg. Baicheng). This indicated that drought existed and was unfavorable for crop growth and development, especially during the period of 2001-2010. This finding revealed that drought was still one of the most important agricultural meteorological disasters in Northeast China. Some countermeasures should be formulated to adapt to climate change. Our findings have important implications for improving climate change impact studies, for breeding scientists to breed higher yielding cultivars, and for agricultural production to cope with ongoing climate change. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Zhao, Junfang; Guo, Jianping] Chinese Acad Meteorol Sci, Beijing 10081, Peoples R China.
   [Zhao, Junfang] Univ Missouri, Sch Nat Resources, Columbia, MO 65201 USA.
C3 China Meteorological Administration; Chinese Academy of Meteorological
   Sciences (CAMS); University of Missouri System; University of Missouri
   Columbia
RP Zhao, JF (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Meteorol Sci, Beijing 10081, Peoples R China.
EM zhaojfcams@163.com
RI Guo, Jianping/K-1497-2017
OI Guo, Jianping/0000-0001-8530-8976
FU China Meteorological Administration Special Public Welfare Research Fund
   [GYHY201506016]; China Meteorological Administration Special Climate
   Change Research Fund [CCSF201346]; CAMS Basic Research Funds-regular
   [2013Z008]
FX This work was supported by the China Meteorological Administration
   Special Public Welfare Research Fund (GYHY201506016), the China
   Meteorological Administration Special Climate Change Research Fund (No.
   CCSF201346) and the CAMS Basic Research Funds-regular (No. 2013Z008). We
   thank the editors of the journal and the anonymous reviewers for their
   useful and detailed comments and suggestions to improve the original
   submission. Special thanks also go to Dr. Mark Morgan, Parks, Recreation
   and Tourism of School of Natural Resources, University of Missouri, USA,
   for his zealous help in improving the manuscript.
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NR 42
TC 8
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 33
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 1474-7065
EI 1873-5193
J9 PHYS CHEM EARTH
JI Phys. Chem. Earth
PY 2015
VL 87-88
BP 28
EP 42
DI 10.1016/j.pce.2015.07.011
PG 15
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA DA3LB
UT WOS:000367697200005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Berg, A
   de Noblet-Ducoudré, N
   Sultan, B
   Lengaigne, M
   Guimberteau, M
AF Berg, A.
   de Noblet-Ducoudre, N.
   Sultan, B.
   Lengaigne, M.
   Guimberteau, M.
TI Projections of climate change impacts on potential C4 crop productivity
   over tropical regions
SO AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Agriculture; Impacts; Tropics; C4 crops; Africa
ID ATMOSPHERIC CARBON-DIOXIDE; FERTILIZER USE; ELEVATED CO2; YIELD; FOOD;
   AGRICULTURE; FUTURE; MODEL; 20TH-CENTURY; VARIABILITY
AB Climate change impacts on agriculture could arguably be most critical for developing countries in tropical regions: their populations rely importantly on agriculture and climate-dependant resources, poverty limits their capacity to anticipate and adapt to climate change, and population increase already poses a serious challenge to food security in those regions. Current projections of climate change impacts on tropical crop yields, even though on average negative, remain largely uncertain: there is need for more consistent, large-scale, quantitative assessments.
   In this study we use a newly developed agro-DGVM (Dynamical Global Vegetation Model including an explicit representation of croplands) driven by projections from several climate models and two SRES scenarios to evaluate climate change impacts on potential C4 crop productivity over Africa and India from 1960 to 2100. We specifically separate the effect of increasing atmospheric CO2 levels. We perform transient simulations directly forced by climate model outputs: to preserve consistency in the analysis despite regional biases in climate models, we analyze yield change on a bioclimatic basis (using the Koppen classification) rather than on a geographical basis. We find that the potential productivity of one of the most important staple crops in those regions, millet, will overall decrease, on average over all models and scenarios, by -6% (individual model projections ranging from -29% to +11%). The bioclimatic analysis allows us to highlight the main climate drivers of these changes. The main impact is a moderate but robust temperature-driven yield decrease over Equatorial and Temperate Koppen zones; larger but much more inconsistent yield changes occur in Arid Koppen zones, reflecting the uncertainty in precipitation projections from climate models. The uncertainty in aggregated impacts reflects the uncertainty over these areas, underlining the need to narrow the uncertainty in precipitation projections over dry areas if more reliable agricultural impact assessments over tropical regions are to be provided. Our results are also consistent with the limited magnitude of the impact of increased atmospheric CO2 levels on C4 crop yields described in the literature. While such climatic impacts further increase the challenge of achieving future food security in developing countries in the Tropics, most of these impacts can arguably be mitigated through adaptation measures and improved agricultural practices. (c) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Berg, A.; Sultan, B.; Lengaigne, M.; Guimberteau, M.] LOCEAN IPSL, Paris, France.
   [Berg, A.; de Noblet-Ducoudre, N.] LSCE IPSL, Gif Sur Yvette, France.
C3 Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN); Sorbonne Universite;
   Universite Paris Saclay
RP Berg, A (corresponding author), Princeton Univ, GFDL, Forrestal Campus,201 Forrestal Rd, Princeton, NJ 08540 USA.
EM alexis.berg@noaa.gov
RI Lengaigne, Matthieu/K-4345-2013; de NOBLET, Nathalie/O-8613-2015;
   Lengaigne, Matthieu/M-8321-2014; Sultan, Benjamin/C-8957-2012
OI Lengaigne, Matthieu/0000-0002-0044-036X; Guimberteau,
   Matthieu/0000-0001-8582-6087; Sultan, Benjamin/0000-0003-0416-0338
FU Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy; Ile-de-France Region
FX We acknowledge the modeling groups, the Program for Climate Model
   Diagnosis and Intercomparison (PCMDI) and the WCRP's Working Group on
   Coupled Modelling (WGCM) for their roles in making available the WCRP
   CMIP3 multi-model dataset. Support of this dataset is provided by the
   Office of Science, U.S. Department of Energy. The work of Alexis Berg
   was funded by the Ile-de-France Region PhD funding program.
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NR 52
TC 70
Z9 76
U1 1
U2 125
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0168-1923
EI 1873-2240
J9 AGR FOREST METEOROL
JI Agric. For. Meteorol.
PD MAR 15
PY 2013
VL 170
SI SI
BP 89
EP 102
DI 10.1016/j.agrformet.2011.12.003
PG 14
WC Agronomy; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 098JX
UT WOS:000315546700010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Antoci, A
   Borghesi, S
   Galdi, G
   Sodini, M
   Ticci, E
AF Antoci, Angelo
   Borghesi, Simone
   Galdi, Giulio
   Sodini, Mauro
   Ticci, Elisa
TI Maladaptation in an unequal world: an evolutionary model with
   heterogeneous agents
SO ANNALS OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Maladaptation; Inequality; Negative externalities; Economic growth;
   North-South interactions; C70; D62; O13; O40; Q20
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; NATURAL-RESOURCES; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; CURSE;
   POPULATION; OUTCOMES; POVERTY
AB Maladaptation is steadily increasing its presence in agenda and debates about climate change and its impacts. The term denotes actions undertaken, at the individual or collective level, to defend against the adverse effects of climate change or environmental degradation, but that ultimately exacerbate the underlying risk factors. In this paper, we investigate the effects of maladaptation in terms of well-being and inequality in a two-population (North-South) evolutionary model. While agents in the South often face higher vulnerability to environmental degradation and limited defense mechanisms compared to their Northern counterparts, the latter stand to endure greater economic losses, in absolute terms. Our model demonstrates that the diffusion of maladaptive choices could result in a Pareto-dominated steady state, influencing inequality levels positively or negatively based on the scale of maladaptation impacts relative to the existing environmental degradation. These findings stress the imperative of integrating environmental risk studies with maladaptive effects and dynamics. Additionally, they advocate for international discourse not only on climate change mitigation but also on adaptive measures among countries.
C1 [Antoci, Angelo] Univ Sassari, Dept Econ & Business, Via Francesco Muroni 25, I-07100 Sassari, Italy.
   [Borghesi, Simone] European Univ Inst, Florence Sch Regulat, Via Giovanni Boccaccio 121, I-50133 Firenze FI, Italy.
   [Borghesi, Simone; Ticci, Elisa] Univ Siena, Dept Polit & Int Sci, Via Pier Andrea Mattioli 10, I-53100 Siena, Italy.
   [Galdi, Giulio] Univ Trento, Dept Econ & Management, Via Vigilio Inama 5, I-38122 Trento, Italy.
   [Sodini, Mauro] Univ Naples Federico II, Dept Law, Via Porta Massa 32, I-80133 Naples, Italy.
   [Sodini, Mauro] Tech Univ Ostrava, Fac Econ, Dept Finance, Sokolskastr 2416, Ostrava 70200, Czech Republic.
C3 University of Sassari; European University Institute; University of
   Siena; University of Trento; University of Naples Federico II; Technical
   University of Ostrava
RP Borghesi, S (corresponding author), European Univ Inst, Florence Sch Regulat, Via Giovanni Boccaccio 121, I-50133 Firenze FI, Italy.; Borghesi, S (corresponding author), Univ Siena, Dept Polit & Int Sci, Via Pier Andrea Mattioli 10, I-53100 Siena, Italy.
EM antoci@uniss.it; simone.borghesi@unisi.it; giulio.galdi@unitn.it;
   mauro.sodini@unina.it; ticci4@unisi.it
RI Antoci, Angelo/AAG-2800-2021; Galdi, Giulio/AAE-8471-2021; Sodini,
   Mauro/R-1776-2016; Borghesi, Simone/B-7143-2012
OI BORGHESI, SIMONE/0000-0002-7419-1212; Galdi, Giulio/0000-0002-0038-373X
FU MUR [23-06282S]; University of Siena under the PSR (Piano Sostegno alla
   Ricerca) support scheme; Czech Science Foundation (GACR) [SP2024/003];
   SGS Research Project of VSB Technical University of Ostrava
   [DR/2022/2055]; European Union under the REFRESH - Research Excellence
   For REgion Sustainability and Hightech Industries; Project "The Impact
   of Crises on Complex Spatial Economic Systems (ICCSES)", Programma FRA
   2022 - Universita di Napoli 'Federico II'; Universita degli Studi di
   Siena;  [20227N3BMK];  [CZ. 10.03.01/00/22_003/0000048]
FX Angelo Antoci gratefully acknowledges financial support from MUR.(PRIN:
   PROGETTI DI RICERCA DI RILEVANTE INTERESSE NAZIONALE - Bando 2022, Prot.
   20227N3BMK). Simone Borghesi and Elisa Ticci gratefully acknowledge
   financial support from the University of Siena under the PSR (Piano
   Sostegno alla Ricerca) support scheme. Mauro Sodini would like to thank
   the Czech Science Foundation (GACR) under the Project 23-06282S and SGS
   Research Project SP2024/003 of VSB Technical University of Ostrava for
   financial support of this work and the financial support of the European
   Union under the REFRESH - Research Excellence For REgion Sustainability
   and Hightech Industries project number CZ. 10.03.01/00/22_003/0000048
   via the Operational Programme Just Transition. Mauro Sodini also
   acknowledges support within the project "The Impact of Crises on Complex
   Spatial Economic Systems (ICCSES)", Programma FRA 2022 - Universita di
   Napoli 'Federico II' (DR/2022/2055 del 17/05/2022). Finally, the authors
   are grateful to the anonymous reviewers and the participants in the 28th
   Annual Conference of the European Association of Environmental and
   Resource Economists (Cyprus, 27-30 June 2023) for their valuable
   feedback on earlier drafts of this paper.Open access funding provided by
   Universita degli Studi di Siena within the CRUI-CARE Agreement.
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NR 55
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 5
U2 9
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0254-5330
EI 1572-9338
J9 ANN OPER RES
JI Ann. Oper. Res.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 337
IS 3
SI SI
BP 1089
EP 1110
DI 10.1007/s10479-024-05863-3
EA MAR 2024
PG 22
WC Operations Research & Management Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Operations Research & Management Science
GA TT1P0
UT WOS:001171468700001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barreira, AP
   Andraz, J
   Ferreira, V
   Panagopoulos, T
AF Barreira, Ana Paula
   Andraz, Jorge
   Ferreira, Vera
   Panagopoulos, Thomas
TI Relevance of ecosystem services and disservices from green
   infrastructure perceived by the inhabitants of two Portuguese cities
   dealing with climate change: implications for environmental and
   intersectional justice
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE environmental justice; intersectional justice; green infrastructure;
   ecosystem disservices; perception of inhabitants; climate change
   adaptation
ID URBAN; BENEFITS; RESIDENTS; HEALTH; COSTS; SPACE
AB Green infrastructure provides ecosystem services (ESs) and disservices (EDSs), although EDSs are understudied. By considering both, this study contributes to the literature. The inhabitants' perception of the importance of ESs/EDSs is assessed through a survey in two Portuguese cities facing extreme climatic events. "Heat reduction" and "contact with nature" are the most perceived ESs while "risk of fire" and "excessive water consumption" are the most perceived EDSs, respectively, in Elvas and Faro. Using rank-ordered logistic regression models, this study finds that the relevance of ESs/EDSs is perceived differently throughout the different areas of the cities, with Elvas revealing the highest signs of environmental injustice, since the importance of ESs is perceived differently by the inhabitants, specifically those inhabiting impoverished areas. The inhabitants perceiving heatwaves acknowledge less relevance to some ESs and more relevance to several EDSs. Gender, age, and income affect the perceived relevance of some ESs/EDSs, signalling intersectional injustice.
C1 [Barreira, Ana Paula; Andraz, Jorge] Univ Algarve, Faro, Portugal.
   [Ferreira, Vera] Univ Algarve, Res Ctr Tourism Sustainabil & Well being, Faro, Portugal.
   [Panagopoulos, Thomas] Univ Algarve, Fac Sci & Technol, Faro, Portugal.
C3 Universidade do Algarve; Universidade do Algarve; Universidade do
   Algarve
RP Panagopoulos, T (corresponding author), Univ Algarve, Fac Sci & Technol, Faro, Portugal.
EM tpanago@ualg.pt
RI Ferreira, Vera/AAV-6616-2021; Panagopoulos, Thomas/A-3048-2012;
   Barreira, Ana Paula/N-7034-2015; Andraz, Jorge/B-5858-2009
OI Panagopoulos, Thomas/0000-0002-8073-2097; Barreira, Ana
   Paula/0000-0001-5816-3361; Andraz, Jorge/0000-0001-9209-3344
FU Improving life in a changing urban environment through Biophilic Design
FX No Statement Available
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NR 46
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 13
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-0568
EI 1360-0559
J9 J ENVIRON PLANN MAN
JI J. Environ. Plan. Manag.
PD 2023 NOV 24
PY 2023
DI 10.1080/09640568.2023.2286927
EA NOV 2023
PG 31
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA AZ8W8
UT WOS:001122369200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kim, SM
   Mendelsohn, R
AF Kim, Seung Min
   Mendelsohn, Robert
TI Climate change to increase crop failure in US
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; agriculture; extreme weather events; climate change
   adaptation; climate risk
ID TEMPERATURE; YIELDS; DAMAGES; IMPACTS; WHEAT
AB The literature has documented that climate change is likely to reduce crop yields of harvested acres in the United States. This study uses panel data methods to document that climate change could also reduce harvested area. We find that 'crop failures' are sensitive to spring and fall temperature conditions. Using perturbations of temperature and precipitation conditions, we show that a uniform 1 C-circle increase in temperature across the U.S. with no adaptation is expected to cause about 3.2 million additional failed acres in the United States, which is equal to a 0.9% decline in acreage. These harmful impacts are predicted to be stronger in the southern than northern United States. For illustrative purposes, we also examine a uniform 3 C-circle warming scenario with no adaptation, and project that damage increases to 11 million lost acres, about a 3% decrease in crop acreage. Projected increases in local precipitation have little effect. The effect of crop failure must be added to previously measured reductions in crop yields from harvested acres, implying climate change is likely to be more harmful to American crop production than previously thought.
C1 [Kim, Seung Min; Mendelsohn, Robert] Yale Univ, Sch Environm, 195 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511 USA.
C3 Yale University
RP Mendelsohn, R (corresponding author), Yale Univ, Sch Environm, 195 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511 USA.
EM robert.mendelsohn@yale.edu
RI Mendelsohn, Robert/GZA-9112-2022
OI Kim, Seung Min/0000-0002-5110-2651
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NR 33
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 5
U2 28
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD JAN 1
PY 2023
VL 18
IS 1
AR 014014
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/acac41
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 7T9IX
UT WOS:000911754600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bradley, S
   Mahmoud, IH
   Arlati, A
AF Bradley, Sean
   Mahmoud, Israa H.
   Arlati, Alessandro
TI Integrated Collaborative Governance Approaches towards Urban
   Transformation: Experiences from the CLEVER Cities Project
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE nature-based solutions; shared governance; urban regeneration;
   governance models; urban transformation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ACTOR ROLES; LIVING LABS; SUSTAINABILITY;
   MODES
AB Within the framework of CLEVER Cities Horizon 2020, London, Milan, and Hamburg are putting in place nine Urban Living Labs in order to implement Nature-based Solutions that address urban challenges in socially disadvantaged neighborhoods. In this article, the means by which co-creation processes and pathways may lead to innovation in governance structures are considered. Through a comparative case study analysis, this research aims to identify integrated, collaborative governance frameworks that are complex and adaptive, as well as reflect the actual changes in governance in cities. Herein, ULLs are intended not just as a vehicle for place-based urban regeneration but also as a starting point for collaborative governance. In this article, it is considered how co-creation pathways may lead to innovation in current local governance structures and achieve transformational change. This paper analyzes the collaborative governance dynamic models at three points in time in the three cities. It is also considered how co-creation pathways may lead to innovation in current local governance structures and achieve transformational change.
C1 [Bradley, Sean] Groundwork London, CLEVER Cities Programme, 18-21 Morley St, London SE1 7QZ, England.
   [Mahmoud, Israa H.] Politecn Milan, Dept Architecture & Urban Studies DAStU, Lab Simulaz Urbana Fausto Curti, Via Bonardi 3, I-20133 Milan, Italy.
   [Arlati, Alessandro] HafenCity Univ Hamburg, Dept Urban Planning & Reg Dev, Henning Voscherau Pl 1, D-20457 Hamburg, Germany.
C3 Polytechnic University of Milan
RP Mahmoud, IH (corresponding author), Politecn Milan, Dept Architecture & Urban Studies DAStU, Lab Simulaz Urbana Fausto Curti, Via Bonardi 3, I-20133 Milan, Italy.; Arlati, A (corresponding author), HafenCity Univ Hamburg, Dept Urban Planning & Reg Dev, Henning Voscherau Pl 1, D-20457 Hamburg, Germany.
EM israa.mahmoud@polimi.it; alessandro.arlati@hcu-hamburg.de
RI Arlati, Alessandro/LDG-6169-2024; Mahmoud, Israa/ACT-3523-2022
OI Bradley, Sean/0000-0002-8796-8852; Mahmoud, Israa/0000-0003-0161-6096;
   Arlati, Alessandro/0000-0003-3335-6612
FU European Union; HafenCity Universitaet [776604]; Politecnico di Milano;
   CLEVER Cities project
FX This document has been prepared in the framework of the European project
   CLEVER Cities. This project has received funding from the European
   Union's Horizon 2020 innovation action program under grant agreement no.
   776604. The APC was partially funded as of: 10% from HafenCity
   Universitaet, 30% by Politecnico di Milano and the rest of 60% by CLEVER
   Cities project under grant agreement no. 776604. The sole responsibility
   for the content of this publication lies with the authors.
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NR 47
TC 15
Z9 16
U1 11
U2 43
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 23
AR 15566
DI 10.3390/su142315566
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6Y7CN
UT WOS:000897248900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Moscovici, D
AF Moscovici, Daniel
TI Ski Resort Closures and Opportunities for Sustainability in North
   America
SO LAND
LA English
DT Article
DE ski resorts; sustainable skiing; climate change; mountain development;
   winter tourism
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; SNOW PRODUCTION; WATER-QUALITY; IMPACTS; SOIL;
   VULNERABILITY; CONSERVATION; CONSUMPTION; ADAPTATION; RECREATION
AB More than half of the ski resorts in North America have closed since the early building booms-many facing a warming climate and pressures to find water to make artificial snow. Researching and documenting all resorts between 1969-2019, we find that 59% of all resorts in North America have closed since the resort boom of the 1960s and 70s (65% in the United States, 31% in Canada). This shift has left some states or provinces with only one or no resorts remaining. To proactively persevere with a variable climate, less water, and a need for more energy to make snow, we suggest mountains holistically plan for sustainability. Recommendations include third party environmental certification, commitment to sustainability at the management level, communication to customers about sustainability practices and implementing unique models for remaining open and competitive. These practices include resort consolidation, multi-mountain passes, and/or unique ownership models. We believe that ski resorts must focus on positive environmental practices, sustainability planning, and climate change adaptation if they want to remain viable and competitive in the coming decades.
C1 [Moscovici, Daniel] Stockton Univ, Dept Environm Studies & Sustainabil, Atlantic City, NJ 08205 USA.
C3 Stockton University
RP Moscovici, D (corresponding author), Stockton Univ, Dept Environm Studies & Sustainabil, Atlantic City, NJ 08205 USA.
EM daniel.moscovici@stockton.edu
OI Moscovici, Daniel/0000-0002-1831-4855
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NR 89
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 4
U2 44
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-445X
J9 LAND-BASEL
JI Land
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 11
IS 4
AR 494
DI 10.3390/land11040494
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 0R3MQ
UT WOS:000785504000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Estrela-Segrelles, C
   Mocholi-Paredes, C
   Pérez-Martín, MA
AF Estrela-Segrelles, Clara
   Mocholi-Paredes, Cristina
   Angel Perez-Martin, Miguel
BE Ortega-Sanchez, M
TI Impact of Climate Change on Cold-Water Fish Species. Application in the
   Jucar River Basin District
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 39TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 39th IAHR World Congress on From Snow to Sea
CY JUN 19-24, 2022
CL Ctr Studies & Experimentat Publ Works, Spain Water, Granada, SPAIN
SP Univ Granada, Minist Ecol Transit & Demog Challenge, Gen Directorate Coast & Sea, Minist Ecol Transit & Demog Challenge, Gen Directorate Water, China Inst Water Resources & Hydropower Res, Int Assoc Hydro Environm Engn & Res
HO Ctr Studies & Experimentat Publ Works, Spain Water
DE Climate change; Brown trout; Resilience; Risk assessment
AB Human influence has warmed the atmosphere. The temperature variation causes an increase in water bodies temperature, which will reduce the available habitat of cold-water fish species such as Salmonids. The potential habitat of this species will be reduced due to a displacement of the thermal barrier, which is defined as the maximum temperature fish species can tolerate. This work carries out a risk assessment of the climate change impact on salmo trutta potential habitat in Jucar River Basin District (JRBD). RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5 emission scenarios have been used for the short term (2011 - 2040), medium term (2041 - 2070) and long term (2071 - 2100). This impact has been studied in two water bodies located in the Mijares and the Turia rivers. Mijares has been classified as very high risk whereas Turia has been classified as high risk. The riparian vegetation state plays a relevant role in the resilience of water bodies. Climate change adaptation measures are focused on reduce vulnerability and improve resilience. For this impact, restoration of riverbank vegetation is established as the main adaptation measure and should be applied firstly in very high risk water bodies.
C1 [Estrela-Segrelles, Clara] Diputacio Castello, Castellon de La Plana, Spain.
   [Mocholi-Paredes, Cristina; Angel Perez-Martin, Miguel] Univ Politecn Valencia, Res Inst Water & Environm Engn IIAMA, Valencia, Spain.
C3 Universitat Politecnica de Valencia
RP Estrela-Segrelles, C (corresponding author), Diputacio Castello, Castellon de La Plana, Spain.
EM claesseg@upv.es; cristinamp297@gmail.com; mperezm@hma.upv.es
RI Pérez-Martín, Miguel/J-1565-2012; Segrelles, Clara/ADB-8804-2022
FU Biodiversity Foundation of the Spanish Ministry for the Ecological
   Transition and the Demographic Challenge
FX This study has been supported by the Biodiversity Foundation of the
   Spanish Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic
   Challenge. Authors would like to thank the Spanish Climate Change Office
   and the Jucar River basin Authority for their contribution to this work.
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NR 13
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU IAHR-INT ASSOC HYDRO-ENVIRONMENT ENGINEERING RESEARCH
PI MADRID
PA PASEO BAJO VIRGEN DEL PUERTO 3, MADRID, 28005, SPAIN
BN 978-90-832612-1-8
PY 2022
BP 1943
EP 1948
DI 10.3850/IAHR-39WC2521716X2022132
PG 6
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Water Resources
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Water Resources
GA BV7PR
UT WOS:001070410602041
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU van Aalderen, N
   Horlings, LG
AF van Aalderen, Nicolien
   Horlings, Lummina Geertruida
TI Accommodative public leadership in wind energy development: Enabling
   citizens initiatives in the Netherlands
SO ENERGY POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Leadership; Citizens initiatives; Energy transition; Governance; Climate
   change; Renewable energy
ID SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; SOCIAL INNOVATION; PLACE; COPRODUCTION;
   GOVERNANCE; PARTICIPATION; PERSPECTIVE; REFLECTIONS; TRANSITION; CITIES
AB This research centers around the question: How can provincial governments take the lead in implementing an adaptive governance approach considering citizen-led wind energy development? A framework for 'accommodative leadership' was created - building on the work of Meijerink and Stiller (2013) regarding leadership in climate change adaptation, and the work of Sotarauta (2010) on place leadership. The combination of the two provides a leadership framework which aims to include both governmental actors and local citizens initiatives as potential leaders in wind energy development.
   Three cases studies in three regions of the Netherlands were assessed. The results show that provinces adopt various leadership styles, referred to as 'facilitative decentralization', 'deliberative innovation' and 'authoritative reluctance'. Our conclusion is that there is no madmap for effective accommodative leadership, as it occurs in many forms. Nonetheless the developed framework can be used by regional governments as an assessment tool to understand the roles and actions which can potentially be taken by this authority to purposefully allocate their leadership capacities, while allowing citizen-led wind energy development.
C1 [Horlings, Lummina Geertruida] Univ Groningen, Fac Spatial Sci, Dept Spatial Planning & Environm, Landleven 1, NL-9747 AD Groningen, Netherlands.
   [van Aalderen, Nicolien] KWR Water Res Inst, Groningenhaven 7, NL-3430 BB Nieuwegein, Netherlands.
C3 University of Groningen
RP Horlings, LG (corresponding author), Univ Groningen, Fac Spatial Sci, Dept Spatial Planning & Environm, Landleven 1, NL-9747 AD Groningen, Netherlands.
EM nicolien.van.aalderen@kwrwater.nl; l.g.horlings@rug.nl
OI Horlings, Lummina/0000-0002-8690-7986
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NR 57
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 3
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4215
EI 1873-6777
J9 ENERG POLICY
JI Energy Policy
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 138
AR 111249
DI 10.1016/j.enpol.2020.111249
PG 13
WC Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LD6BZ
UT WOS:000526116500001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Quandt, A
   Neufeldt, H
   McCabe, JT
AF Quandt, Amy
   Neufeldt, Henry
   McCabe, J. Terrence
TI The role of agroforestry in building livelihood resilience to floods and
   drought in semiarid Kenya
SO ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE agroforestry; climate change; drought; flood; Kenya; resilience;
   sustainable livelihoods
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; CROP DIVERSIFICATION; FOOD SECURITY; AGRICULTURE;
   VARIABILITY; NORTHERN; SYSTEMS; PERCEPTIONS; ADAPTATION; STRATEGIES
AB Climate change may create serious problems for farmers by increasing precipitation variability and drought and flood events. Understanding how to build livelihood resilience to these effects is a pressing need. Agroforestry is one potential solution. Although many people intuitively link agroforestry with livelihood resilience to floods and drought, little comprehensive empirical evidence exists. Here, we strive to answer the call for more empirical evidence by drawing on field work in Isiolo County, Kenya to ask the research question: How does agroforestry help smallholder farmers build livelihood resilience to floods and drought? We used a mixed- methods approach that included 20 qualitative case study households and 338 quantitative household surveys. Our major findings are: (1) practicing agroforestry can influence perceptions of floods and drought, (2) specific environmental and livelihood benefits of agroforestry contribute to livelihood resilience, and (3) agroforestry directly and indirectly builds livelihood resilience to floods and drought. Identifying potential climate change adaptation strategies is crucial for smallholder farmers. Our research indicates that agroforestry is one promising option.
C1 [Quandt, Amy] New Mexico State Univ, Jornada Expt Range, Las Cruces, NM 88003 USA.
   [Quandt, Amy] Univ Colorado, Sustainabil Innovat Lab Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Neufeldt, Henry] World Agroforestry Ctr, Climate Change Unit, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [McCabe, J. Terrence] Univ Colorado, Inst Behav Sci, Dept Anthropol, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
C3 New Mexico State University; University of Colorado System; University
   of Colorado Boulder; CGIAR; World Agroforestry (ICRAF); University of
   Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder
RP Quandt, A (corresponding author), New Mexico State Univ, Jornada Expt Range, Las Cruces, NM 88003 USA.; Quandt, A (corresponding author), Univ Colorado, Sustainabil Innovat Lab Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
RI Quandt, Amy/AAP-1716-2021
FU U.S. Borlaug Fellows in Global Food Security Graduate Research Grant
   [206766]; University of Colorado Boulder Libraries Open Access Fund
FX Most importantly, we acknowledge the communities of Burat and Kinna, who
   so graciously welcomed us, and the households who spent hours answering
   our endless questions. This research would not have been possible
   without the assistance of the CGIAR research program on Climate Change,
   Agriculture and Food Security; the World Agroforestry Centre in Nairobi;
   and the Kenya Red Cross Society - Isiolo Branch, in Isiolo. Red Cross
   volunteers played an integral role in all stages of data collection, and
   special thanks go to Noor Hussein. We also thank Joel Harrter, Lisa
   Dilling, Myles Osborne, and Max Boykoff for their feedback on research
   instruments. Much gratitude also goes to the University of Colorado
   Boulder. Funding: This work was supported by a U.S. Borlaug Fellows in
   Global Food Security Graduate Research Grant (#206766), which supported
   field and research costs for A. Quandt. Publication of this article was
   funded by the University of Colorado Boulder Libraries Open Access Fund.
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NR 64
TC 83
Z9 90
U1 10
U2 100
PU RESILIENCE ALLIANCE
PI WOLFVILLE
PA ACADIA UNIV, BIOLOGY DEPT, WOLFVILLE, NS B0P 1X0, CANADA
SN 1708-3087
J9 ECOL SOC
JI Ecol. Soc.
PY 2017
VL 22
IS 3
AR 10
DI 10.5751/ES-09461-220310
PG 12
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FJ7MV
UT WOS:000412944300024
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Leon-Camacho, H
   Morales-Acevedo, A
   Gandlgruber, B
AF Leon-Camacho, Horacio
   Morales-Acevedo, Arturo
   Gandlgruber, Bruno
BE Lentz, A
   Renne, D
TI Methodology for evaluating climate change adaptive capacities when using
   decentralized renewable energies
SO 2013 ISES SOLAR WORLD CONGRESS
SE Energy Procedia
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT ISES Solar World Congress (SWC)
CY NOV 03-07, 2013
CL Cancun, MEXICO
SP ISES
DE ACW; CAM; Climate Change; Decentralized Renewable Energy (DRE);
   Availability of Critical Services (ACS)
AB Extreme climatic events have already happened in different regions of our world affecting the economic resources of poor and even rich countries. As an example we can mention the recent destructive hurricanes, Katrina (2005) in New Orleans and Sandy (2012) in New York, or floods in Pakistan in 2010. Therefore, there is an increasing need for evaluating the adaptive capacities of communities, regions or even whole countries to events caused by climatic changes. In this work we address different methodologies for this purpose and give reasons for adopting the adaptive capacities wheel developed by Gupta et al. [1] as the basic way for this evaluation. We add an additional dimension to those already developed by Gupta for determining the capacity of a community for having basic services (health, communications, safety, etc.) in a situation of crisis caused by climatic changes. A climatic crisis generally affects the conventional energy infra-structure and therefore decentralized renewable energies would reduce vulnerability of the community in question. At the end we discuss the evaluation made under these assumptions for a selected community in Mexico. (c) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Leon-Camacho, Horacio; Morales-Acevedo, Arturo] IPN, Ctr Invest & Estudios Avanzados, Sci & Technol Dev Dept, Ave IPN 2508, Mexico City 07360, DF, Mexico.
   [Gandlgruber, Bruno] Univ Autonoma Metropolitana, Social Sci & Human Div, Mexico City 06760, DF, Mexico.
C3 Instituto Politecnico Nacional - Mexico; CINVESTAV - Centro de
   Investigacion y de Estudios Avanzados del Instituto Politecnico
   Nacional; Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana - Mexico
RP Leon-Camacho, H (corresponding author), IPN, Ctr Invest & Estudios Avanzados, Sci & Technol Dev Dept, Ave IPN 2508, Mexico City 07360, DF, Mexico.
EM hleon@cinvestav.mx
OI Morales-Acevedo, Arturo/0000-0003-0460-0823
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NR 29
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 9
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1876-6102
J9 ENRGY PROCED
PY 2014
VL 57
BP 791
EP +
DI 10.1016/j.egypro.2014.10.287
PG 3
WC Energy & Fuels
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels
GA BB9FL
UT WOS:000348253200086
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wei, ZX
   Li, YJ
   Dong, JH
   Cao, SH
   Ma, WL
   Wang, X
   Wang, H
   Tang, R
   Zhao, JJ
   Liu, X
   Tang, CQ
AF Wei, Zhanxi
   Li, Yingjun
   Dong, Jianhui
   Cao, Shenghong
   Ma, Wenli
   Wang, Xiao
   Wang, Hao
   Tang, Ran
   Zhao, Jianjun
   Liu, Xiao
   Tang, Chengqian
TI The Identification and Influence Factor Analysis of Landslides Using
   SBAS-InSAR Technique: A Case Study of Hongya Village, China
SO APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE SBAS-InSAR; Sentinel-1A; landslide identification; influencing factors;
   visibility; climate change adaptation; risk reduction
ID SURFACE DISPLACEMENTS; COUNTY
AB On 1 September 2022, a landslide in Hongya Village, Weiyuan Town, Huzhu Tu Autonomous County, Qinghai Province, caused significant casualties and economic losses. To mitigate such risks, InSAR technology is employed due to its wide coverage, all-weather operation, and cost-effectiveness in detecting landslides. In this study, focusing on the landslide in Hongya Village, SBAS-InSAR and Sentinel-1A satellite data from July 2021 to September/October 2022 were used to accurately identify the areas of active landslides and to analyze the landslide deformation trends, in combination with the geological characteristics of the landslides and rainfall data. The results showed that strong deformation was detected in the middle and back of the landslide in Hongya Village, with a maximum deformation rate of approximately -13 mm/year. The surface of the landslide consisted of mainly Upper Pleistocene wind-deposited loess, which is extremely sensitive to water. The deformation of the landslide was closely related to the rainfall, and the deformation of the landslide increased with the increase in rainfall. The research results prove that the combination of ascending and descending orbit data based on SBAS-InSAR technology is highly feasible in the field of landslide deformation monitoring and is of great practical significance for landslide disaster prevention and mitigation.
C1 [Wei, Zhanxi; Li, Yingjun; Cao, Shenghong; Ma, Wenli; Wang, Hao] Qinghai 906 Project Survey & Design Inst, Xining 810007, Peoples R China.
   [Wei, Zhanxi; Li, Yingjun; Cao, Shenghong; Ma, Wenli; Wang, Hao] Qinghai Geol Environm Protect & Disaster Prevent E, Xining 810012, Peoples R China.
   [Dong, Jianhui; Wang, Xiao; Tang, Ran; Liu, Xiao; Tang, Chengqian] Chengdu Univ, Sch Architecture & Civil Engn, Chengdu 610106, Peoples R China.
   [Zhao, Jianjun] Chengdu Univ Technol, State Key Lab Geohazard Prevent & Geoenvironm Prot, Chengdu 610059, Peoples R China.
C3 Chengdu University; Chengdu University of Technology
RP Li, YJ (corresponding author), Qinghai 906 Project Survey & Design Inst, Xining 810007, Peoples R China.; Li, YJ (corresponding author), Qinghai Geol Environm Protect & Disaster Prevent E, Xining 810012, Peoples R China.
EM 15297082225@163.com; 13327642145@163.com; dongjianhui@cdu.edu.cn;
   13897626250@163.com; mwlmwhmwl@163.com; wangxiao@cdu.edu.cn;
   13897433854@163.com; tangran@cdu.edu.cn; zjjtc@126.com;
   liuxiao0424@stu.cdu.edu.cn; tangchengqian@stu.cdu.edu.cn
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC);  [41877273]
FX This study was supported in part by the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China (NSFC) (Code: 41877273).
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NR 47
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 13
U2 13
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2076-3417
J9 APPL SCI-BASEL
JI Appl. Sci.-Basel
PD SEP
PY 2024
VL 14
IS 18
AR 8413
DI 10.3390/app14188413
PG 15
WC Chemistry, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Materials
   Science, Multidisciplinary; Physics, Applied
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Chemistry; Engineering; Materials Science; Physics
GA H5T0E
UT WOS:001324051300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Akpa, AF
AF Akpa, Armand Frejuis
TI The effects of climate extreme events on selected food crop yields in
   Sub-Saharan Africa
SO HELIYON
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climatic risks; Crop yields; Food insecurity; Food
   production
ID UNIT-ROOT TESTS; NATURAL DISASTERS; ECONOMIC-GROWTH; FINANCIAL
   DEVELOPMENT; PANEL-DATA; IMPACT; REGRESSION; INFERENCE
AB The agricultural sector is essential for economic growth. However, agricultural performance can be limited by factors such as climatic risks. This paper aims to analyse the effect of climate extreme events on selected food crop yield in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). The study uses data from the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) database for maize, rice, and sorghum yields. Also, we used data obtained from the International Disaster Database of the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) for floods and droughts over the period 1990-2020. The data were analysed based on the Fully Modified Ordinary Least Squares (FMOLS). The results showed that climate extreme events negatively affected maize, rice and sorghum yields. Also, the findings showed that floods and droughts in past years negatively influence current yields of maize, rice and sorghum. Moreover, agricultural labour force, fertilizer and financial development are the main transmission channels through which floods and droughts can affect maize, rice and sorghum yields. The study concludes by recommending that policies aimed at promoting climate change adaptation measures as well as agricultural insurance could make the agriculture sector more resilient to climate extreme events and in turn that could improve agricultural productivity and reduce food insecurity.
C1 [Akpa, Armand Frejuis] Univ Abomey Calavi UAC, Fac Sci Econ & Gest, Lab Economie Publ LEP, Abomey Calavi, Benin.
   [Akpa, Armand Frejuis] Univ Palmas Gran Canaria ULPGC, Res Inst Tourism & Econ Sustainable Dev TIDES, Las Palmas Gran Canaria, Spain.
C3 University of Abomey Calavi; Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
RP Akpa, AF (corresponding author), Univ Abomey Calavi UAC, Fac Sci Econ & Gest, Lab Economie Publ LEP, Abomey Calavi, Benin.; Akpa, AF (corresponding author), Univ Palmas Gran Canaria ULPGC, Res Inst Tourism & Econ Sustainable Dev TIDES, Las Palmas Gran Canaria, Spain.
EM frejuisakpa@gmail.com
RI Akpa, Armand Frejuis/AGO-4080-2022
OI Akpa, Armand Frejuis/0000-0001-7613-9445
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NR 60
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 8
U2 12
PU CELL PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA 50 HAMPSHIRE ST, FLOOR 5, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02139 USA
EI 2405-8440
J9 HELIYON
JI Heliyon
PD MAY 15
PY 2024
VL 10
IS 9
AR e30796
DI 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e30796
PG 10
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA TD3D8
UT WOS:001239274700001
PM 38756606
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Deshayes, TA
   Périard, JD
AF Deshayes, Thomas A.
   Periard, Julien D.
TI Regular physical activity across the lifespan to build resilience
   against rising global temperatures
SO EBIOMEDICINE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Global warming; Resilience; Adaptation; Exercise;
   Thermoregulation
ID 2003 HEAT-WAVE; MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION; AIR-TEMPERATURE; EXTREME HEAT;
   HEALTH; MORTALITY; WEATHER; DISEASE; ADOLESCENTS; CHILDREN
AB Population aging, high prevalence of non-communicable diseases, physical inactivity, and rising global temperatures are some of the most pressing issues in public health of the current century. Such trends suggest that individuals increasingly less equipped to tolerate heat will be increasingly exposed to it, which from a public health perspective is alarming. Nonetheless, future impacts of extreme heat events will depend not only on the magnitude of climate change, but on our ability to adapt by becoming less sensitive and vulnerable. Although physical activity's role in mitigating climate change has received attention, its potential contribution to climate change adaptation and resilience remains largely unaddressed. Accordingly, in this viewpoint, we discuss how regular physical activity throughout life could have an important contribution to adapting to rising global temperatures, allowing to be better equipped to cope with heat-related health hazards and increasing individual and community resilience. This viewpoint constitutes a call for more research into the contribution that physical activity can have in adapting to rising global temperatures and, more broadly, to climate change. Copyright (c) 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
C1 [Deshayes, Thomas A.] Montreal Heart Inst, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
   [Deshayes, Thomas A.] Univ Montreal, Sch Kinesiol & Exercise Sci, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
   [Periard, Julien D.] Univ Canberra, Res Inst Sport & Exercise, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
C3 Universite de Montreal; Universite de Montreal; University of Canberra
RP Deshayes, TA (corresponding author), Montreal Heart Inst, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
EM thomas.deshayes@umontreal.ca
RI Deshayes, Thomas/HKO-7594-2023
OI Deshayes, Thomas/0000-0002-7620-1939; Periard,
   Julien/0000-0002-6266-4246
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NR 78
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 7
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2352-3964
J9 EBIOMEDICINE
JI EBioMedicine
PD OCT
PY 2023
VL 96
AR 104793
DI 10.1016/j.ebiom.2023.104793
EA SEP 2023
PG 6
WC Medicine, General & Internal; Medicine, Research & Experimental
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC General & Internal Medicine; Research & Experimental Medicine
GA S7FI4
UT WOS:001072786200001
PM 37689024
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Phan, TTH
   Nguyen, HA
AF Phan, Thi Thanh Hang
   Nguyen, Hang Anh
TI Spatial and temporal distributions of temperature and rainfall on
   tropical islands of Vietnam
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE CMIP6; Mann-Kendall test; spatial and temporal distribution; trend and
   tropical islands
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE
AB This study presents the spatial-temporal distribution of temperature and rainfall on the tropical islands of Vietnam using observed data, and historical and future climate data extracted from the ACCESS-ESM1.5. Regarding spatial distribution, the average temperature increased from North to South while rainfall did not vary significantly. Regarding temporal distribution, this research employed the Mann-Kendall test at a 5% significance level to analyze the trend of climate change. According to the calculation result, only annual temperature tended to increase in all stations but at different rates. Other trends of climate change in maximum, temperature, minimum temperature, annual rainfall, and maxi-mum 1-day rainfall are inconsistent and only found significant in islands with a long-observed period. Using 1970-2000 as the reference period with all R-2 above 0.94, this research extracted and predicted climate trends in the period of 2021-2100 for areas above 1 km(2) based on four scenarios which are SSP 1-2.6, SSP 2-4.5, SSP 3-7.0, and SSP 5-8.5. The projected maximum and minimum temperatures have shown increasing trends whereas the change in annual rainfall is not clear. The results of this study provide important implications for climate change adaptation scenarios and territorial planning of tropical islands.
C1 [Phan, Thi Thanh Hang] Vietnam Acad Sci & Technol, Inst Geog, Dept Surface Water Resources, 18 Hoang Quoc Viet, Hanoi, Vietnam.
   [Phan, Thi Thanh Hang] Vietnam Acad Sci & Technol, Grad Univ Sci & Technol, 18 Hoang Quoc Viet, Hanoi, Vietnam.
   [Nguyen, Hang Anh] Univ Wollongong, Northfields Ave, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia.
C3 Vietnam Academy of Science & Technology (VAST); Vietnam Academy of
   Science & Technology (VAST); University of Wollongong
RP Nguyen, HA (corresponding author), Univ Wollongong, Northfields Ave, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia.
EM hanganhnguyen190@gmail.com
OI Nguyen, Hang Anh/0000-0001-7922-3183; Thi Thanh Hang,
   Phan/0000-0002-1164-5731
FU project on 'Senior Researcher Support' [NVCC10.05/23-23]; CMIP6; ESGF
FX The authors would like to thank anonymous reviewers for their helpful
   comments. The authors also express their gratitude to the project on
   Senior Researcher Support - Code NVCC10.05/23-23' in support of this
   research. We acknowledge the World Climate Research Programme, which,
   through its Working Group on Coupled Modelling, coordinated and promoted
   CMIP6. We thank the climate modeling groups for producing and making
   available their model output, the Earth System Grid Federation (ESGF)
   for archiving the data and providing access, and the multiple funding
   agencies that support CMIP6 and ESGF.
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NR 30
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 1
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
EI 2408-9354
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PD MAY
PY 2023
VL 14
IS 5
BP 1395
EP 1412
DI 10.2166/wcc.2023.342
EA APR 2023
PG 18
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA H5ON8
UT WOS:000975389300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Boutang, J
   Moussa, BY
AF Boutang, Jerome
   Moussa, Badamassi Yacouba
TI Taxonomy and Ex Ante Metric of Climate Change Adaptation Projects
   Recorded in the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) as Updated
   for Conference of the Parties-26 (COP-26)
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation; taxonomy; ex ante metric; adaptive projects;
   NDC
AB The authors have proposed a method of reiterating the statistical analysis of the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) of the UNFCCC Parties, which were updated at Conference of the Parties-26. The present analysis confirms the taxonomy developed in 2020, based on 2475 adaptive solutions recorded in 2022 NDCs, and discusses the differences observed. An ex ante adaptation metric is proposed, which allows monitoring of adaptive solutions over time and comparisons between projects in time and space. The fitness coefficient evaluates the ex ante relevance of these adaptive projects in relation to the climate challenges of each country. The authors have proposed a program of continuous improvement instead of a definitive calculation. The authors have developed an algorithm to automate the text analysis and minimize the subjectivity of the analysis. The objective is to assign a level of vulnerability to each project for each hazard in the country. The correspondence analysis was used to derive the most representative dimensions of project category dispersion and vulnerability intensities from a contingency table for each hazard. This coefficient can be made available to experts, project developers, and funders for ex ante evaluation and selection of candidate projects for funding before more in-depth analyses are carried out.
C1 [Boutang, Jerome; Moussa, Badamassi Yacouba] Citepa, 42 Rue Paradis, F-75010 Paris, France.
   [Moussa, Badamassi Yacouba] Univ Paris Saclay, Univ Versailles St Quentin, Fac Social Sci, Dept Dev & Environm Study, 11 Blvd Alembert, F-78280 Guyancourt, France.
C3 Universite Paris Saclay
RP Boutang, J (corresponding author), Citepa, 42 Rue Paradis, F-75010 Paris, France.
EM jerome.boutang@citepa.org
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NR 34
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 5
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 5
AR 4509
DI 10.3390/su15054509
PG 27
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 9T9PO
UT WOS:000947353500001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yu, I
   Jung, H
AF Yu, Insang
   Jung, Huicheul
TI Flood Risk Assessment to Enable Improved Decision-Making for Climate
   Change Adaptation Strategies by Central and Local Governments
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE flood; risk assessment; climate change; adaptation; decision-making;
   indicator
ID MULTICRITERIA ANALYSIS; VULNERABILITY; SUSCEPTIBILITY; HAZARDS; BASIN;
   AREAS
AB This study assessed the flood risk in the Republic of Korea, considering representative concentration pathway (RCP) climate change scenarios, after applying the concept of "risk" as proposed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. For the hazard assessment, hazard indicators were constructed utilizing design rainfall standards, which represented the local flood protection capability, as a flood threshold. We constructed high-resolution spatial images from data of buildings, roads, agriculture areas, and the population that have suffered significant flood damage in the Republic of Korea. We also calculated flood exposure levels by analyzing the scales of the targets in low-lying areas. Environmental and anthropogenic conditions that can directly increase or decrease river flooding and urban flooding were set as indicators and utilized as proxy variables. As a result of the risk assessment, we found 43 risk areas in the historical period, accounting for 19% of the total administrative districts, 42 in the projected period under RCP 4.5 (18%), and 51 in the projected period under RCP 8.5 (22%). This study's results can be utilized by the central government to determine flood risk priority areas in various administrative districts and by the local government to select priority areas to install flood reduction facilities.
C1 [Yu, Insang; Jung, Huicheul] Korea Environm Inst, Korea Adaptat Ctr Climate Change, Sejong 30121, South Korea.
C3 Korea Environment Institute (KEI)
RP Jung, H (corresponding author), Korea Environm Inst, Korea Adaptat Ctr Climate Change, Sejong 30121, South Korea.
EM hchjung@kei.re.kr
OI JUNG, Huicheul/0000-0002-1908-342X; Yu, Insang/0000-0002-8127-4892
FU Korea Environment Institute (KEI) upon the request of the Korea Ministry
   of Environment [2022-001-05]
FX This paper is based on the results of the research work "Assessment of
   climate change vulnerability and support tool" (2022-001-05), conducted
   by the Korea Environment Institute (KEI) upon the request of the Korea
   Ministry of Environment.
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NR 70
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 12
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 21
AR 14335
DI 10.3390/su142114335
PG 24
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6E7SV
UT WOS:000883576700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pierro, R
   Ember, CR
   Pitek, E
   Skoggard, I
AF Pierro, Rachele
   Ember, Carol R.
   Pitek, Emily
   Skoggard, Ian
TI Local knowledge and practice in disaster relief: A worldwide
   cross-cultural comparison of coping mechanisms
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Indigenous knowledge; Coping strategies; Natural hazards; Resilience;
   Migration
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; RISK; RESILIENCE; UNCERTAINTY; ADAPTATION; STRATEGIES
AB There is a growing interest and urgency in understanding and incorporating local knowledge and strategies into sustainable climate change adaptation. This is particularly important because as populations age and new technologies come on the scene, much local knowledge is lost to newer generations. For this reason, we have systematically examined 90 societies from the ethnographic record to explore and document the strategies that people in the past have implemented in response to serious natural hazards. Our review reveals a rich diversity of coping mechanisms and contingency plans used by societies around the world in response to different hazards, particularly floods and droughts. We collect, classify, and compare different types of coping mechanisms, focusing on four major types: technological, subsistence, economic and religious. We find that most societies employ multiple types of coping mechanisms, although our data suggest that technological coping mechanisms are the most common coping mechanisms in response to fast-onset hazards, whereas religious coping mechanisms are the most common mechanism used in response to slow-onset hazards. We also find that religious and nonreligious coping strategies are not antithetical to each other. In fact, an increased number of religious coping mechanisms is associated with an increased number of "practical", nonreligious coping mechanisms.
C1 [Pierro, Rachele; Ember, Carol R.; Pitek, Emily; Skoggard, Ian] Yale Univ, Human Relat Area Files HRAF, Time Res, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
   [Pierro, Rachele] Collect Refugee & Immigrant Womens Wellbeing CRIW, New Haven, CT USA.
   [Pitek, Emily] George Washington Univ, Washington, DC 20052 USA.
C3 Yale University; George Washington University
RP Skoggard, I (corresponding author), Yale Univ, Human Relat Area Files HRAF, Time Res, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
EM IAN.SKOGGARD@YALE.EDU
OI Skoggard, Ian/0000-0002-6158-6522; Ember, Carol/0000-0002-8725-1691
FU National Science Foundation [SMA-1416651]; Human Relations Area Files
FX This research was supported by a grant from the National Science
   Foundation (SMA-1416651) with additional support from the Human
   Relations Area Files. We thank Tahlisa Brougham, Sarah Casson, and Megan
   Farrer for their data collection and coding and Leon Doyon for
   assistance with database management.
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NR 88
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 2
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD JUN 15
PY 2022
VL 76
AR 102988
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2022.102988
EA MAY 2022
PG 11
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA 3I8OL
UT WOS:000832968600001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bhawra, J
AF Bhawra, Jasmin
TI Decolonizing Digital Citizen Science: Applying the Bridge Framework for
   Climate Change Preparedness and Adaptation
SO SOCIETIES
LA English
DT Article
DE decolonizing research; citizen science; digital health; health equity;
   data sovereignty; self-governance; indigenous health; two-eyed seeing;
   climate change; food security
ID INDIGENOUS HEALTH; FOOD SECURITY; 1ST NATIONS; METIS
AB Research has historically exploited Indigenous communities, particularly in the medical and health sciences, due to the dominance of discriminatory colonial systems. In many regions across Canada and worldwide, historical and continued injustices have worsened health among Indigenous Peoples. Global health crises such as climate change are most adversely impacting Indigenous communities, as their strong connection to the land means that even subtle changes in the environment can disproportionately affect local food and health systems. As we explore strategies for climate change preparedness and adaptation, Indigenous Peoples have a wealth of Traditional Knowledge to tackle specific climate and related health issues. If combined with digital citizen science, data collection by citizens within a community could provide relevant and timely information about specific jurisdictions. Digital devices such as smartphones, which have widespread ownership, can enable equitable participation in citizen science projects to obtain big data for mitigating and managing climate change impacts. Informed by a Two-Eyed Seeing approach, a decolonized lens to digital citizen science can advance climate change adaptation and preparedness efforts. This paper describes the 'Bridge Framework' for decolonizing digital citizen science using a case study with a subarctic Indigenous community in Saskatchewan, Canada.
C1 [Bhawra, Jasmin] Univ Saskatchewan, Johnson Shoyama Grad Sch Publ Policy, DEPtH Lab, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5B8, Canada.
C3 University of Saskatchewan
RP Bhawra, J (corresponding author), Univ Saskatchewan, Johnson Shoyama Grad Sch Publ Policy, DEPtH Lab, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5B8, Canada.
EM jasmin.bhawra@usask.ca
OI Bhawra, Jasmin/0000-0001-9926-8442
FU Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) Banting Postdoctoral
   Fellowship
FX This research was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health
   Research (CIHR) Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship.
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TC 6
Z9 7
U1 5
U2 18
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2075-4698
J9 SOCIETIES
JI Societies
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 12
IS 2
AR 71
DI 10.3390/soc12020071
PG 14
WC Sociology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Sociology
GA 0Q9KP
UT WOS:000785228300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Teoh, MY
   Shinozaki, M
   Saito, K
   Said, I
AF Teoh, Mei-Yee
   Shinozaki, Michihiko
   Saito, Kei
   Said, Ismail
TI Developing climate-led landscapes and greenery in urban design: a case
   study at Ipoh, Malaysia
SO JOURNAL OF ASIAN ARCHITECTURE AND BUILDING ENGINEERING
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban planning and design; landscapes and greening; urban microclimate;
   thermal comfort; modelling and simulation
ID OUTDOOR THERMAL COMFORT; HEAT-ISLAND; HOT; MICROCLIMATE; SPACES; IMPACT;
   INFRASTRUCTURE; ENVIRONMENT; ADAPTATION; MITIGATION
AB Designing urban landscapes for climate change adaptation and mitigation has been highly promoted in contemporary urban development. However, the lack of climate-based design knowledge and techniques in existing urban landscape practice has challenged the implementation. This paper, therefore, introduced a climate-led urban landscape design method to overcome such a dilemma. This approach was results-oriented, and it adopted an integrated use of microclimate, thermal comfort, and GIS modelling and simulation tools. Through the scenarios comparison, this paper has assessed and figured out efficient landscape designs for microclimate and thermal comfort improvement in Ipoh, Malaysia. It showed that shading most determined outdoor thermal comfort, making effective street tree planting an essential measure in the tropical climate-led plan. Besides, this study found that wind did not positively influence thermal comfort due to site characteristic at a particular time, in contrast with other hot regions. In conclusion, developing climate-led landscape and greenery in urban design is a functional initiative for urban cooling and sustainable urban development. Furthermore, the application of modelling and simulation methods in urban landscape design can reduce the possibility of failure in practice, thereby promising urban efficiency in response to climate change.
C1 [Teoh, Mei-Yee; Shinozaki, Michihiko] Shibaura Inst Technol, Sch Architecture, Tokyo, Japan.
   [Saito, Kei] Tokyo City Univ, Fac Urban Life Studies, Tokyo, Japan.
   [Said, Ismail] Univ Teknol Malaysia, Fac Built Environm & Surveying, Johor Baharu, Malaysia.
C3 Shibaura Institute of Technology; Tokyo City University; Universiti
   Teknologi Malaysia
RP Teoh, MY (corresponding author), Shibaura Inst Technol, Koto Ku, 07R32,3-7-5 Toyosu, Tokyo 1358548, Japan.
EM na18504@shibaura-it.ac.jp
RI MEI YEE, TEOH/IYJ-6510-2023
OI Saito, Kei/0000-0002-6534-052X; Said, Ismail/0000-0003-0732-8757; TEOH,
   MEI YEE/0000-0003-2418-5962; Shinozaki, Michihiko/0000-0002-5825-1342
FU Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [19K04779];
   Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [19K04779] Funding Source: KAKEN
FX This work was supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of
   Science (JSPS) under Grant [19K04779];Japan Society for the Promotion of
   Science (JSPS) [19K04779];
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NR 66
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 8
U2 76
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1346-7581
EI 1347-2852
J9 J ASIAN ARCHIT BUILD
JI J. Asian Archit. Build. Eng.
PD JUL 4
PY 2022
VL 21
IS 4
BP 1640
EP 1656
DI 10.1080/13467581.2021.1942881
EA JUL 2021
PG 17
WC Architecture; Construction & Building Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Architecture; Construction & Building Technology
GA 0X0WB
UT WOS:000669119900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wang, M
   Wang, KX
AF Wang, Min
   Wang, Kexin
TI Exploring Water Landscape Adaptability of Urban Spatial Development Base
   on Coupling Coordination Degree Model A Case of Caidian District, Wuhan
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE water landscape; spatial development; land use change; adaptability;
   coupling coordination degree
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION
AB Under the background of rapid urbanization, the study explored the adaptive relationship between urban spatial development and water landscape in different stages in Caidian District, Wuhan in order to reveal the characteristics and influencing factors of water landscape adaptability of urban spatial development and improve urban sustainability aiming at optimizing spatial development and improving water landscape function. Caidian District was seen as a complex adaptive system formed by the interaction between the base layer and the occupation layer. The assessment system of urban spatial development is constructed based on land use data and landscape pattern indices, and the coupling coordination degree model and correlation analysis were used to describe the characteristics of water landscape adaptability of urban spatial development. The results showed that: (1) the adaptation relationship between urban space and water landscape in Caidian District was becoming tense; (2) different spatial systems have unique adaptation cycles to water landscape; (3) the 1000 m buffer is the main area affected by water landscape adaptability of urban spatial development. This study provides a new perspective for the urban adaptability. Finally, improvement suggestions were put forward by three aspects of water landscape structure control, urban development control, and ecological space demarcation.
C1 [Wang, Min; Wang, Kexin] Huazhong Agr Univ, Coll Hort & Forestry Sci, Wuhan 430070, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Min; Wang, Kexin] Minist Agr & Rural Affairs, Key Lab Urban Agr Cent China, Wuhan 430070, Peoples R China.
C3 Huazhong Agricultural University; Ministry of Agriculture & Rural
   Affairs
RP Wang, M (corresponding author), Huazhong Agr Univ, Coll Hort & Forestry Sci, Wuhan 430070, Peoples R China.; Wang, M (corresponding author), Minist Agr & Rural Affairs, Key Lab Urban Agr Cent China, Wuhan 430070, Peoples R China.
EM wangmin009@mail.hzau.edu.cn; wkx79923@webmail.hzau.edu.cn
OI Wang, Min/0000-0002-6107-7357
FU Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
   [2662020YLPY013]; China Scholarship Funding [CSC2018]
FX This research was funded by the Fundamental Research Funds for the
   Central Universities, grant number 2662020YLPY013, and China Scholarship
   Funding, grant number CSC2018.
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NR 58
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 11
U2 64
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD FEB
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 3
AR 1475
DI 10.3390/su13031475
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA QD6KH
UT WOS:000615624000001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Albris, K
   Lauta, KC
   Raju, E
AF Albris, Kristoffer
   Lauta, Kristian Cedervall
   Raju, Emmanuel
TI Strengthening Governance for Disaster Prevention: The Enhancing Risk
   Management Capabilities Guidelines
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Disaster governance; Risk management; Knowledge sharing; Risk
   communication; Stakeholder participation; Climate change adaptation
AB Governance is central to Disaster Risk Management (DRM) in the 21st Century. In order to enhance the risk management capabilities of countries and the institutions responsible for carrying out DRM tasks, new approaches to governance should be explored. In heeding this claim, the Enhancing Risk Management Capabilities Guidelines creates a list of recommendations for how governance and management measures can support work in each of the DRM phases and across them. These guidelines are built around the SHIELD model, encompassing a set of strategic recommendations across six identified key themes: (1) Sharing Knowledge; (2) Harmonizing Capacities; (3) Institutionalizing Coordination; (4) Engaging Stakeholders; (5) Leveraging Investments; and finally, (6) Developing Communication. This paper presents each of these recommendations, and discusses why they should be seen as central aspects of the future of DRM in which governance is central. In addition, the paper reflects on the process of crafting the guidelines, and the issues inherent in attempting to propose suggestions and recommendations across a range of complex topics in the domain of disaster management. The guidelines have been produced as part of the H2020-project ESPREssO (Enhancing Synergies for disaster prevention in the European Union) and are freely available online: http://www.espressoproject.eu/images/deliverables/ESPREssO_D5.4.pdf.
C1 [Albris, Kristoffer] Univ Copenhagen, Fac Social Sci, Copenhagen Ctr Social Data Sci SODAS, COPE Copenhagen Ctr Disaster Res,Dept Anthropol, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Lauta, Kristian Cedervall] Univ Copenhagen, Fac Law, COPE Copenhagen Ctr Disaster Res, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Raju, Emmanuel] Univ Copenhagen, Fac Hlth & Med Sci, COPE Copenhagen Ctr Disaster Res, Global Hlth Sect, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Raju, Emmanuel] North West Univ, Fac Nat & Agr Sci, African Ctr Disaster Studies, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
C3 University of Copenhagen; University of Copenhagen; University of
   Copenhagen; North West University - South Africa
RP Albris, K (corresponding author), Oster Farimagsgade 5, DK-1353 Copenhagen C, Denmark.
EM kristoffer.albris@anthro.ku.dk
OI RAJU, EMMANUEL/0000-0002-2348-1850; Albris,
   Kristoffer/0000-0002-1201-2231
FU DG RESEARCH under the H2020 Programme [700342]
FX These guidelines, together with the ESPREssO Vision Paper (deliverable
   D5.5 "ESPREssO Vision Paper") are the final outputs of the project
   ESPREssO - "Enhancing synergies for disaster prevention in the European
   Union", a Coordination and Support Action funded by DG RESEARCH under
   the H2020 Programme, Grant Agreement No. 700342. The guidelines are a
   result of a joint effort from the entire ESPREssO team. The editorial
   team for the guidelines included Kristian Cedervall Lauta, Kristoffer
   Albris, Giulio Zuccaro and Grandjean Gilles. The insights gathered as
   part of the ESPREssO project should be recognized as jointly produced by
   all the project partners.
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NR 33
TC 15
Z9 19
U1 2
U2 27
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD AUG
PY 2020
VL 47
AR 101647
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2020.101647
PG 8
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA LW7DJ
UT WOS:000539303600003
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alam, A
   Miller, F
AF Alam, Ashraful
   Miller, Fiona
TI Slow, small and shared voluntary relocations: Learning from the
   experience of migrants living on the urban fringes of Khulna, Bangladesh
SO ASIA PACIFIC VIEWPOINT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; Bangladesh; climate change; displacement; migration;
   voluntary relocation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; EMPIRICAL-EVIDENCE; ADAPTATION; MIGRATION; RESETTLEMENT;
   DISPLACEMENT; DISCOURSES; DYNAMICS; POLICIES; STRATEGY
AB The paper conceptualises the process of voluntary relocation undertaken by rural farmers to informal settlements in coastal cities. These are journeys that occur without formal institutional support, utilising migrants' own agency. Learning from these community-driven relocations has merit in rethinking climate change adaptation at the regional level. In this paper we present stories of 17 families who have progressively relocated to the fringes of Khulna city in southwestern Bangladesh. We observe three key attributes: first, relocations are slow, neither singular nor immediately completed, but rather take months of careful back and forth journeys of family members between their places of origin and destination. Second, relocations rely on small networks of relatives and acquaintances at the destination. Third, relocations are built on shared responsibilities distributed among a range of actors in places of origin and destination. We conclude that these slow, small and shared relocations are likely to be realised as forms of ongoing adaptation by rural farmers if their aspirational mobilities, social relations and supports are maintained at a regional scale. This kind of migration as adaptation may bring about just outcomes for those displaced without necessarily promoting rigid planning interventions that tend to fix resettlement solutions in place and time.
C1 [Alam, Ashraful] Univ Otago, Sch Geog, Dunedin, New Zealand.
   [Miller, Fiona] Macquarie Univ, Dept Geog & Planning, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
C3 University of Otago; Macquarie University
RP Alam, A (corresponding author), Univ Otago, Sch Geog, Dunedin, New Zealand.
EM ash.alam@otago.ac.nz; fiona.miller@mq.edu.au
OI Miller, Fiona/0000-0003-4427-6466; Alam, Ashraful/0000-0001-6529-4423
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   [No title captured]
NR 59
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 16
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1360-7456
EI 1467-8373
J9 ASIA PAC VIEWP
JI Asia Pac. Viewp.
PD DEC
PY 2019
VL 60
IS 3
BP 325
EP 338
DI 10.1111/apv.12244
PG 14
WC Area Studies; Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies; Geography
GA JR4NG
UT WOS:000499602900007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kutzner, D
AF Kutzner, Diana
TI Environmental change, resilience, and adaptation in nature-based
   tourism: conceptualizing the social-ecological resilience of
   birdwatching tour operations
SO JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM
LA English
DT Article
DE Resilience theory; birdwatching tourism; adaptation; environmental
   change; climate change
ID PENGUINS MEGADYPTES-ANTIPODES; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; UTOPIAN
   IDEALLY PERFECT; NEW-ZEALAND; COMMUNITY RESILIENCE; OTAGO PENINSULA;
   MARINE TOURISM; GLOBAL CHANGE; CORAL-REEFS; SUSTAINABILITY
AB Resilience theory has emerged as a holistic concept well suited to analyzing tourism systems and which promises important insights into the sustainability of tourism destinations in the face of accelerating global environmental change (GEC). This article presents empirical research into the social-ecological resilience of tour operators using the case study destination of the Otago Peninsula, Dunedin, New Zealand. It addresses the following research question: How do birdwatching tour operators build resilience to drivers of environmental change, including climatic drivers, into their operations? Qualitative interviews with providers of a specific nature tourism sector activity - birdwatching - were conducted with stakeholders including tour operators, conservation organizations, and local government members. The findings highlight current and possible future challenges to birdwatching tourism on the Otago Peninsula. The paper introduces a conceptual framework which highlights the tour operators' main coping strategies in response to key perceived social-ecological system (SES) drivers of change. Overall, tour operators perceived their main social-ecological resilience to be the diversity of the species of the Otago Peninsula, their business experience, and the strength of their local stakeholder network to respond to SES crises.
C1 [Kutzner, Diana] Univ Otago, Dept Tourism, POB 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand.
C3 University of Otago
RP Kutzner, D (corresponding author), Univ Otago, Dept Tourism, POB 56, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand.
EM kutzid@gmail.com
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   ,, 2008, Climate change adaptation and mitigation in the tourism sector: frameworks, tools and practices
NR 149
TC 36
Z9 37
U1 7
U2 109
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0966-9582
EI 1747-7646
J9 J SUSTAIN TOUR
JI J. Sustain. Tour.
PY 2019
VL 27
IS 8
BP 1142
EP 1166
DI 10.1080/09669582.2019.1601730
EA MAY 2019
PG 25
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Hospitality, Leisure, Sport &
   Tourism
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA IS6IH
UT WOS:000469104000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Kitano, T
   Jayaprasad, S
   Kioka, W
AF Kitano, Toshikazu
   Jayaprasad, Sivaranjani
   Kioka, Wataru
BE Sundar, V
   Sannasiraj, SA
   Murali, K
   Sriram, V
TI An extended Poisson test for detecting the difference between the past
   and future rates of extremes of sea wave heights
SO 8TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ASIAN AND PACIFIC COASTS (APAC 2015)
SE Procedia Engineering
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 8th International Conference on Asian and Pacific Coasts (APAC 2015)
CY SEP 07-10, 2015
CL Chennai, INDIA
SP IIT Madras, APAC Council, COES, JSCE, KSCOE
DE Poisson test; climate change; extreme value statistics; degree of
   experience; return period
AB The occurrence rates of extremes of the natural forces, wave heights and sea levels, are one of the important factors in the design of coastal structures. Especially detecting the difference between the past and future rates is becoming recently an issue remarked in the discussions of climate change adaptation. However the difference is often so faint that the significance has not been examined appropriately nor even discussed in many previous studies of statistical methods of extreme value analysis. One might wonder if the significance is well shown in selecting the non-stationary model in comparison with the stationary one. However the difference of those models should be considered to be checked in the region where the frequently observed values are concentrated, while it will not always hold true in the outer region where the observed values are sparse. It is the same point of arguments as existing the limitation of extrapolation even if the parameters of distribution function are estimated. In the previous research, a criterion of possible extrapolation is given by the degree of experience for one sample. This research discusses to compare two populations of sea extremes by extending the Poisson test for two-sample. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Kitano, Toshikazu; Jayaprasad, Sivaranjani; Kioka, Wataru] Nagoya Inst Technol, Showa Ku, Gokisocho, Nagoya, Aichi 4668555, Japan.
C3 Nagoya Institute of Technology
RP Kitano, T (corresponding author), Nagoya Inst Technol, Showa Ku, Gokisocho, Nagoya, Aichi 4668555, Japan.
EM kitano@nitech.ac.jp
CR Hald A, 1952, STAT THEORY ENG APPL
   Heffernan J. E., 2014, ISMEV PACKAGE VER 1
   Kitano T., 2010, P 32 C COAST ENG SHA
   Kitano T., 2008, ANN J COASTAL ENG JS, P141, DOI DOI 10.2208/PROCE1989.55.141
   Kitano T, 2009, PROCEEDINGS OF COASTAL DYNAMICS 2009
   Stephenson A., 2012, EVD PACKAGE VER 2 3
NR 6
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 0
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1877-7058
J9 PROCEDIA ENGINEER
PY 2015
VL 116
BP 583
EP 591
DI 10.1016/j.proeng.2015.08.329
PG 9
WC Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Marine; Engineering, Ocean
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering
GA BF2SA
UT WOS:000380494700073
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maldonado, L
   Molinos-Senante, M
   Quiero-Bastias, M
   Atal, G
AF Maldonado, Luis
   Molinos-Senante, Maria
   Quiero-Bastias, Maximo
   Atal, Gabriela
TI Willingness to pay for improving water supply continuity in case of
   climatic extreme natural events: an empirical approach for Chile
SO URBAN WATER JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Willingness to pay; contingent valuation; water supply; disasters; Chile
ID SAFE DRINKING-WATER; CONTINGENT VALUATION; SERVICES; DECENTRALIZATION;
   PRIVATIZATION; PREFERENCES; SANITATION; BENEFITS; IMPACT
AB In this study, a single-bounded dichotomous contingent valuation design was employed to examine customers' willingness to pay (WTP) for a water company's initiatives to increase the drinking water service's autonomy during extreme climatic events in the Metropolitan Region of Chile in 2020. Considering that this country is a paradigmatic case of almost full access to drinking water service in urban areas, this research is one of the first attempts to measure customers' WTP for initiatives to increase the drinking water service's autonomy when natural extreme events occur. Findings indicate an average WTP of CLP 1,371 (USD 1.81), equivalent to 16.72% of the average water bills per month. We also found significant differences in WTP among water suppliers. Although most sociodemographic predictors are not relevant, the results regarding WTP determinants also suggest that political attitudes are especially important, revealing polarized preferences about water suppliers in need of climate change adaptation.
C1 [Maldonado, Luis; Quiero-Bastias, Maximo; Atal, Gabriela] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Inst Sociol, Santiago, Chile.
   [Maldonado, Luis] Ctr Social Conflict & Cohes Studies ANID FONDAP, Santiago 15130009, Chile.
   [Maldonado, Luis; Molinos-Senante, Maria] Res Ctr Integrated Disaster Risk Management ANID F, Santiago 15110017, Chile.
   [Molinos-Senante, Maria] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Dept Ingn Hidraul & Ambiental, Santiago, Chile.
   [Maldonado, Luis] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Inst Sociol, Vicuna Mackenna 4860, Casilla 306, Correo 22, Macu, Santiago 7810000, Chile.
C3 Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile; Pontificia Universidad
   Catolica de Chile; Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile
RP Maldonado, L (corresponding author), Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Inst Sociol, Vicuna Mackenna 4860, Casilla 306, Correo 22, Macu, Santiago 7810000, Chile.
EM lmaldona@uc.cl
RI Molinos-Senante, Maria/IVH-9831-2023; Molinos-Senante, Maria/A-8523-2016
OI Molinos-Senante, Maria/0000-0002-6689-6861; Maldonado,
   Luis/0000-0002-0028-4766; Quiero-Bastias, Maximo/0000-0001-5404-9764
FU FONDECYT REGULAR [1181754, 1191522]; ANID Beca Doctorado Nacional 2019
   [21191237]; Fondo de Financiamiento de Centros de Investigacion en Areas
   Prioritarias [15110017, 15130009]
FX This work was supported by the FONDECYT REGULAR [1181754, 1191522]; ANID
   Beca Doctorado Nacional 2019 [21191237]; Fondo de Financiamiento de
   Centros de Investigacion en Areas Prioritarias [15110017, 15130009].
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NR 59
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 7
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1573-062X
EI 1744-9006
J9 URBAN WATER J
JI Urban Water J.
PD JAN 2
PY 2023
VL 20
IS 1
BP 74
EP 88
DI 10.1080/1573062X.2022.2153702
EA DEC 2022
PG 15
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA 8F8KP
UT WOS:000894245600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Greene, C
AF Greene, Christina
TI "Drought isn't just water, it is living": Narratives of drought
   vulnerability in California's San Joaquin Valley
SO GEOFORUM
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; RESILIENCE; GEOGRAPHIES;
   FARMWORKERS; ENVIRONMENT; EXCLUSION; KNOWLEDGE; MULTIPLE; DYNAMICS
AB Drought vulnerability studies in the United States primarily focus on biophysical and economic indicators and overlook the multiple ways drought is experienced socially. This research examines the human dimensions of drought through narratives of drought vulnerability in the agricultural communities of California's San Joaquin Valley during the 2012-2016 drought. Four narratives are identified that reveal the lived experiences and local knowledges of drought as well as the multiple understandings of the political, economic, social, and environmental processes that produce drought vulnerability. The narratives explain the production of drought across long timescales that include both memories of historical events as well as visions of desired futures for the region. Who is vulnerable and why differs across the narratives, with each narrative offering competing understandings for how the relationships between water, agriculture, labor, and rural communities create drought vulnerability. Which narrative becomes dominant and embedded in water governance has impacts on the practice of agriculture as well as social and environmental justice for farmworkers and rural community members.
C1 [Greene, Christina] Univ Arizona, Climate Assessment Southwest, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
C3 University of Arizona
RP Greene, C (corresponding author), Univ Arizona, Climate Assessment Southwest, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
EM cgreene@email.arizona.edu
OI Greene, Christina/0000-0003-3767-0932
FU Climate Assessment for the Southwest (CLIMAS); Social & Behavioral
   Sciences Research Institute at the University of Arizona; Agriculture
   and Food Research Initiative grant from the USDA National Institute of
   Food and Agriculture [2017-67011-26037]; NIFA [2017-67011-26037, 914540]
   Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
FX Initial research was supported by Climate Assessment for the Southwest
   (CLIMAS) and Social & Behavioral Sciences Research Institute at the
   University of Arizona. This work was supported by Agriculture and Food
   Research Initiative grant no. 2017-67011-26037 from the USDA National
   Institute of Food and Agriculture. Any opinions, findings, conclusions,
   or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author
   and do not necessarily reflect the view of the U.S. Department of
   Agriculture.
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NR 93
TC 7
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 16
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0016-7185
EI 1872-9398
J9 GEOFORUM
JI Geoforum
PD MAY
PY 2021
VL 121
BP 33
EP 43
DI 10.1016/j.geoforum.2021.02.007
EA FEB 2021
PG 11
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA RY0ZU
UT WOS:000647647300004
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jones, L
   Kuhl, L
   Matthews, N
AF Jones, Lindsey
   Kuhl, Laura
   Matthews, Nathanial
TI Addressing power and scale in resilience programming: A call to engage
   across funding, delivery and evaluation
SO GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; ethics; finance; resilience
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; SUSTAINABLE
   DEVELOPMENT; TRANSFORMATION; COMMUNITY; NEEDS; PROJECTS; POLITICS
AB Resilience has recently emerged as a conceptual and operational buzzword spanning every facet of the international development agenda. The rise of resilience provides renewed opportunities for geographers to critically engage with the policy sphere and shape ongoing discourse over the nature of resilience programming. Yet, while aspects of the political economy of resilience have long been acknowledged in both academic and practitioner literatures, scholarly inputs have had limited influence in addressing issues of power and scale as applied directly to resilience programming. In this commentary, we argue that enhanced uptake of geographic enquiry is contingent on geographers being more proactive in engaging with resilience practitioners. One way of doing so is to tailor scholarly inputs to three critical elements of the programmatic cycle, namely how resilience-building activities are funded, delivered, and evaluated. Using these three facets, we highlight key practical and ethical considerations worthy of further geographic enquiry - focusing on issues of power and scale as concepts at the heart of geography.
C1 [Jones, Lindsey] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, London, England.
   [Kuhl, Laura] Northeastern Univ, Sch Publ Policy, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
   [Kuhl, Laura] Northeastern Univ, Urban Affairs & Int Affairs Program, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
   [Matthews, Nathanial] Global Resilience Partnership, Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 University of London; London School Economics & Political Science;
   Northeastern University; Northeastern University; Stockholm University
RP Jones, L (corresponding author), London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Grantham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, London, England.
EM l.jones3@lse.ac.uk
OI Kuhl, Laura/0000-0002-1379-9435
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NR 79
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 8
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0016-7398
EI 1475-4959
J9 GEOGR J
JI Geogr. J.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 186
IS 4
BP 415
EP 423
DI 10.1111/geoj.12362
EA OCT 2020
PG 9
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA PB5TS
UT WOS:000583308000001
OA Green Accepted, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mehiriz, K
AF Mehiriz, Kaddour
TI The sources of municipalities' innovation in the management of weather
   disaster risks, their relationships, and their antecedents
SO LOCAL GOVERNMENT STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Internal sources of innovation; external sources of innovation;
   complementarity between innovation sources; climate change adaptation;
   weather disasters; municipalities; Canada
ID RESEARCH-AND-DEVELOPMENT; PUBLIC-SECTOR; ABSORPTIVE-CAPACITY; ADOPTION;
   UNIVERSITIES
AB This article presents the results of a study on the use of internal and external sources of innovation by municipalities to deal with weather hazards. Using data collected by an online survey of municipal emergency management coordinators in Quebec - Canada, this study shows that municipalities rely primarily on their expertise and, to a lesser extent, on peer organisations and upper levels of governments to develop new solutions to weather hazards. In addition, this study finds weak support for the complementarity hypothesis between internal and external sources of innovation and suggests strongly that these sources of innovation are not substitutable. The capacity and vulnerability of municipalities, as well as political support for initiatives to improve the management of weather disasters, seem to be significant drivers of innovation. Finally, efforts aimed at strengthening public organisations' internal capacities and creating incentives to facilitate collaborations between public organisations are important levers to stimulate innovation.
C1 [Mehiriz, Kaddour] Doha Inst Grad Studies, Sch Publ Adm & Dev Econ, Doha, Qatar.
C3 Doha Institute for Graduate Studies
RP Mehiriz, K (corresponding author), Doha Inst Grad Studies, POB 200592,Zone 70,Al Tarfa St, Doha, Qatar.
EM kaddour.mehiriz@dohainstitute.edu.qa
FU Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
FX This research was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering
   Research Council of Canada.
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NR 42
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 18
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0300-3930
EI 1743-9388
J9 LOCAL GOV STUD
JI Local Gov. Stud.
PD NOV 2
PY 2021
VL 47
IS 6
BP 951
EP 970
DI 10.1080/03003930.2020.1816545
EA SEP 2020
PG 20
WC Regional & Urban Planning; Political Science; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Government & Law
GA XH2OO
UT WOS:000567592500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carnohan, SA
   Clifford-Holmes, JK
   Retief, H
   McKnight, US
   Pollard, S
AF Carnohan, Shane A.
   Clifford-Holmes, Jai K.
   Retief, Hugo
   McKnight, Ursula S.
   Pollard, Sharon
TI Climate change adaptation in rural South Africa: Using stakeholder
   narratives to build system dynamics models in data-scarce environments
SO JOURNAL OF SIMULATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Participatory modelling; climate change; narratives; system dynamics
   modelling; water resources management; water governance
ID WATER-RESOURCE MANAGEMENT; DECISION-SUPPORT; SIMULATION; QUALITY;
   FRAMEWORK; SCIENCE; OPTIONS; DESIGN; HEALTH
AB The need for innovative systemic approaches for managing water resources that integrate natural and human dimensions is well established. Although systemic, participatory modelling has been shown to support stakeholder involvement and integrated analysis, the uptake within acrimonious, data-scarce contexts - especially in the developing world - is limited. This study details a process designed to address challenges facing the lower Olifants River Catchment in South Africa, including deteriorating water quality, data paucity and stakeholder conflict. Narratives and quantitative data were used to build a system dynamics (SD) model, ResiMod, within a participatory process. The paper demonstrates how narratives can inform, and be informed by, iterative model development whilst integrating scientific data. The approach facilitated an exploration of perceptions of causality, connections between stakeholder sectors, and mitigatory actions for responding to climate-change impacts on biodiversity. This offers a promising approach to support improved communication and learning in disputed, data-scarce contexts.
C1 [Carnohan, Shane A.; McKnight, Ursula S.] Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Environm Engn, Lyngby, Denmark.
   [Carnohan, Shane A.] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sino Danish Ctr Educ & Res SDC, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Clifford-Holmes, Jai K.] Rhodes Univ, Inst Water Res, Grahamstown, South Africa.
   [Clifford-Holmes, Jai K.; Retief, Hugo; Pollard, Sharon] Assoc Water & Rural Dev AWARD, Hoedspruit, Limpopo, South Africa.
C3 Technical University of Denmark; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University
   of Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS; Rhodes University
RP Carnohan, SA (corresponding author), Tech Univ Denmark, Bygningstorvet Bldg 115,Room 159, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
EM shca@env.dtu.dk
RI McKnight, Ursula/HII-5158-2022; Carnohan, Shane/HKW-3158-2023;
   Clifford-Holmes, Jai/HMD-2979-2023; McKnight, Ursula Solard/F-4498-2012
OI Carnohan, Shane/0000-0003-0083-0269; McKnight, Ursula
   Solard/0000-0001-8363-8672
FU United States Agency for International Development: Southern Africa
   grant [RFA-674-12-000016]
FX This work was funded by the United States Agency for International
   Development: Southern Africa grant (RFA-674-12-000016 RESilience in the
   LIMpopo Basin (RESILIM)).
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NR 86
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 1
U2 21
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1747-7778
EI 1747-7786
J9 J SIMUL
JI J. Simul.
PD APR 3
PY 2021
VL 15
IS 1-2
SI SI
BP 5
EP 22
DI 10.1080/17477778.2020.1762516
EA MAY 2020
PG 18
WC Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Operations Research &
   Management Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Computer Science; Operations Research & Management Science
GA RQ6HA
UT WOS:000540863700001
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Käyhkö, J
AF Kayhko, Janina
TI Climate risk perceptions and adaptation decision-making at Nordic farm
   scale - a typology of risk responses
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change risk; adaptation; risk management; Nordic agriculture;
   farmer
ID MEKONG DELTA; INDIVIDUAL ADAPTATION; FOREST OWNERS; AGRICULTURE;
   VULNERABILITY; VARIABILITY; SCIENCE; POLICY; INTENSIFICATION; FRAMEWORK
AB Agriculture in the Nordic countries is a sector, where farmers are facing climatic challenges first-hand with little policy guidance on climate change adaptation or climate risk management. Adaptation practices emerging at the farm scale have potentially harmful outcomes that can erode the agricultural sustainability. So far, farm scale decision-making on adaptation measures is scarcely studied, and a thorough assessment of risk perceptions underlying adaptation decision-making is required in the Nordic context to inform adaptation policy planning. In this qualitative case study, the climate risk perceptions of Nordic farmers and agricultural extension officers are examined. As a result, a typology of risk responses is presented, showing three dominant patterns within highly dynamic and contextual adaptation processes at farm scale: risk aversive, opportunity-seeking and experimental. The typology represents the variation within adaptation processes that further stress the need for participatory adaptation policy development in agriculture.
C1 [Kayhko, Janina] Univ Helsinki, Ecosyst & Environm Res Programme, POB 65,Viikinkaari 1,4403, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Kayhko, Janina] Univ Helsinki, Helsinki Inst Sustainabil Sci HELSUS, POB 65,Viikinkaari 1 4403, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
C3 University of Helsinki; University of Helsinki
RP Käyhkö, J (corresponding author), Univ Helsinki, Ecosyst & Environm Res Programme, POB 65,Viikinkaari 1,4403, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland.; Käyhkö, J (corresponding author), Univ Helsinki, Helsinki Inst Sustainabil Sci HELSUS, POB 65,Viikinkaari 1 4403, FIN-00014 Helsinki, Finland.
EM janina.kayhko@helsinki.fi
RI Käyhkö, Janina/AAW-6163-2021
OI Kayhko, Janina/0000-0003-0904-5857
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NR 76
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 5
U2 37
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1473-5903
EI 1747-762X
J9 INT J AGR SUSTAIN
JI Int. J. Agric. Sustain.
PD NOV 2
PY 2019
VL 17
IS 6
BP 431
EP 444
DI 10.1080/14735903.2019.1689062
EA NOV 2019
PG 14
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA JR3YX
UT WOS:000496099400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU De Roeck, F
AF De Roeck, Frederik
TI Governmentality and the climate-development nexus: The case of the EU
   Global Climate Change Alliance
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Governmentality; European Union; Development
   cooperation
ID POWER; SECURITISATION; RESILIENCE; GOVERNANCE; DISCOURSES; SECURITY;
   POLITICS; LEADER; UNION
AB This article uses a governmentality perspective to uncover the power effects of the external climate change adaptation assistance provided by the European Union (EU) through its flagship initiative in this regard: the Global Climate Change Alliance. By drawing upon a body of literature that conceptualizes the established international architecture in this regard as rooted in power relations, this article opens up our current perspective of the EU as an international climate actor. An analysis of policy documents and targeted semi-structured interviews reveals that the EU discursively emphasizes the responsibility of partner countries to manage risk and become 'resilient' to climate impacts, while downplaying the transformative potential of adaptation for development. We see this dynamic further reflected in GCCA policy techniques, which promote the production of quantified and depoliticized knowledge on adaptation. This in its turn further guides the allocation of GCCA support and is instrumentalized in order to establish a stable identity for the organization and reproduce the EU as a climate leader in this regard.
C1 [De Roeck, Frederik] Univ Ghent, Ctr EU Studies, Univ Str 8, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium.
C3 Ghent University
RP De Roeck, F (corresponding author), Univ Ghent, Ctr EU Studies, Univ Str 8, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium.
EM Frederik.Deroeck@Ugent.be
RI De Roeck, Frederik/AAD-3436-2020
OI De Roeck, Frederik/0000-0003-1030-2224
FU Research Foundation Flanders [11ZU217N]
FX This work was supported by the Research Foundation Flanders [grant
   number 11ZU217N].
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NR 65
TC 12
Z9 14
U1 1
U2 35
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD MAR
PY 2019
VL 55
BP 160
EP 167
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2019.02.006
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA HS6KY
UT WOS:000463982000015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Greene, C
AF Greene, Christina
TI Broadening understandings of drought - The climate vulnerability of
   farmworkers and rural communities in California (USA)
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate vulnerability; Farmworkers; Rural communities; Drought;
   Maladaptation
ID ADAPTATION; FARMERS; RISK
AB The vulnerability of food and agricultural systems to climate variability and change is extensively studied. However, the vulnerability of agricultural labor is largely ignored in climate vulnerability and adaptation studies, especially in the context of developed countries. This research examines the drought vulnerability of farmworkers both in the fields and in their communities by analyzing how changes in water resources and agricultural practices impact socioeconomic drought. A combination of surveys and semi-structured interviews with farmworkers, farmers, and social service providers in California's San Joaquin Valley is used to identify the impacts of drought on agricultural labor, water security, food security, and health. Findings demonstrate that drought impacts and vulnerabilities are multi-scalar and uneven. Agricultural drought adaptations, including increase in groundwater pumping and changes in crops, reshapes the vulnerability of farmworkers and rural communities. There is a need for continued interdisciplinary research on the socioeconomic dimensions of drought as well as increased representation of needs and vulnerabilities of farmworkers and rural communities in drought and climate change adaptation planning.
C1 [Greene, Christina] Sch Geog & Dev, POB 210137, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
RP Greene, C (corresponding author), Sch Geog & Dev, POB 210137, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
EM cgreene@email.arizona.edu
OI Greene, Christina/0000-0003-3767-0932
FU Climate Assessment for the Southwest (CLIMAS) at the University of
   Arizona; Social & Behavioral Sciences Research Institute at the
   University of Arizona; Agriculture and Food Research Initiative from the
   USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2017-67011-26037]; NIFA
   [914540, 2017-67011-26037] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
FX Initial research was supported by Climate Assessment for the Southwest
   (CLIMAS) and Social & Behavioral Sciences Research Institute at the
   University of Arizona. This work was supported by Agriculture and Food
   Research Initiative grant no. 2017-67011-26037 from the USDA National
   Institute of Food and Agriculture. Any opinions, findings, conclusions,
   or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author
   and do not necessarily reflect the view of the U.S. Department of
   Agriculture.
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NR 59
TC 25
Z9 32
U1 5
U2 32
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD NOV
PY 2018
VL 89
BP 283
EP 291
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.08.002
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GX2OB
UT WOS:000447557600030
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Solaun, K
   Cerdá, E
AF Solaun, Kepa
   Cerda, Emilio
TI The Impact of Climate Change on the Generation of Hydroelectric Power-A
   Case Study in Southern Spain
SO ENERGIES
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; climate change adaptation; hydropower generation; water
   resources; renewable energy
AB Climate change could pose a significant threat to the energy sector in various countries. The objective of this study is to analyze the long-term impact of changes in precipitation and water availability on hydroelectric production. To do so, the study focuses on three hydroelectric power plants in Southern Spain combining climatological, technical and economic data and projections. A physical model has been designed that reproduces the plants' operations and incorporates various scenarios for the evolution of contributions to the basin. The results predict a 10 to 49% drop in production by the end of the century, depending on the plant and scenario. This decrease in production, in accordance with our economic and operational hypotheses, would significantly affect the operating margins of the facilities and, in certain scenarios, could reach an economically unsustainable level by the end of the century. An investment analysis has been carried out as well, showing that climate change may jeopardize future investments in similar facilities.
C1 [Solaun, Kepa] Univ Navarra, Sch Sci, Campus Univ, E-31080 Pamplona, Spain.
   [Solaun, Kepa] Factor CO2, Colon Larreategui 26,Planta 1, Bilbao 48006, Spain.
   [Cerda, Emilio] Univ Complutense Madrid, ICEI, Campus Somosaguas, Madrid 28223, Spain.
C3 University of Navarra; Complutense University of Madrid
RP Solaun, K (corresponding author), Univ Navarra, Sch Sci, Campus Univ, E-31080 Pamplona, Spain.; Solaun, K (corresponding author), Factor CO2, Colon Larreategui 26,Planta 1, Bilbao 48006, Spain.
EM ksolaun@factorco2.com; ecerdate@ccee.ucm.es
RI Cerdá, Emilio/H-8645-2015
OI Solaun, Kepa/0000-0003-1041-8825
FU Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [ECO2015-70349-P]
FX Financial support from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and
   Competitiveness (ECO2015-70349-P) is acknowledged. We deeply appreciate
   the valuable support from the ENDESA staff, especially from the South
   Hydroelectric Production Unit (David Zafra and Manuel Medina), but also
   from the Climate Change Corporate Unit (David Corregidor, Jorge Pina,
   Alejandro Rodriguez). The technical and economic analysis of this paper
   benefited from the contribution of Enrique Losada (ENDESA), Carmen Lopez
   and Luis Posse (IDEA) as well as from Maria del Mar Vich (Meteoclim). We
   are also grateful for the comments from the participants in the Seminar
   of the Department of Foundations of Economic Analysis II, of the
   University of the Basque Country (March, 2016), the IX Iberian Congress
   on Water Planning and Management (September, 2016), the XII Congress of
   the Spanish Association for Energy Economics (February, 2017) and Madrid
   Aqua Energy Forum (MAEF 17, March, 2017). Helen Poliquin and Christina
   Garcia reviewed the use of English in the manuscript.
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NR 28
TC 24
Z9 25
U1 4
U2 17
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1996-1073
J9 ENERGIES
JI Energies
PD SEP
PY 2017
VL 10
IS 9
AR 1343
DI 10.3390/en10091343
PG 19
WC Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Energy & Fuels
GA FH5RJ
UT WOS:000411225200099
OA Green Published, Green Accepted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cohn, A
AF Cohn, Avery
TI Leveraging Climate Regulation by Ecosystems for Agriculture to Promote
   Ecosystem Stewardship
SO TROPICAL CONSERVATION SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate regulation; ecosystem services; cobenefits; climate change
   adaptation; forest conservation
ID INDEX INSURANCE; MATO-GROSSO; CROP YIELD; LAND-USE; BIODIVERSITY;
   MANAGEMENT; SERVICES; DROUGHT; SCIENCE; FORESTS
AB One in every five patches of tropical forest near agriculture in Brazil appears to contribute more to agricultural production by preventing crop-killing extreme heat exposure than it could produce if it were converted to cropland itself. In this commentary, I refer to this and other forms of climate regulation by ecosystems and beneficial for agriculture as E4A. E4A is a readily employable and largely untapped concept for protecting and restoring tropical ecosystems. The promise of E4A lies in demonstrating sizeable production-protection synergies relevant for critical actors. Using a consultative research process, I gauged the current and future status of E4A science and action in tropical land use decision-making. Stakeholders flagged unmet demand for E4A in support of decisions tied to numerous regulatory, governance, and business processes. Results from a complementary literature review revealed gaps in research, advocacy, and entrepreneurship. I close by discussing opportunities to relieve E4A pain points to catalyze tropical ecosystem stewardship.
C1 [Cohn, Avery] Tufts Univ, 160 Packard Ave, Medford, MA 02155 USA.
C3 Tufts University
RP Cohn, A (corresponding author), Tufts Univ, 160 Packard Ave, Medford, MA 02155 USA.
EM avery.cohn@tufts.edu
FU Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs [DGAN I 16099163]
FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for
   the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Support
   for this article was provided by the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs
   through grant, DGAN I 16099163.
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NR 47
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 35
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 1940-0829
J9 TROP CONSERV SCI
JI Trop. Conserv. Sci.
PD AUG 30
PY 2017
VL 10
DI 10.1177/1940082917720672
PG 7
WC Biodiversity Conservation
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation
GA FG1ZT
UT WOS:000409871800004
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alrusheidat, J
   Abu Hammour, W
   Aljaafreh, S
AF Alrusheidat, Jamal
   Abu Hammour, Wafa'a
   Aljaafreh, Safa
TI Climate change adaptation and technology transfer: the path to disaster
   risk reduction in the arid and semi-arid zones. The case of Jordan
SO NEW MEDIT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; technology transfer; adaptation
AB Climate change is a worldwide phenomenon that does not respect national boundaries nor affects one specific region. Hurricanes, tornadoes, typhoons, drought and floods are just a few of its many disastrous forms. Most world countries, especially in the arid and semi-arid regions, have been seriously devastated by the consequences of climate change at the economic, health, social, and environmental level. Adaptation and mitigation strategies have become the top priority of most international conferences and symposia around the world. The notion "Act locally and think globally" has become the main slogan and the most urgent need for collective action to ease the impacts of climate change. Such efforts like information, education, and technology transfer can make the difference due to their enormous potential to mitigate the implications of climate change. They represent the hope to face negative impacts of climate and the right path to mitigate its various implications, and consequently adapt to its future development.
C1 [Alrusheidat, Jamal] Natl Ctr Agr Res & Extens, Amman, Jordan.
   [Abu Hammour, Wafa'a; Aljaafreh, Safa] Climate Change Researchers NCARE, Amman, Jordan.
RP Alrusheidat, J (corresponding author), Natl Ctr Agr Res & Extens, Amman, Jordan.
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NR 13
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 1
U2 12
PU EDIZIONI DEDALO S R L
PI BARI
PA V LE LUIGI JACOBINI, 5, ZONA INDUSTRIALE - BARI, CASELLA POSTALE BA-19,
   BARI, 70123 BA, ITALY
SN 1594-5685
J9 NEW MEDIT
JI New Medit
PD MAR
PY 2016
VL 15
IS 1
BP 2
EP 6
PG 5
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA DK0QM
UT WOS:000374617300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Sherman, WB
   Beckman, TG
AF Sherman, WB
   Beckman, TG
BE Janick, J
TI Climatic adaptation in fruit crops
SO GENETICS AND BREEDING OF TREE FRUITS AND NUTS
SE Acta Horticulturae
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 26th International Horticultural Congress
CY AUG 11-17, 2002
CL TORONTO, CANADA
SP Canadian Soc Hort Sci, Int Soc Hort Sci, Univ Guelph
DE photoperiod; light intensity; cold hardiness; winter dormancy;
   vernalization; chill units; heat units; water stress; soil pH; soil
   temperature
ID COLD-HARDINESS; TEMPERATURE; PEACH; GROWTH; FLOWER; PHOTOPERIOD;
   IRRIGATION; NECTARINE; APPLE; REST
AB Fruits have varying amounts of climatic adaptation. Most grow only in either the tropical, subtropical, or temperate zones. For example, fruits such as mango and pineapple grow best in a tropical climate without frosts, citrus grows best in a subtropical climate without hard winter freezes, and apricot grows best in a temperate, Mediterranean climate of uniformly cool winters and dry summers. However, strawberry has adaptation from the equator to the Arctic Circle and some apple genotypes will grow in low chill, subtropical climates while others will grow in high chill, temperate climates. Clearly, some fruits have more specific adaptation limitations than others as seen by their specialized areas of production. Fruit breeding is human directed evolution for desired tree and fruit characteristics. Climatic adaptation precedes breeding for commercial fruit qualities. Without climatic adaptation, the breeder may not be able to make hybrids and cannot adequately fruit and evaluate them. Once the breeder finds climatic adaptation for tree growth and fruiting, selection for more specific climatic requirements is possible, and primary attention can then be given to fruit characteristics necessary for making the crop economically viable. Adaptation factors for tree growth, flower bud formation, flowering, and fruit growth and maturation are photoperiod, light intensity, chilling and heat units, soil type, and temperature and water tolerance. These topics are discussed with examples of fruit species that respond to each, and the presence of genetic variability in that fruit species for climatic adaptation. Future prospects in breeding for adaptation are presented.
C1 Univ Florida, Gainesville, FL USA.
C3 State University System of Florida; University of Florida
RP Univ Florida, Gainesville, FL USA.
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NR 101
TC 30
Z9 37
U1 2
U2 22
PU INT SOC HORTICULTURAL SCIENCE
PI LEUVEN 1
PA PO BOX 500, 3001 LEUVEN 1, BELGIUM
SN 0567-7572
EI 2406-6168
BN 90-6605-189-2
J9 ACTA HORTIC
PY 2003
IS 622
BP 411
EP 428
DI 10.17660/ActaHortic.2003.622.43
PG 18
WC Agronomy; Horticulture
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture
GA BX65N
UT WOS:000186003500043
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Storbjörk, S
AF Storbjork, Sofie
TI 'It Takes More to Get a Ship to Change Course': Barriers for
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SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate risks; climate adaptation; adaptive capacity; organizational
   learning; learning challenges
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; POLICY; LEVEL; CONTEXT; CITIES
AB In working with local climate adaptation, questions are raised of how to increase the capacity for integrating climate considerations in planning and decision-making. As part of the institutional dimension of adaptive capacity, how to foster processes of learning and reflexivity among different administrative units and actors is particularly essential. The aim of this paper is to analyse how the call for systematic organizational learning is manifested in local climate adaptation in two Swedish municipalities, illustrating what forms of learning occur and what learning challenges are identified. Despite the distinct and often contrasting approaches to climate adaptation adopted in the two municipalities-reflecting a variety of learning approaches-there are striking similarities in terms of difficulties in moving beyond the specialized few and reaching general acceptability as well as in the inability to mediate tensions between local sector interests, values and priorities and thus bringing about reflexive learning through experience. The paper shows that the cross-cutting nature of climate change needs to be further acknowledged in practice, including to what extent learning takes place among a specialized few key actors or as part of a systematic and cross-sectoral organizational mainstreaming as well as to what extent learning 'on paper' is actually embraced as 'learning in use' in concrete working practices.
C1 Linkoping Univ, Dept Water & Environm Studies, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res CSPR, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
C3 Linkoping University
RP Storbjörk, S (corresponding author), Linkoping Univ, Dept Water & Environm Studies, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res CSPR, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
EM sofie.storbjork@liu.se
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NR 57
TC 75
Z9 82
U1 2
U2 37
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PY 2010
VL 12
IS 3
BP 235
EP 254
DI 10.1080/1523908X.2010.505414
PG 20
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA 651AS
UT WOS:000281897600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Struthers, CL
AF Struthers, Cory L.
TI The political in the technical: understanding the influence of national
   political institutions on climate adaptation
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Institutions; politics; climate adaptation; drought
ID WATER MANAGEMENT; PERSONAL VOTE; REPRESENTATION; GOVERNANCE; INCENTIVES;
   PARTIES; CHILE; POLARIZATION; GOVERNMENT; AUSTRALIA
AB A growing body of research shows that local and international institutions as well as party politics affect climate adaptation. Yet few studies have considered the role of political institutions at the national level. Comparative political institutional theory argues that a country's party system, executive-legislative arrangement, and electoral rules affect elected officials' incentives and behaviour. This study utilizes this theory to explain how Chile's national elected officials responded to the country's extreme drought in 2010-2015. Results indicate that ideologically distinct alliances, a strong president, and legislators' competing incentives to cater to different interests resulted in adaptive policy solutions that only partially addressed the shortcomings that drought exposed. The findings of this study show how politics can underlie technical decision-making on climate change, help to account for the continued inadequacies of Chilean water reform even in the face of new climate extremes, and demonstrate the utility of the comparative political institutional lens for explaining national strategies for climate adaptation. Applying this lens to other country cases and climatic events will advance knowledge on how differences in electoral incentives and policy processes systematically shape climate adaption policy.
C1 [Struthers, Cory L.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Polit Sci, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
   [Struthers, Cory L.] Univ Minnesota, Dept Forest Resources, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Davis;
   University of Minnesota System; University of Minnesota Twin Cities
RP Struthers, CL (corresponding author), Univ Calif Davis, Dept Polit Sci, Davis, CA 95616 USA.; Struthers, CL (corresponding author), Univ Minnesota, Dept Forest Resources, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
EM cstruth@umn.edu
OI Struthers, Cory/0000-0001-9931-9211
FU Hemispheric Institute on the Americas at the University of California,
   Davis through the Tinker Foundation
FX This work was supported by the Hemispheric Institute on the Americas at
   the University of California, Davis through the Tinker Foundation.
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NR 97
TC 4
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 16
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD SEP 13
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 8
BP 756
EP 768
DI 10.1080/17565529.2019.1689905
EA NOV 2019
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA NW7IZ
UT WOS:000497877700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Meng, SS
AF Meng, Sisi
TI Environmental governance is critical for mitigating human displacement
   due to weather-related disasters
SO COMMUNICATIONS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID RISK GOVERNANCE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; INDONESIA; AFRICA
AB The impact of climate change is increasingly evident through intensified and more frequent weather-related events, resulting in a higher likelihood of disaster-induced displacement. In response, effective adaptation and resilience-building measures implemented through environmental governance are crucial. Here, we investigate the relationship between environmental governance (measured by the Notre Dame Country Index) and weather-related disaster displacements. Using a panel dataset of 92 countries from 2010 to 2020, Granger non-causality tests reveal a strong bidirectional relationship between environmental governance and disaster displacement. The relationship is primarily driven by governance readiness in the higher-income group, while both governance and economic readiness are crucial in the middle-income group. Notably, all three readiness components appear significant in the lower-income group, emphasizing the imperative for comprehensive disaster management strategies that address economic development, governmental effectiveness, and social conditions. These findings underscore the importance of effective environmental governance for climate change adaptation and sustainable development goals.
   Governmental readiness - a capacity of state actors to manage disaster risks - is critical for reducing human displacement due to weather-related events regardless of country income, according to an analysis combining country readiness index and human displacement data for 92 countries from 2010 to 2020.
C1 [Meng, Sisi] Univ Notre Dame, Keough Sch Global Affairs, 3113 Jenkins & Nanov Halls, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.
C3 University of Notre Dame
RP Meng, SS (corresponding author), Univ Notre Dame, Keough Sch Global Affairs, 3113 Jenkins & Nanov Halls, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.
EM smeng@nd.edu
RI Meng, Sisi/AHD-6194-2022
OI Meng, Sisi/0000-0003-0677-2717
FU Environmental Change Initiative at the University of Notre Dame
FX The author acknowledges support from the Environmental Change Initiative
   at the University of Notre Dame. I am also grateful to my former
   student, Zhanaiym Kozybay, for her assistance with the literature
   review. Finally, I thank the editor and three anonymous reviewers for
   their suggestions, which have significantly improved the quality of our
   manuscript.
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NR 53
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 3
PU SPRINGERNATURE
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2662-4435
J9 COMMUN EARTH ENVIRON
JI Commun. Earth Environ.
PD JUL 6
PY 2024
VL 5
IS 1
AR 363
DI 10.1038/s43247-024-01528-y
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA XR4N6
UT WOS:001263394100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Shen, JY
   Murray-Tuite, P
   Wernstedt, K
   Guikema, S
AF Shen, Jiayun
   Murray-Tuite, Pamela
   Wernstedt, Kris
   Guikema, Seth
TI Estimating pre-impact and post-impact evacuation behaviors - An
   empirical study of hurricane Ida in coastal Louisiana and Mississippi
SO JOURNAL OF TRANSPORT GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Post-impact evacuation; Sequential logit model; Hurricane; Utility
   interdependency; Residential damage; Evacuation study
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; TRAVEL DEMAND MODEL
AB Evacuation after hurricane impacts appear (post-impact evacuation) has been underemphasized in empirical evacuation studies. This study uses well-examined factors for pre-impact evacuation and novel factors for postimpact evacuation in a sequential logit model for pre- and post-impact evacuation choices. Results show that the evacuation warning is the only factor that affected both pre-impact and post-impact evacuations. Demographics and housing characteristics are significant factors for pre-impact evacuation but not for post-impact evacuation, while residential damages and durations of utility outages are significant situational factors for post-impact evacuation. The durations of water and power outages had additive effects on the probability of evacuating after hurricane impact. Based on the results, we argue that the conventional assumption that sheltered-in-place residents will remain in the affected area, and the restoration planning and assistance generated with that premise will not be aligned with the demand of residents facing inhabitable living situations with damaged residences and prolonged utility outages. Agencies should consider extending the evacuation planning time horizon for storm events likely to induce severe damages and outages and prepare for evacuation during disrupted conditions.
C1 [Shen, Jiayun] Clemson Univ, Glenn Dept Civil Engn, 135 Lowry Hall, Clemson, SC 29634 USA.
   [Murray-Tuite, Pamela] Clemson Univ, Glenn Dept Civil Engn, Clemson, SC USA.
   [Wernstedt, Kris] Virginia Polytech Inst & State Univ, Sch Publ & Int Affairs, Blacksburg, VA USA.
   [Guikema, Seth] Univ Michigan, Ind & Operat Engn, Ann Arbor, MI USA.
C3 Clemson University; Clemson University; Virginia Polytechnic Institute &
   State University; University of Michigan System; University of Michigan
RP Shen, JY (corresponding author), Clemson Univ, Glenn Dept Civil Engn, 135 Lowry Hall, Clemson, SC 29634 USA.
EM jiayuns@g.clemson.edu; pmmurra@clemson.edu; krisw@vt.edu;
   sguikema@umich.edu
OI Shen, Jiayun/0000-0003-4062-2130
FU NSF (CMMI) [1822436]
FX We are very appreciative of the constructive comments from the anonymous
   reviewers, responding to those comments improved the paper. We would
   like to thank Mr. Youwei Xing for his inputs on the self-selection
   issue. This research work is supported by NSF (CMMI, Award Number:
   1822436) for which the authors are grateful; however, the content is
   solely the responsibility of the authors. The authors declare no
   conflicts of interest.
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NR 72
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 4
U2 4
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0966-6923
EI 1873-1236
J9 J TRANSP GEOGR
JI J. Transp. Geogr.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 118
AR 103925
DI 10.1016/j.jtrangeo.2024.103925
EA JUN 2024
PG 14
WC Economics; Geography; Transportation
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Geography; Transportation
GA D8I3T
UT WOS:001298560100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mohale, CT
   Mthombeni, DL
AF Mohale, C. T.
   Mthombeni, D. L.
TI FACTORS INFLUENCING SMALLHOLDER CROP FARMERS' AWARENESS AND ADAPTATION
   MEASURES ON CLIMATE CHANGE IN MOPANI DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY IN THE
   LIMPOPO PROVINCE, SOUTH AFRICA
SO APPLIED ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation measures; climate change; descriptive statistics; logistic
   regression model
ID LEVEL; PERCEPTIONS; STRATEGIES; IMPACTS
AB Farmers are aware of challenges brought by climate change yet struggle with adaptation measures due to a lack of resources such as early warning systems, ecosystem restoration, climateresilient infrastructure, and water supply. This study, undertaken to assess smallholder crop farmers' awareness of, and adaptation to, the impacts of climate change, was conducted in the three local municipalities of Mopani district in the Limpopo Province, South Africa: Giyani, Letaba and Maruleng. The proportionate sampling technique was used to obtain the study sample size of 291 farmers. A Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 28 was used to analyze data, along with descriptive statistics and a binary logistic regression model. The results indicated that 100% of smallholder crop farmers were aware of climate change but struggled to implement adaptation measures. The binary logistic regression results revealed that the variables gender, farm size and change of weather had a significant influence on farmers' adaptation measures. Ninety per cent of smallholder crop farmers were aware of, and implemented, climate change adaptation measures. The study recommends a heightened focus on improving the level of farmers' efforts to adapt, to mitigate the effects of climate change in the study area.
C1 [Mohale, C. T.; Mthombeni, D. L.] Univ South Africa, Dept Agr & Anim Hlth, Florida Campus, ZA-1709 Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of South Africa
RP Mthombeni, DL (corresponding author), Univ South Africa, Dept Agr & Anim Hlth, Florida Campus, ZA-1709 Johannesburg, South Africa.
EM mthomdl@unisa.ac.za
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NR 36
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 5
U2 5
PU ALOKI Applied Ecological Research and Forensic Inst Ltd
PI Budapest
PA Kassa u. 118, Budapest, HUNGARY
SN 1589-1623
EI 1785-0037
J9 APPL ECOL ENV RES
JI Appl. Ecol. Environ. Res.
PY 2024
VL 22
IS 2
BP 1437
EP 1446
DI 10.15666/aeer/2202_14371446
PG 10
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA RP7C1
UT WOS:001228919800019
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chen, ZM
   Zhou, TJ
   Chen, XL
   Zhang, WX
   Zuo, M
   Man, WM
   Qian, Y
AF Chen, Ziming
   Zhou, Tianjun
   Chen, Xiaolong
   Zhang, Wenxia
   Zuo, Meng
   Man, Wenmin
   Qian, Yun
TI Emergent Constrained Projections of Mean and Extreme Warming in China
SO GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
ID SURFACE AIR-TEMPERATURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; UNCERTAINTY; MODELS;
   PRECIPITATION; 21ST-CENTURY; PERFORMANCE; SCENARIOMIP; ENSEMBLE; TRENDS
AB Reliable regional temperature projections including heat extremes are essential for climate change adaptation and mitigation. Taking China as an example, simple averages from Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) models project high warming due to sampling many high climate sensitivities in the ensemble. Here, we develop an emergent constraint (EC) framework to obtain constrained mean and daily maximum temperature (TXx) warming over China by using observed global warming and local residual warming. The constrained annual mean and TXx warming over China (2.33(degrees)C [1.61-3.05(degrees)C] and 2.31(degrees)C [1.21-2.99(degrees)C]) are 0.65(degrees)C [0.04-1.76(degrees)C] and 0.63(degrees)C [-0.50-2.39(degrees)C], respectively, lower than raw projections (2.98(degrees)C [1.85-4.22(degrees)C] and 2.94(degrees)C [2.04-4.39(degrees)C]) for 2080-2099 under the intermediate-emission scenario. Approximately half model uncertainty is reduced after constraint. The land area (population) experiencing temperature extremes in our metric is 78% (85%) of the raw projections. Our results imply a lower impact of extreme heat than implied by current raw CMIP6 projections.
C1 [Chen, Ziming; Zhou, Tianjun; Chen, Xiaolong; Zhang, Wenxia; Zuo, Meng; Man, Wenmin] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Atmospher Phys, LASG, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Ziming; Zhou, Tianjun] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Earth & Planetary Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Ziming; Qian, Yun] Pacific Northwest Natl Lab, Atmospher Sci & Global Change Div, Richland, WA USA.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Atmospheric Physics, CAS;
   Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,
   CAS; United States Department of Energy (DOE); Pacific Northwest
   National Laboratory
RP Zhou, TJ (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Atmospher Phys, LASG, Beijing, Peoples R China.; Zhou, TJ (corresponding author), Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Earth & Planetary Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM zhoutj@lasg.iap.ac.cn
RI Chen, Ziming/JZD-3965-2024; Chen, Xiaolong/AAO-7147-2020; qian,
   yun/E-1845-2011; ZHOU, Tianjun/C-3195-2012; Zuo, Meng/R-8129-2018;
   Zhang, Wenxia/L-8394-2015
OI ZHOU, Tianjun/0000-0002-5829-7279; Chen, Ziming/0000-0001-7522-5093;
   Chen, Xiaolong/0000-0003-4098-9952; Man, Wenmin/0000-0003-3004-5464;
   Zuo, Meng/0000-0001-6078-9814; Zhang, Wenxia/0000-0001-8614-8070
FU This study is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (Grant 41988101), National Key Research and Development Program of
   China (2020YFA0608904), and the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific
   Expedition and Research (STEP) program (Grant 2 [41988101]; National
   Natural Science Foundation of China [2020YFA0608904]; National Key
   Research and Development Program of China [2019QZKK0102]; Second Tibetan
   Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research (STEP) program; US Department
   of Energy (DOE), Office of Science, Office of Biological and
   Environmental Research (BER), as part of the Global and Regional Model
   Analysis program area [DE-AC05-76RLO1830]; DOE by the Battelle Memorial
   Institute; Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Climate Change
FX This study is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (Grant 41988101), National Key Research and Development Program of
   China (2020YFA0608904), and the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific
   Expedition and Research (STEP) program (Grant 2019QZKK0102). This
   research is also supported by the US Department of Energy (DOE), Office
   of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research (BER), as
   part of the Global and Regional Model Analysis program area. The Pacific
   Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is operated for the DOE by the
   Battelle Memorial Institute under Contract DE-AC05-76RLO1830. We also
   acknowledge the support from Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for
   Climate Change and Dr. Jian Lu. We thank WCRP & apos;s WGCM for making
   available CMIP6 model output (Tables S1 and S2 in Supporting Information
   S1) (), and NOAA/OAR/ESRL PSD for providing the NOAA merged land ocean
   global surface temperature data sets ().
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NR 63
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 8
U2 23
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
SN 0094-8276
EI 1944-8007
J9 GEOPHYS RES LETT
JI Geophys. Res. Lett.
PD OCT 28
PY 2023
VL 50
IS 20
AR e2022GL102124
DI 10.1029/2022GL102124
PG 13
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology
GA U7JH0
UT WOS:001086526600001
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lugen, M
AF Lugen, Marine
TI Framing Climate Services: Logics, Actors, and Implications for Policies
   and Projects
SO ATMOSPHERE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate services; climate information services; climate change
   adaptation; framing analysis; discourse analysis; climate policy
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; INFORMATION; SCIENCE; VULNERABILITY; FORECASTS;
   FARMERS; NEEDS; RISK; AGRICULTURE; KNOWLEDGE
AB This paper explores how climate services are framed in the literature and possible implications for climate services' policies and projects. By critically exploring the frames around climate services, the wider objective is to encourage more reflexive and responsible research in the field, particularly given the huge challenge that climate change represents. By using a framing analysis based on an extensive literature review, five dominant frames were identified. Climate services are mainly framed (1) as a technological innovation, (2) as a market, (3) as an interface between users and producers, (4) as a risk management tool, and (5) from an ethical angle. The predominant frames influence how we think about climate services, shared assumptions, and the way in which policies and projects are designed. To prevent negative effects of climate services on the ground, such as inequalities, the main recommendations include establishing interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary dialogues between different communities of practice and players, increasing empirical and social science research to improve our understanding of this new field, and finally, re-thinking climate services in terms of adaptation rather than as the mere production of new information products.
C1 [Lugen, Marine] Univ Libre Bruxelles, Ctr Etud Dev Durable, ULB C130-03 Ave FD Roosevelt 50, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium.
C3 Universite Libre de Bruxelles
RP Lugen, M (corresponding author), Univ Libre Bruxelles, Ctr Etud Dev Durable, ULB C130-03 Ave FD Roosevelt 50, B-1050 Brussels, Belgium.
EM marine.lugen@ulb.be
OI Lugen, Marine/0000-0003-4742-6351
FU Belgian Fund for Scientific Research-FNRS (F.R.S.-FNRS)
FX This research was funded by the Belgian Fund for Scientific
   Research-FNRS (F.R.S.-FNRS), through a Research Fellow (ASP-Aspirant)
   fellowship.
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NR 142
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 12
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4433
J9 ATMOSPHERE-BASEL
JI Atmosphere
PD OCT
PY 2020
VL 11
IS 10
AR 1047
DI 10.3390/atmos11101047
PG 27
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA OJ8OA
UT WOS:000584212100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mabon, L
AF Mabon, Leslie
TI Environmental justice in urban greening for subtropical Asian cities:
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SO SINGAPORE JOURNAL OF TROPICAL GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE environmental justice; greenspace; resilience; Taipei; urban development
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; INFRASTRUCTURE;
   RESILIENCE; GENTRIFICATION; POLICY
AB Whilst an extensive body of literature exists on the environmental justice implications of urban greening in North America, Europe and to an extent Australasia, there are fewer analogous studies for tropical zone Asian city contexts. Given increasing global interest in the potential for urban greenspace to contribute to resilience in the face of environmental change and the higher vulnerability of Asian cities to environmental shocks, this is a notable gap. In response, this paper evaluates the contours of environmental justice debates within urban greenspace planning for one subtropical Asian city-Taipei. Through analysis of newspaper reporting on urban greenspace planning within Taipei, the potential and limitations of greenspace planning in contributing to equitably delivering benefits from urban greenspace towards resilience are assessed. Findings suggest that claims to environmental injustice in greenspace debates within Taipei follow broadly similar lines to controversies in Europe and North America. Nevertheless, the need for specific knowledge to understand the different ecosystem services provided by tropical zone ecosystems, and the potential for conflicts over greenspace versus development to be heightened in dense Asian city settings, are highlighted as potential areas where environmental justice debates in an Asian urban greening context may differ from Western cities.
C1 [Mabon, Leslie] Scottish Assoc Marine Sci, Oban, Argyll, Scotland.
C3 University of the Highlands & Islands
RP Mabon, L (corresponding author), Scottish Assoc Marine Sci, Oban, Argyll, Scotland.
EM leslie.mabon@sams.ac.uk
RI Mabon, Leslie/JDW-8621-2023
OI Mabon, Leslie/0000-0003-2646-6119
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NR 62
TC 15
Z9 14
U1 1
U2 25
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0129-7619
EI 1467-9493
J9 SINGAPORE J TROP GEO
JI Singap. J. Trop. Geogr.
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 41
IS 3
BP 432
EP 449
DI 10.1111/sjtg.12341
PG 18
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA NN9QF
UT WOS:000569122900009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Somphong, C
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AF Somphong, Chatuphorn
   Udo, Keiko
   Ritphring, Sompratana
   Shirakawa, Hiroaki
TI Beach Nourishment as an Adaptation to Future Sandy Beach Loss Owing to
   Sea-Level Rise in Thailand
SO JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
LA English
DT Article
DE sea-level rise; sandy beach; beach erosion; beach nourishment; climate
   change adaptation; Thailand
ID DREDGED SAND; SHORELINE; FLOOD
AB A recent study suggested that significant beach loss may take place on the coasts of Thailand by the end of the 21st century as per projections of sea-level rise by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The present study adapts a framework and provides broad estimations for sand volumes and costs required to apply beach nourishment to each coastal zone in Thailand using a technique based on the Bruun rule assumption. Results indicate that a minimum of USD 2981 million (the best scenario) to a maximum of USD 11,409 million (the worst scenario) would be required to maintain all sandy beaches at their present width. Further, the effect of filling particle size on beach nourishment was analyzed in this study. The cost of beach nourishment ranges between USD 1983 and 14,208 million when considering filling particle size diameters of 0.5 and 0.2 mm. A zonal sand volume map for all 51 sandy beach zones in Thailand was created for use as an overview to help decision makers develop a more feasible adaptation plan to deal with the future sea-level rise for Thailand.
C1 [Somphong, Chatuphorn; Udo, Keiko] Tohoku Univ, Int Res Inst Disaster Sci, Sendai, Miyagi 9808572, Japan.
   [Ritphring, Sompratana] Kasetsart Univ, Dept Water Resources Engn, Bangkok 10900, Thailand.
   [Shirakawa, Hiroaki] Nagoya Univ, Grad Sch Environm Studies, Nagoya, Aichi 4648601, Japan.
C3 Tohoku University; Kasetsart University; Nagoya University
RP Somphong, C (corresponding author), Tohoku Univ, Int Res Inst Disaster Sci, Sendai, Miyagi 9808572, Japan.
EM somphong@irides.tohoku.ac.jp; udo@irides.tohoku.ac.jp; fengstr@ku.ac.th;
   sirakawa@urban.env.nagoya-u.ac.jp
RI Udo, Keiko/AAN-1610-2021
OI Somphong, Chatuphorn/0000-0003-2965-0720; Udo, Keiko/0000-0003-0293-1354
FU Advancing Co-design of Integrated Strategies with Adaptation to Climate
   Change on Thailand (ADAP-T)
FX This research was supported by Advancing Co-design of Integrated
   Strategies with Adaptation to Climate Change on Thailand (ADAP-T).
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NR 36
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 0
U2 14
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2077-1312
J9 J MAR SCI ENG
JI J. Mar. Sci. Eng.
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 8
IS 9
AR 659
DI 10.3390/jmse8090659
PG 14
WC Engineering, Marine; Engineering, Ocean; Oceanography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Oceanography
GA OE8TI
UT WOS:000580795700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ihm, SH
   Seo, SB
   Kim, YO
AF Ihm, Sun Hoo
   Seo, Seung Beom
   Kim, Young-Oh
TI Valuation of Water Resources Infrastructure Planning from Climate Change
   Adaptation Perspective using Real Option Analysis
SO KSCE JOURNAL OF CIVIL ENGINEERING
LA English
DT Article
DE real option analysis; robust; adaptive; decision making; economic
   feasibility
ID RISK; DESIGN
AB For adaptation to the changing climate, planning of new water infrastructures should be carefully evaluated by either robust or adaptive decision making methods. For this purpose, a new economic feasibility analysis framework has been developed using real option analysis that can reflect robust and adaptive perspectives in decision making. To reflect uncertainty in climate (robust), the probabilities of drought occurrences are estimated by the results of dam storage simulation. To provide flexibility in decision making (adaptive), three different types of real options are used as a form of a decision tree. By re-evaluating economic feasibility of the Boryeong Dam conduit project, it is found that the abort option can be the best choice for minimal economic loss on the project. Further, more conditions for maximizing economic feasibility on the project are addressed from the sensitivity analysis. It is found that the invest option would be more economically feasible than abort option, when the probability of severe drought increases by approximately 20%. Thus, though the Boryeong Dam conduit project is not economically feasible for now, it might be an appropriate infrastructure if it is constructed in the future, when the probability of drought occurrence increases.
C1 [Ihm, Sun Hoo; Seo, Seung Beom] Korea Environm Inst, Sejong 30147, South Korea.
   [Kim, Young-Oh] Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
C3 Korea Environment Institute (KEI); Seoul National University (SNU)
RP Seo, SB (corresponding author), Korea Environm Inst, Sejong 30147, South Korea.
EM shihm@kei.re.kr; sbseo7@kei.re.kr; yokim05@snu.ac.kr
OI Seo, Seung Beom/0000-0001-9819-6555
FU Advanced Water Management Research Program - Ministry of Land,
   Infrastructure and Transport of Korea [18AWMP-B083066-05]; National
   Research Foundation of Korea [NRF-2017R1A6A3A11031800]
FX This research was supported by a grant (18AWMP-B083066-05) from the
   Advanced Water Management Research Program funded by the Ministry of
   Land, Infrastructure and Transport of Korea, and also supported by a
   grant (NRF-2017R1A6A3A11031800) through the Young Researchers program
   funded by the National Research Foundation of Korea.
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NR 38
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 23
PU KOREAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS-KSCE
PI SEOUL
PA 3-16 JUNGDAE-RO 25-GIL, SONGPA-GU, SEOUL, 05661, SOUTH KOREA
SN 1226-7988
EI 1976-3808
J9 KSCE J CIV ENG
JI KSCE J. Civ. Eng.
PD JUN
PY 2019
VL 23
IS 6
BP 2794
EP 2802
DI 10.1007/s12205-019-1722-6
PG 9
WC Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering
GA HY6JW
UT WOS:000468237600039
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU García, AK
AF Garcia, Angela Kronenburg
TI Territorial Conflicts, Agency and the Strategic Appropriation of
   Interventions in Kenya's Southern Drylands
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE territorial conflict; interventions; agency; drylands; Loita Maasai;
   Kenya; natural resource conflict
ID GROUP RANCH SUBDIVISION; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; MAASAI; LEADERSHIP;
   PROPERTY; DISTRICT; NAROK; POWER
AB A number of scholars have noted that interventions, such as development programmes and climate change adaptation projects, that simplify complex social realities and thus lose sight of the relational dynamics beyond the target or beneficiary group, risk contributing to conflict. This article examines how a series of interventions in a particular dryland area in southern Kenya became embroiled in a long-running territorial conflict between the Loita Maasai (the beneficiary community) and their neighbours, the non-beneficiary Purko Maasai. Based on ethnographic research and by taking a historical perspective, it shows how Loita Maasai leaders systematically appropriated these outside interventions, used and reworked them with the strategic aim of stopping land loss to ongoing Purko encroachment. The analysis reveals two ways in which Loita leaders realized this: (a) by using interventions to stake out spatial claims to land; and (b) by capitalizing on the tendency of interventions to simplify local contexts. This article contributes to the debate on the linkages between intervention and conflict by highlighting the agency of intervention beneficiaries and showing that, through their actions, interventions may unwittingly reproduce and even aggravate existing conflicts.
C1 [Garcia, Angela Kronenburg] Catholic Univ Louvain, Earth & Life Inst, B-1348 Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
C3 Universite Catholique Louvain
RP García, AK (corresponding author), Catholic Univ Louvain, Earth & Life Inst, B-1348 Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
EM angela.kronenburg@uclouvain.be
OI Kronenburg Garcia, Angela/0000-0003-4547-9468
FU MaGW Social Sciences; Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
   [400-05-146]; Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds; European Research Council
   (ERC) under the European Union [677140 MIDLAND]
FX This work is based on my PhD research, which was funded by MaGW Social
   Sciences, the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (grant
   number 400-05-146), and through a grant from the Prins Bernhard
   Cultuurfonds. The writing of this article has received support from the
   European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020
   research and innovation programme (grant agreement 677140 MIDLAND).
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NR 57
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 3
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
SN 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD NOV
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 11
AR 4156
DI 10.3390/su10114156
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HC1AQ
UT WOS:000451531700330
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nunn, PD
   Runman, J
   Falanruw, M
   Kumar, R
AF Nunn, Patrick D.
   Runman, John
   Falanruw, Margie
   Kumar, Roselyn
TI Culturally grounded responses to coastal change on islands in the
   Federated States of Micronesia, northwest Pacific Ocean
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Pacific; Island; Micronesia; Coastal change; Climate change; Adaptation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; COMMUNITY; SETTLEMENT; KNOWLEDGE; DISASTER;
   LESSONS; CONTEXT; SYSTEMS; TUVALU; MIDDLE
AB The characterization of Pacific Islands as especially vulnerable to climate change often undervalues the cultural resilience of their inhabitants. On many Micronesian islands, coastal stone-built structures are the most visible type of tangible cultural resilience and have endured for perhaps 1000 years or more. A distinction is recognized between older structures, likely built in response to sea-level rise during the Medieval Warm Period (AD 750-1250), and more recent structures that likely took advantage of the lowered sea level during the Little Ice Age (AD 1350-1800). Detailed studies of Micronesian responses to recent coastal change were undertaken in the islands of Yap (Proper). The positioning and maintenance of coastal men's houses (faluw) reflect either pragmatic responses to unmanageable coastal change or a cultural determination to resist this. The long history of traditional responses to climate variability and coastal change for terrestrial food production on Yap is also discussed. Future adaptation pathways on Yap and other higher islands in Micronesia need to combine scientific knowledge of climate change with traditional responses to historical change, including the stonework tradition and the cultural determination to resist undesired coastal change.
C1 [Nunn, Patrick D.] Univ Sunshine Coast, Maroochydore, Qld, Australia.
   [Runman, John] Govt Yap, Hist Preservat Off, Yap, Micronesia.
   [Falanruw, Margie] Federated States Micronesia, Yap Inst Nat Sci, Yap, Micronesia.
   [Kumar, Roselyn] Univ South Pacific, Pacific Studies, Suva, Fiji.
C3 University of the Sunshine Coast; University of the South Pacific
RP Nunn, PD (corresponding author), Univ Sunshine Coast, Maroochydore, Qld, Australia.
EM pnunn@usc.edu.au
RI ; Nunn, Patrick/C-7864-2011
OI Kumar, Roselyn/0000-0002-3940-0488; Nunn, Patrick/0000-0001-9295-5741
FU University of the Sunshine Coast (Australia); Government of the
   Federated States of Micronesia
FX The field surveys that stimulated this study were seed funded by the
   University of the Sunshine Coast (Australia) and supported by the
   Government of the Federated States of Micronesia. The assistance of
   Augustine Kohler, Francis Reg, Falownug Kenmed and Kenneth Fanaguchel is
   especially acknowledged. For information and hospitality, we thank James
   Raech (Bechyal), Joseph Waayan and Lewis Yifith (Leang), Andrew Waayan
   (Riy), Mark Mangarfir (Ngariy) and Thomas Ganang (Gachpar). The
   generosity of the people of Yap with which PN and RK were previously
   unfamiliar is something they (and Petra Nunn) will never forget.
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PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD APR
PY 2017
VL 17
IS 4
SI SI
BP 959
EP 971
DI 10.1007/s10113-016-0950-2
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ES6ZO
UT WOS:000399699500002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Balbi, S
   Villa, F
   Mojtahed, V
   Hegetschweiler, KT
   Giupponi, C
AF Balbi, Stefano
   Villa, Ferdinando
   Mojtahed, Vahid
   Hegetschweiler, Karin Tessa
   Giupponi, Carlo
TI A spatial Bayesian network model to assess the benefits of early warning
   for urban flood risk to people
SO NATURAL HAZARDS AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; BELIEF NETWORKS; NATURAL HAZARDS; DAMAGE;
   UNCERTAINTY; MANAGEMENT; SYSTEM; VULNERABILITY; DECISIONS; FRAMEWORK
AB This article presents a novel methodology to assess flood risk to people by integrating people's vulnerability and ability to cushion hazards through coping and adapting. The proposed approach extends traditional risk assessments beyond material damages; complements quantitative and semi-quantitative data with subjective and local knowledge, improving the use of commonly available information; and produces estimates of model uncertainty by providing probability distributions for all of its outputs. Flood risk to people is modeled using a spatially explicit Bayesian network model calibrated on expert opinion. Risk is assessed in terms of (1) likelihood of non-fatal physical injury, (2) likelihood of post-traumatic stress disorder and (3) likelihood of death. The study area covers the lower part of the Sihl valley (Switzerland) including the city of Zurich. The model is used to estimate the effect of improving an existing early warning system, taking into account the reliability, lead time and scope (i.e., coverage of people reached by the warning). Model results indicate that the potential benefits of an improved early warning in terms of avoided human impacts are particularly relevant in case of a major flood event.
C1 [Balbi, Stefano; Villa, Ferdinando] Basque Ctr Climate Change, BC3, Leioa 48940, Spain.
   [Mojtahed, Vahid; Giupponi, Carlo] Ca Foscari Univ Venice, Dept Econ, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
   [Mojtahed, Vahid; Giupponi, Carlo] Venice Ctr Climate Studies, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
   [Hegetschweiler, Karin Tessa] Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res WSL, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
   [Villa, Ferdinando] Ikerbasque, Basque Fdn Sci, Bilbao 48013, Spain.
   [Mojtahed, Vahid] Fera Sci Ltd, York YO41 1LZ, N Yorkshire, England.
C3 Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3); Universita Ca Foscari Venezia;
   Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute
   for Forest, Snow & Landscape Research; Basque Foundation for Science;
   Food & Environment Research Agency
RP Balbi, S (corresponding author), Basque Ctr Climate Change, BC3, Leioa 48940, Spain.
EM stefano.balbi@bc3research.org
RI Giupponi, Carlo/E-5895-2012; Balbi, Stefano/M-5740-2013
OI Balbi, Stefano/0000-0001-8190-5968; Hegetschweiler,
   Tessa/0000-0001-6738-7148; Villa, Ferdinando/0000-0002-5114-3007
FU KULTURisk (Knowledge-based approach to develop a cULTURE of Risk
   prevention) project, FP7-ENV [265280]; NERC [NE/L001195/1, NE/J000957/1]
   Funding Source: UKRI
FX This research was partially funded by the KULTURisk (Knowledge-based
   approach to develop a cULTURE of Risk prevention) project, FP7-ENV-2010
   vertical bar Project 265280 (www.kulturisk.eu). The authors want to
   thank the 25 flood risk experts and the four EWS experts interviewed. We
   express our gratitude to Roland Olschewski and Matthias Buchecker (Swiss
   Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research - WSL) and
   Martina Bullo (Department of Environmental Sciences, Informatics and
   Statistics, Ca' Foscari University of Venice) for the insights provided
   by their work. Special thanks to Animesh Gain and Claudio Biscaro
   (Department of Economics, Ca' Foscari University of Venice) for the
   review of the vulnerability module. We also want to acknowledge
   Valentina Gallina, Silvia Torresan, Elena Semenzin and Alex Zabeo
   (Department of Environmental Sciences, Informatics and Statistics, Ca'
   Foscari University of Venice) for the contribution in the development of
   the KULTURisk Framework. The technology used to integrate BNs with GIS
   is k.LAB http://aries.integratedmodelling.org/, a semantic meta-modeling
   platform developed by co-author Villa (Villa et al., 2014). The BN
   modules were developed and tested with the GeNIe software
   https://dslpitt.org/genie/wiki/GeNIe_Documentation. The GIS results have
   been elaborated with the QGIS open source application www.qgis.org.
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TC 23
Z9 28
U1 4
U2 37
PU COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
PI GOTTINGEN
PA BAHNHOFSALLEE 1E, GOTTINGEN, 37081, GERMANY
SN 1561-8633
EI 1684-9981
J9 NAT HAZARD EARTH SYS
JI Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci.
PY 2016
VL 16
IS 6
BP 1323
EP 1337
DI 10.5194/nhess-16-1323-2016
PG 15
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA DP0VJ
UT WOS:000378207900003
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Konchar, KM
   Staver, B
   Salick, J
   Chapagain, A
   Joshi, L
   Karki, S
   Lo, S
   Paudel, A
   Subedi, P
   Ghimire, SK
AF Konchar, Katie M.
   Staver, Ben
   Salick, Jan
   Chapagain, Arjun
   Joshi, Laxmi
   Karki, Sita
   Lo, Smriti
   Paudel, Asha
   Subedi, Prem
   Ghimire, Suresh K.
TI ADAPTING IN THE SHADOW OF ANNAPURNA: A CLIMATE TIPPING POINT
SO JOURNAL OF ETHNOBIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; Himalaya; local ecological knowledge; traditional
   agriculture; adaptation
ID TIBETAN SACRED SITES; VEGETATION; HIMALAYAS; BIODIVERSITY; DIVERSITY;
   VICINITY; PLATEAU; PLANTS; NEPAL
AB Rapid climate change in the Himalaya threatens the traditional livelihoods of remote mountain communities, challenges traditional systems of knowledge, and stresses existing socio-ecological systems. Through semi-structured interviews, participatory photography, and repeat photography focused on climate change and its impacts on traditional livelihoods, we aim to shed light on some of the socio-cultural implications of climate related change in Manang, a remote village in the Annapurna Conservation Area of Western Nepal. Observed changes in temperature, precipitation, permanent snow cover, and glacial extent directly inform villagers' perceptions of and adaptations to Himalayan climate change. Adaptation strategies include a shift from traditional agropastoral practices to a more diversified blend of agropastoralism, tourism services, and cash-crop production. Climate change has tipped the scales in favor of the production of fruits and vegetables, cash crops previously unsuitable to the local climate. Diversification of livelihood strategies signifies transformation within the socio-ecological system of Manang and may enable greater resiliency to long-term climatic change. Continued development of relevant, place-based adaptations to rapid Himalayan climate change depends on local peoples' ability to understand the potential impacts of climate change and to adjust within complex, traditional socio-ecological systems.
C1 [Staver, Ben] Georgia Inst Technol, Sch Publ Policy, Atlanta, GA 30332 USA.
   [Salick, Jan] Missouri Bot Garden, St Louis, MO USA.
   [Chapagain, Arjun; Joshi, Laxmi; Karki, Sita; Lo, Smriti; Paudel, Asha; Subedi, Prem; Ghimire, Suresh K.] Tribhuvan Univ, Cent Dept Bot, Kathmandu, Nepal.
C3 University System of Georgia; Georgia Institute of Technology; Missouri
   Botanical Gardens; Tribhuvan University
EM katie.konchar@gmail.com
RI Chapagain, Arjun/GWZ-9100-2022
OI Ghimire, Suresh Kumar/0000-0002-3845-4468; Joshi, Laxmi
   Raj/0000-0003-1277-4233; CHAPAGAIN, Arjun/0000-0002-0295-0216
FU National Geographic Society [8605-09]; Missouri Botanical Garden;
   Central Department of Botany, Tribhuvan University
FX The authors thank the Government of Nepal, the National Trust for Nature
   Conservation, and the Annapurna Conservation Area Project for permission
   to conduct this work. Special thanks to Laurence de Boissieu Ichac,
   Katrin Hagan, Zdenek Thoma, and Michal Thoma for permission to publish
   historic photographs. We especially acknowledge the Manangi for sharing
   their knowledge, their stories, and their gracious hospitality. This
   work was funded by the National Geographic Society (grant #8605-09
   awarded to Jan Salick for "Central Himalayan Alpine Biodiversity") and
   was completed in conjunction with botanical research supported by the
   Missouri Botanical Garden in collaboration with Central Department of
   Botany, Tribhuvan University (see Salick et al. 2014b).
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NR 79
TC 21
Z9 24
U1 4
U2 56
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0278-0771
EI 2162-4496
J9 J ETHNOBIOL
JI J. Ethnobiol.
PD OCT
PY 2015
VL 35
IS 3
BP 449
EP 471
DI 10.2993/0278-0771-35.3.449
PG 23
WC Anthropology; Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Anthropology; Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
GA DM8DQ
UT WOS:000376591300002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hughes, S
AF Hughes, Sara
TI Justice in Urban Climate Change Adaptation: Criteria and Application to
   Delhi
SO ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; cities and climate change; equity; justice; planning
ID ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE; POLITICAL-ECONOMY; LOCAL COMMITMENT;
   VULNERABILITY; POLICY; CITIES; SUSTAINABILITY; SPACE; URBANIZATION;
   GOVERNANCE
AB Cities around the world are increasingly developing plans to adapt to the consequences of climate change. These plans will have important consequences for urban populations because they are likely to reshape and reconfigure urban infrastructures, services, and decision making processes. It is critical that these adaptation plans are developed in a way that is just. Criteria was developed that can be used to assess justice in adaptation so that the processes, priorities, and impacts address the needs of the most vulnerable urban populations. Further, mechanisms are outlined that have been proposed as responsible for producing urban injustice. The justice criteria are applied to the case of adaptation planning in Delhi and the extent to which poor and informal populations are included and affected by this planning. The analysis shows that adaptation planning in Delhi does not meet the justice criteria in part because of a lack of capacity and the political economy of poverty in the city. The criteria for justice and mechanisms of injustice offer an important step toward developing a greater understanding of not only whether city-level adaptation planning is just, but also why it is or is not.
C1 Natl Ctr Atmospher Res, Boulder, CO 80305 USA.
C3 National Center Atmospheric Research (NCAR) - USA
RP Hughes, S (corresponding author), Natl Ctr Atmospher Res, Boulder, CO 80305 USA.
OI Hughes, Sara/0000-0002-1282-6235
FU Advanced Study Program; Integrated Science Program of the National
   Center for Atmospheric Research
FX This research was supported by funding from the Advanced Study Program
   and Integrated Science Program of the National Center for Atmospheric
   Research and assisted by The Energy and Resources Institute. The author
   would like to thank Patricia Romero Lankao, Harriet Bulkeley, the
   editors of this special issue, and two anonymous reviewers for their
   valuable comments and suggestions. An earlier version of this paper was
   presented at the 2012 annual meeting of the Association of American
   Geographers.
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NR 90
TC 62
Z9 70
U1 1
U2 41
PU RESILIENCE ALLIANCE
PI WOLFVILLE
PA ACADIA UNIV, BIOLOGY DEPT, WOLFVILLE, NS B0P 1X0, CANADA
SN 1708-3087
J9 ECOL SOC
JI Ecol. Soc.
PY 2013
VL 18
IS 4
AR 48
DI 10.5751/ES-05929-180448
PG 15
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 285YS
UT WOS:000329431700048
OA Green Submitted, gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Anderson, P
   Harrison, O
   Cooper, C
   Jané-Llopis, E
AF Anderson, Peter
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TI Incentives for Health
SO JOURNAL OF HEALTH COMMUNICATION
LA English
DT Article
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   NONCOMMUNICABLE DISEASES; ALCOHOL-CONSUMPTION; PROMOTION PROGRAM;
   CONTROLLED-TRIAL; OBESITY; POLICY; WORKPLACE
AB This article discusses incentives to help make healthy choices the easy choices for individuals, operating at the levels of the individual, producers and service providers, and governments. Whereas paying individuals directly to be healthier seems to have a limited effect, offering financial incentives through health insurance improves health. Changing the environment to make healthier choices more accessible acts as an incentive to improve health. Employers can provide incentives to improve the health of their employees. Producers and service providers can take voluntary action to make their products less harmful, and they can be nudged into marketing healthier products within a regulatory environment. International agreements and monitoring systems can incentivize governments to do more for health. Lessons from climate change adaptation suggest that multilevel governance and policy integration are greater obstacles to policy change and implementation than knowing what has to be done. Policy change and implementation are triggered by many drivers, many of which are side effects of other policy pressures rather than of the direct policy goal itself. Effective action to reduce noncommunicable diseases will require leveraging social networks into a new ways of thinking about health; making better health prestigious and aspirational, and giving health and wellness a brand that encourages positive behavior change.
C1 [Anderson, Peter] Newcastle Univ, Inst Hlth & Soc, Fac Med, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE2 4AX, Tyne & Wear, England.
   [Harrison, Oliver] Hlth Author, Abu Dhabi, U Arab Emirates.
   [Cooper, Cary] Univ Lancaster, Sch Management, Lancaster, England.
   [Jane-Llopis, Eva] World Econ Forum, Geneva, Switzerland.
C3 Newcastle University - UK; Lancaster University
RP Anderson, P (corresponding author), Newcastle Univ, Inst Hlth & Soc, Fac Med, Baddiley Clark Bldg,Richardson Rd, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE2 4AX, Tyne & Wear, England.
EM peteranderson.mail@gmail.com
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NR 166
TC 13
Z9 16
U1 2
U2 54
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 1081-0730
EI 1087-0415
J9 J HEALTH COMMUN
JI J. Health Commun.
PY 2011
VL 16
SU 2
BP 107
EP 133
DI 10.1080/10810730.2011.601531
PG 27
WC Communication; Information Science & Library Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Communication; Information Science & Library Science
GA 887ST
UT WOS:000299950800012
PM 21916718
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pasini, S
   Torresan, S
   Rizzi, J
   Zabeo, A
   Critto, A
   Marcomini, A
AF Pasini, S.
   Torresan, S.
   Rizzi, J.
   Zabeo, A.
   Critto, A.
   Marcomini, A.
TI Climate change impact assessment in Veneto and Friuli Plain groundwater.
   Part II: A spatially resolved regional risk assessment
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Regional risk assessment; Groundwater; Climate change; GIS; MCDA
ID VEGETATION; RECHARGE; AQUIFER; SURFACE; WATER
AB Climate change impact assessment on water resources has received high international attention over the last two decades, due to the observed global warming and its consequences at the global to local scale. In particular, climate-related risks for groundwater and related ecosystems pose a great concern to scientists and water authorities involved in the protection of these valuable resources. The close link of global warming with water cycle alterations encourages research to deepen current knowledge on relationships between climate trends and status of water systems, and to develop predictive tools for their sustainable management, copying with key principles of EU water policy. Within the European project Life + TRUST (Tool for Regional-scale assessment of groundwater Storage improvement in adaptation to climaTe change), a Regional Risk Assessment (RRA) methodology was developed in order to identify impacts from climate change on groundwater and associated ecosystems (e.g. surface waters, agricultural areas, natural environments) and to rank areas and receptors at risk in the high and middle Veneto and Friuli Plain (Italy). Based on an integrated analysis of impacts, vulnerability and risks linked to climate change at the regional scale, a RRA framework complying with the Sources-Pathway-Receptor-Consequence (SPRC) approach was defined. Relevant impacts on groundwater and surface waters (i.e. groundwater level variations, changes in nitrate infiltration processes, changes in water availability for irrigation) were selected and analyzed through hazard scenario, exposure, susceptibility and risk assessment. The RRA methodology used hazard scenarios constructed through global and high resolution model simulations for the 2071-2100 period, according to IPCC A1B emission scenario in order to produce useful indications for future risk prioritization and to support the addressing of adaptation measures, primarily Managed Artificial Recharge (MAR) techniques. Relevant outcomes from the described RRA application highlighted that potential climate change impacts will occur with different extension and magnitude in the case study area. Particularly, qualitative and quantitative impacts on groundwater will occur with more severe consequences in the wettest and in the driest scenario (respectively). Moreover, such impacts will likely have little direct effects on related ecosystems - croplands, forests and natural environments - lying along the spring area (about 12% of croplands and 2% of natural environments at risk) while more severe consequences will indirectly occur on natural and anthropic systems through the reduction in quality and quantity of water availability for agricultural and other uses (about 80% of agricultural areas and 27% of groundwater bodies at risk). (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Zabeo, A.; Critto, A.; Marcomini, A.] Univ Ca Foscari Venice, Dept Environm Sci Informat & Stat, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
   [Pasini, S.; Torresan, S.; Rizzi, J.; Critto, A.] Ctr Euromediterraneo Cambiamenti Climat CMCC, Impacts Soil & Coast Div ISC, I-73100 Lecce, Italy.
C3 Universita Ca Foscari Venezia; Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti
   Climatici (CMCC)
RP Critto, A (corresponding author), Univ Ca Foscari Venice, Dept Environm Sci Informat & Stat, Calle Larga S Marta 2137, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
EM sara.pasini@stud.unive.it; torresan@unive.it; jonathan.rizzi@unive.it;
   zabeo@dsi.unive.it; critto@unive.it; marcom@unive.it
RI Rizzi, Jonathan/P-2004-2019; Marcomini, Antonio/JSL-7114-2023; Zabeo,
   Alex/D-6715-2014
OI Rizzi, Jonathan/0000-0002-2549-3994; TORRESAN,
   Silvia/0000-0002-9758-7084; Critto, Andrea/0000-0001-8868-9057
FU European Union; Italian Ministry for the Environment, the Land and the
   Sea under the Life + programme
FX This paper is a result of the TRUST project, funded by the European
   Union and the Italian Ministry for the Environment, the Land and the Sea
   under the Life + programme. The authors would like to thank the CMCC and
   the University Ca<SUP>1</SUP> Foscari Venice staff who offered their
   contribution, particularly Enrico Tortato and Elisabetta Zambon for the
   framework development, and Paolo Riccato for the support in GIS
   implementation.
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NR 49
TC 32
Z9 32
U1 2
U2 77
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD DEC 1
PY 2012
VL 440
SI SI
BP 219
EP 235
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.06.096
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 060EE
UT WOS:000312758500022
PM 22863150
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bower, ER
   Epifantseva, S
   Schmitter, S
   Wong-Parodi, G
   Kulp, S
   Field, CB
AF Bower, Erica R.
   Epifantseva, Sonya
   Schmitter, Sydney
   Wong-Parodi, Gabrielle
   Kulp, Scott
   Field, Christopher B.
TI Planned relocation may reduce communities' future exposure to coastal
   inundation but effect varies with emission scenario and geography
SO COMMUNICATIONS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID MANAGED RETREAT; CLIMATE; ADAPTATION; SCIENCE; ISLAND
AB The planned, permanent relocation of entire communities away from sea level rise (SLR) and coastal floods is an already occurring climate change adaptation strategy. Yet, planned relocations are fraught undertakings with multiple goals, and may or may not achieve their most basic objective: to reduce risk. Here we assess risk of future coastal flooding before and after moving, for three dates and three emissions scenarios, for 17 communities from a global dataset. Most communities achieved exposure reduction with less future inundation in destinations than origin sites, but the extent varies across time and emissions scenario. In all cases, origin sites have projected exposure to SLR plus a once-per-year flood, with increasing exposure under high emissions scenarios and towards 2100. In nine cases, even destination sites have projected inundation exposure under some scenarios. Small-island-to-small-island relocations had more projected inundation in destinations than moves from a small-island-to-mainland, or from mainland-to-mainland.
   Planned relocations reduce communities' risk of future coastal floods, but they do not eliminate it entirely - especially under high emissions scenarios and for moves with small-island destinations, according to an analysis that combines data on relocation sites and inundation projections.
C1 [Bower, Erica R.] Stanford Univ, Emmett Interdisciplinary Program Environm & Resou, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   [Epifantseva, Sonya; Schmitter, Sydney; Wong-Parodi, Gabrielle; Field, Christopher B.] Stanford Univ, Dept Earth Syst Sci, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   [Wong-Parodi, Gabrielle; Field, Christopher B.] Stanford Univ, Stanford Woods Inst Environm, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   [Kulp, Scott] Climate Cent, Princeton, NJ 08542 USA.
C3 Stanford University; Stanford University; Stanford University
RP Bower, ER (corresponding author), Stanford Univ, Emmett Interdisciplinary Program Environm & Resou, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
EM Ebower@stanford.edu
RI Field, Christopher/AEN-8826-2022
OI Bower, Erica/0000-0002-3437-6300
FU Buckley family through Stanford's Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in
   Environment and Resources
FX We thank Radley Horton, Nicholas Depsky and anonymous reviewers for
   their feedback on various iterations of this manuscript. E.R.B. was
   financially supported by the Buckley family through Stanford's Emmett
   Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources.
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NR 61
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU SPRINGERNATURE
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2662-4435
J9 COMMUN EARTH ENVIRON
JI Commun. Earth Environ.
PD NOV 7
PY 2024
VL 5
IS 1
AR 670
DI 10.1038/s43247-024-01854-1
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA L7E4B
UT WOS:001352309100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Santopietro, L
   Solimene, S
   Lucchese, M
   Di Carlo, F
   Scorza, F
AF Santopietro, Luigi
   Solimene, Silvia
   Lucchese, Manuela
   Di Carlo, Ferdinando
   Scorza, Francesco
TI An economic appraisal of the SE(C)AP public interventions towards the EU
   2050 target: The case study of Basilicata region
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Municipal budget; Covenant of mayors; SEAP; Small municipalities;
   Voluntary planning; Public interventions
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; ORGANIZATIONAL
   LEGITIMACY; URBAN ENERGY; COVENANT; MITIGATION; CITIES; PLANS;
   GOVERNANCE; SECTOR
AB Since 2008, among the European initiatives related to energy efficiency, the Covenant of the Mayors (CoM) has been one of the most important because of the significant engagement of small municipalities. The scope of the study is to understand how adherence to the EU CoM initiative by the municipalities has affected their expenditures in supporting and developing public energy efficiency investments, focusing on the analysis of the SEAPs. Two research questions are posed: firstly, exploring which are the main fields of intervention where municipalities have oriented their action plans on energy efficiency, published in SEAP (these being public lighting, education, and public buildings); secondly, the investment expenditure related to these fields of intervention that result from the first analysis and which are increased after SEAPs approval. The sample consists of 81 SEAPs evaluated and approved by the Joint Research Centre of the EU Commission of the Italian Basilicata municipalities in 2008-2021. The main result is that the education sector exhibits significant incremental changes in investment expenditures for each period, considering that, with reasonable certainty, this depends also on the CoM initiative.
C1 [Santopietro, Luigi; Scorza, Francesco] Univ Basilicata, Sch Engn, Lab Urban & Reg Syst Engn LISUT, Via Ateneo Lucano 10, I-85100 Potenza, Italy.
   [Solimene, Silvia] Univ Basilicata, Sch Engn, Via Ateneo Lucano 10, I-85100 Potenza, Italy.
   [Lucchese, Manuela] Univ Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Dept Econ, Capua, Italy.
   [Di Carlo, Ferdinando] Univ Basilicata, Dept Math Comp Sci & Econ, Via Ateneo Lucano 10, I-85100 Potenza, Italy.
C3 University of Basilicata; University of Basilicata; Universita della
   Campania Vanvitelli; University of Basilicata
RP Santopietro, L (corresponding author), Univ Basilicata, Sch Engn, Lab Urban & Reg Syst Engn LISUT, Via Ateneo Lucano 10, I-85100 Potenza, Italy.
EM luigi.santopietro@unibas.it; silvia.solimene@unibas.it;
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   francesco.scorza@unibas.it
RI Scorza, Francesco/J-5932-2019; Di Carlo, Ferdinando/AAJ-5440-2020
OI Santopietro, Luigi/0000-0001-9175-0525; Solimene,
   Silvia/0000-0002-2794-7793
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NR 95
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 2
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 149
AR 104957
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2024.104957
EA MAR 2024
PG 13
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA QU5Z7
UT WOS:001223408300001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Luo, ZR
   Liu, JH
   Zhang, SH
   Shao, WW
   Zhang, L
AF Luo, Zhuoran
   Liu, Jiahong
   Zhang, Shanghong
   Shao, Weiwei
   Zhang, Li
TI Research on Climate Change in Qinghai Lake Basin Based on WRF and CMIP6
SO REMOTE SENSING
LA English
DT Article
DE hydrometeor; spatiotemporal analysis; WRF; CMIP6; Qinghai Lake Basin;
   simulated prediction
ID TIBETAN PLATEAU; URBANIZATION
AB Climate change directly affects water resources by changing temperature and precipitation and the responses of inland basins on plateaus to climate change show a certain pattern. To systematically evaluate the changing facts and evolution trend of temperature and precipitation in the Qinghai Lake Basin, the Weather Research and Forecasting Model (WRF) was used to simulate the spatial distribution of temperature and precipitation in typical periods of the current year based on the observations of hydrological and meteorological stations. Based on the output results of different climate models in CMIP6, the temporal changing trends of temperature and precipitation were predicted. The results showed that precipitation and runoff significantly increased compared to the past, and the lake level first decreased and then increased. In August 2020, the temperature and precipitation near the lake were higher than those in the other areas of the basin. In the future, temperature and precipitation will increase under the influence of different forcing scenarios with the temperature change being more significant. A close combination of observations and simulations will provide quantitative spatiotemporal data and technical support for future climate change adaptability research in the Qinghai Lake Basin.
C1 [Luo, Zhuoran; Zhang, Shanghong; Zhang, Li] North China Elect Power Univ, Sch Water Resources & Hydropower Engn, Beijing 102206, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Jiahong; Shao, Weiwei] China Inst Water Resources & Hydropower Res, State Key Lab Simulat & Regulat Water Cycle River, Beijing 100038, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Jiahong] Minist Water Resources, Key Lab River Basin Digital Twinning, Beijing 100038, Peoples R China.
C3 North China Electric Power University; China Institute of Water
   Resources & Hydropower Research
RP Liu, JH (corresponding author), China Inst Water Resources & Hydropower Res, State Key Lab Simulat & Regulat Water Cycle River, Beijing 100038, Peoples R China.; Liu, JH (corresponding author), Minist Water Resources, Key Lab River Basin Digital Twinning, Beijing 100038, Peoples R China.
EM liujh@iwhr.com
RI Liu, Jiahong/AAG-1319-2021; Shao, Weiwei/AAO-6848-2021
OI Zhang, Shanghong/0000-0003-1131-2002; Shao, Weiwei/0000-0002-4421-6781
FU Qinghai Province Key Research and Development and Transformation Program
   [2022-SF-143]; Chinese National Key Research and Development Program
   [2022YFE0205200, 2022YFC3202000]; Fundamental Research Funds for the
   Central Universities [2023MS068]
FX This work was supported by Qinghai Province Key Research and Development
   and Transformation Program (2022-SF-143), Chinese National Key Research
   and Development Program (2022YFE0205200, 2022YFC3202000), the
   Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (2023MS068).
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NR 41
TC 5
Z9 6
U1 12
U2 41
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2072-4292
J9 REMOTE SENS-BASEL
JI Remote Sens.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 18
AR 4379
DI 10.3390/rs15184379
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Remote Sensing;
   Imaging Science & Photographic Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Remote Sensing; Imaging
   Science & Photographic Technology
GA S9IX5
UT WOS:001074240800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jia, MY
   He, D
   Huo, XW
   Zhang, HR
   Jia, SH
   Zhang, J
AF Jia, Mengyuan
   He, Ding
   Huo, Xiaowei
   Zhang, Haoran
   Jia, Shuhui
   Zhang, Jie
TI Exploring the impact of climate change on flood risk at cultural
   heritage sites using a GIS-based SCS-CN method: A case study of Shanxi
   province, China
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Cultural heritage; Flood risk; Climate change; Runoff simulation
ID NATURAL HAZARDS
AB Cultural heritage sites in China are facing an increasing risk of flooding caused in part by global climate change. This paper aims to provide a new method used to predict flood risk of cultural heritage sites while considering the impact of climate change. Using a GIS-based Soil Conservation Service Curve Number (SCS-CN) method, we assessed the risk of flooding at cultural heritage sites in Shanxi Province by the end of 21st century under three different climate change scenarios, namely SSP119, SSP245, and SSP585. The results show that 268 sites are currently at risk from a 100-year storm event. By 2099, about 100 additional cultural heritage sites are projected to be threatened by flooding. The cultural heritage sites protected at the city and county level are generally more vulnerable to climate change. In addition, those along the Fen River in Taiyuan City, the Qin and Dan rivers in Jincheng City, and the upstream region of the Zhuozhang River in Changzhi City also have relatively high flood risks. These findings can provide insights for climate change adaptive action and cultural heritage conversation in Shanxi Province.
C1 [Jia, Mengyuan; He, Ding] Beijing Univ Civil Engn & Architecture, Sch Architecture & Urban Planning, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Huo, Xiaowei; Zhang, Jie] Beijing Tsinghua Tongheng Planning & Design Inst C, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Haoran; Jia, Shuhui] China Acad Urban Planning & Design, Beijing, Peoples R China.
C3 Beijing University of Civil Engineering & Architecture
RP He, D (corresponding author), Beijing Univ Civil Engn & Architecture, Sch Architecture & Urban Planning, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM jiamengyuan@bucea.edu.cn; heding@bucea.edu.cn
OI Jia, Mengyuan/0000-0002-0451-2252
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [52208040]; Social Science
   Foundation of Ministry of Education of China [22YJCZH066]
FX Acknowledgement This work was supported by the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China [grant number 52208040] and Social Science
   Foundation of Ministry of Education of China [grant number 22YJCZH066] .
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NR 34
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 12
U2 43
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD OCT 1
PY 2023
VL 96
AR 103968
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103968
EA AUG 2023
PG 14
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA S3AU8
UT WOS:001069939000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Leal, W
   Salvia, AL
   Balogun, AL
   Pereira, MJV
   Mucova, SAR
   Ajulo, OM
   Ng, A
   Gwenzi, J
   Mashonjowa, E
   Aina, YA
   Li, CL
   Totin, E
   Pinho, P
   Campbell, D
   Chanza, N
   Setti, AFF
AF Leal Filho, Walter
   Salvia, Amanda Lange
   Balogun, Abdul-Lateef
   Pereira, Mario Jorge Verde
   Mucova, Serafino Afonso Rui
   Ajulo, Oluwadunsin Moromoke
   Ng, Artie
   Gwenzi, Juliet
   Mashonjowa, Emmanuel
   Aina, Yusuf A.
   Li, Chunlan
   Totin, Edmond
   Pinho, Patricia
   Campbell, Donovan
   Chanza, Nelson
   Setti, Andreia F. F.
TI Towards more sustainable responses to natural hazards and climate change
   challenges via transformative adaptation
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Transformative adaptation; Sustainability responses; Natural hazards;
   Poverty-livelihood nexus; Climate change
ID VULNERABILITY; LEVEL
AB Climate change is perceived as a major challenge of modern times. Apart from mitigation measures, such as greenhouse gas emission reductions, a further means to tackle it is via the deployment of adaptation policies and responses, which may also help to address the natural hazards associated with it. Despite the importance of adaptation measures, their effectiveness is often limited by a failure to integrate actions addressing both the causes and symptoms of vulnerability. There is evidence that adaptation processes are largely fragmented, incremental, with limited capacity for transformational change. This paper suggests measures through which transformative adaptation may be further deployed to tackle climate challenges in conjunction with efforts that address poverty alleviation. The implications of this paper are two-fold. Firstly, it offers a comprehensive review of the literature on transformative climate change adaptation, outlining its nature and special features. Secondly, it contains a unique set of cases from 20 countries, predominantly from the Global South, mostly affected by climate change, and is one of the largest studies on the topic ever undertaken. The experiences from this paper will support attempts to sustain transformative adaptation and natural hazards control, which are relevant to the many countries suffering from climatic variations.
C1 [Leal Filho, Walter] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Dept Nat Sci, Chester St, Manchester M1 5GD, England.
   [Leal Filho, Walter] Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, European Sch Sustainabil Sci & Res, Hamburg, Germany.
   [Salvia, Amanda Lange] Univ Passo Fundo, Grad Program Civil & Environm Engn, BR 285, Passo Fundo, RS, Brazil.
   [Balogun, Abdul-Lateef] Serv Dept Resources, Esri Australia, 613 King St, West Melbourne, Vic 3003, Australia.
   [Balogun, Abdul-Lateef] Univ Teknol PETRONAS, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Geospatial Anal & Modelling Res GAMR Grp, Seri Iskandar 32610, Perak, Malaysia.
   [Pereira, Mario Jorge Verde; Mucova, Serafino Afonso Rui; Setti, Andreia F. F.] Univ Aveiro, Dept Biol, Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Pereira, Mario Jorge Verde; Mucova, Serafino Afonso Rui; Setti, Andreia F. F.] Univ Aveiro, CESAM Ctr Environm & Marine Studies, Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Mucova, Serafino Afonso Rui] Lurio Univ, Fac Nat Sci, POB 958, Pemba, Mozambique.
   [Ajulo, Oluwadunsin Moromoke] Univ Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
   [Ng, Artie] Int Business Univ, Ctr Sustainable Business, Toronto, ON, Canada.
   [Ng, Artie] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Ind & Syst Engn, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Gwenzi, Juliet; Mashonjowa, Emmanuel] Univ Zimbabwe, Harare, Zimbabwe.
   [Aina, Yusuf A.] Yanbu Ind Coll, Dept Geomat Engn Technol, Yanbu, Saudi Arabia.
   [Aina, Yusuf A.] Univ Sains Malaysia, Sch Humanities, Geoinformat Unit, Geog Sect, George Town 11800, Malaysia.
   [Li, Chunlan] East China Normal Univ, Ctr Geopolit & Strateg Studies, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R China.
   [Li, Chunlan] East China Normal Univ, Inst Global Innovat & Dev, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R China.
   [Li, Chunlan] East China Normal Univ, Sch Urban & Reg Sci, Shanghai 200241, Peoples R China.
   [Totin, Edmond] Univ Natl Agr Benin, Ketou, Nigeria.
   [Pinho, Patricia] Univ Sao Paulo, Inst Adv Studies IEA, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
   [Campbell, Donovan] Univ West Indies, Dept Geog & Geol, Mona, Kingston 7, Jamaica.
   [Chanza, Nelson] Univ Johannesburg, Dept Geog Energy Studies & Environm Sci, Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 Manchester Metropolitan University; Hochschule Angewandte Wissenschaft
   Hamburg; Universidade de Passo Fundo; Universiti Teknologi Petronas;
   Universidade de Aveiro; Universidade de Aveiro; University of Newcastle;
   Hong Kong Polytechnic University; University of Zimbabwe; Yanbu
   Industrial College; Universiti Sains Malaysia; East China Normal
   University; East China Normal University; East China Normal University;
   Universidade de Sao Paulo; University West Indies Mona Jamaica;
   University of Johannesburg
RP Aina, YA (corresponding author), Yanbu Ind Coll, Dept Geomat Engn Technol, Yanbu, Saudi Arabia.
EM walter.leal2@haw-hamburg.de; amandasalvia@gmail.com;
   geospatial63@gmail.com; mverde@ua.pt; serafinomucova@live.ua.pt;
   Oluwadunsin.ajulo@uon.edu.au; ang@ibu.ca; julievimbai@gmail.com;
   emashonjowa@gmail.com; ainay@rcyci.edu.sa; 15598022233@163.com;
   edmond.totin@gmail.com; pinhopati@gmail.com;
   donovan.campbell@uwimona.edu.jm; nchanza@gmail.com;
   andreiasetti@gmail.com
RI Setti, Andréia/C-3470-2017; Chanza, Nelson/ABG-3970-2020; Salvia,
   Amanda/T-3483-2017; Aina, Yusuf/M-1859-2017; Balogun,
   Abdul-Lateef/AAH-2963-2020; Leal, Walter/ACX-9082-2022; Mashonjowa,
   Emmanuel/JMD-0430-2023; Gwenzi, Juliet/AAF-4897-2021
OI Chanza, Nelson/0000-0001-5328-5546; Pereira, Mario
   J./0000-0003-1826-391X
FU International Climate Change Information and Research Programme
   (ICCIRP); The "100 Papers to Accelerate Climate Change Mitigation and
   Adaptation" Initiative
FX This study was funded by the International Climate Change Information
   and Research Programme (ICCIRP) and is part of the "100 Papers to
   Accelerate Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation" Initiative.
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NR 64
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 3
U2 11
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD OCT
PY 2023
VL 141
AR 104525
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2023.104525
EA AUG 2023
PG 10
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA GB0L0
UT WOS:001150079200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kumar, R
   Pandey, KS
   Kumar, A
AF Kumar, Raj
   Pandey, Kripa Shankar
   Kumar, Avneesh
TI Dynamical Behavior of the Solutions of Coupled Boussinesq-Burgers
   Equations Occurring at the Seaside Beaches
SO BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Boussinesq-Burgers system; Lie-symmetry; Invariant solutions; Adjoint
   action; Killing form; Conserved vectors
ID SOLITON-SOLUTIONS; DARBOUX TRANSFORMATION; MULTISOLITON SOLUTIONS; GROUP
   CLASSIFICATION; OPTIMAL SYSTEMS
AB Since water lies at the heart of sustainable development and climate change adaptation, therefore, the objective of the present research work is to derive a new variety of analytical solutions for a system of partial differential equations that depicts the propagation of shallow water waves at seaside beaches or in lakes. The (1 + 1)-Boussinesq-Burgers system is solved by using the classical Lie-symmetry analysis and optimal subalgebra using a direct algorithm. Using the one-parameter optimal system, one-dimensional and two-dimensional optimal subalgebras are generated for the system to get a greater variety of solutions. Analytic solutions in this study are different from the nature of research reported earlier. Constructed solutions are represented graphically and show parabolic, multisoliton, periodic, dark, and bright solitons and progressive behaviors. The profiles of solitons could have some implications for port and coastal architecture. Additionally, conserved vectors demonstrate that the system is integrable. As far as the authors are aware, the conserved vectors are calculated and the optimal subalgebra technique is employed first time for the system. Coastal and civil engineers can use the solutions of the system to frame the architecture of the coasts.
C1 [Kumar, Raj; Pandey, Kripa Shankar; Kumar, Avneesh] Veer Bahadur Singh Purvanchal Univ, Fac Engn & Technol, Dept Math, Jaunpur 222003, India.
RP Kumar, R (corresponding author), Veer Bahadur Singh Purvanchal Univ, Fac Engn & Technol, Dept Math, Jaunpur 222003, India.
EM rsoniraj2@gmail.com; kripa5881@gmail.com; avnee2864@gmail.com
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   Shankar/0000-0002-4878-7872
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NR 51
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 2
U2 11
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0103-9733
EI 1678-4448
J9 BRAZ J PHYS
JI Braz. J. Phys.
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 52
IS 6
AR 201
DI 10.1007/s13538-022-01195-4
PG 16
WC Physics, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Physics
GA 5F2HX
UT WOS:000866142200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Obasi, PC
   Chikezie, C
AF Obasi, P. C.
   Chikezie, C.
BE Filho, WL
   Nagy, GJ
   Borga, M
   Munoz, PDC
   Magnuszewski, A
TI SMART Agriculture and Rural Farmers Adaptation Measures to Climate
   Change in Southeast Nigeria: Implications for Sustainable Food Security
SO CLIMATE CHANGE, HAZARDS AND ADAPTATION OPTIONS: HANDLING THE IMPACTS OF
   A CHANGING CLIMATE
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
AB The study evaluated SMART agriculture and rural farmers' vulnerability to climate change, adaptation measures and determinants of choice of adaptation strategies to climate change in Southeast, Nigeria. Data used for the study covered the period 1984-2014 and involved 1240 participatory rural farmers. Data collected were analysed using bivariate and multivariate analyses and multinomial logit model. The findings showed unsteady distribution of climate variables with peak points across the period under review. Rainfall volume, rain days, and relative humidity showed decreasing trends, while temperature and sunshine duration showed increasing trends. Late commencement of planting, use of fertilizers and pesticides, tree planting, use of soil conservation techniques and use of resistant crop varieties were identified to be the most effective adaptation measures to climate change adopted by farmers in the area. The result further shows that age of farmer, land tenureship, extension contact, gender, farm size, value of assets, farming experience and access to credit were the major determinants of choice of adaptation measures. The average per capita food energy consumption estimated for the farmers (2100 kcal < 2500 kcal) show that the farmers were food insecure. It was further observed that the sustainability values estimated for the farmers over the time period showed increasing trend.
C1 [Obasi, P. C.; Chikezie, C.] Fed Univ Technol Owerri, Dept Agr Econ, PMB 1526, Owerri, Imo State, Nigeria.
RP Obasi, PC (corresponding author), Fed Univ Technol Owerri, Dept Agr Econ, PMB 1526, Owerri, Imo State, Nigeria.
EM polycarp.obasi@futo.edu.ng
RI CHIKEZIE, COMFORT/ADT-6646-2022
OI CHIKEZIE, COMFORT/0000-0002-3552-1485
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NR 39
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-030-37425-9; 978-3-030-37424-2
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2020
BP 813
EP 833
DI 10.1007/978-3-030-37425-9_41
D2 10.1007/978-3-030-37425-9
PG 21
WC Engineering, Civil; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies;
   Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences; Public Administration
GA BR9KL
UT WOS:000677532400042
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Running, K
   Burnham, M
   Wardropper, C
   Ma, Z
   Hawes, J
   du Bray, MV
AF Running, Katrina
   Burnham, Morey
   Wardropper, Chloe
   Ma, Zhao
   Hawes, Jason
   du Bray, Margaret V.
TI Farmer adaptation to reduced groundwater availability
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; agriculture; aquifer recharge; climate change; groundwater;
   sustainability
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK PERCEPTIONS; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE;
   ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; CHANGE BELIEFS; VULNERABILITY; AGRICULTURE; BARRIERS;
   BEHAVIOR; DROUGHT
AB The sustainability of agriculture in the American West depends on the capacity of farmers to adapt to water resource constraints. Most US studies of agricultural adaptations measure farmers? willingness to adopt various water use reduction strategies, meaning we have little empirical data on which strategies farmers implement and how these decisions impact their farms. We use survey data from 265 farmers in southeastern Idaho who, beginning in 2016, were required to cut annual groundwater withdrawals by 4%?20% to identify (1) the adaptation practices farmers implemented; (2) how reported crop yields and farm income were impacted; and (3) how adaptation practices varied by farm and farmer characteristics. We found the most commonly used adaptations were reduced spending, installation of more efficient irrigation systems or less frequent watering, and changing crop rotations. Farmers reported losing on average 7.6% of their yield and 8.4% of their income over the first two years of the water cuts. We found no systematic variation based on specific farm or farmer characteristics. Drawing on these results and prior research, we present a typology of adaptation categories intended to inform future research, allow comparisons to adaptation strategies elsewhere, and assist policymakers in designing effective policy interventions.
C1 [Running, Katrina; Burnham, Morey] Idaho State Univ, Dept Sociol Social Work & Criminol, 921 S 8th Ave,STOP 8114, Pocatello, ID 83209 USA.
   [Wardropper, Chloe] Univ Idaho, Dept Nat Resources & Soc, 875 Perimeter Dr MS1139, Moscow, ID 83844 USA.
   [Ma, Zhao; Hawes, Jason] Purdue Univ, Forestry & Nat Resources, 195 Marsteller St, W Lafayette, IN 47909 USA.
   [du Bray, Margaret V.] Augustana Coll, Environm Studies, 639 38th St, Rock Isl, IL 61201 USA.
C3 Idaho State University; University of Idaho; Purdue University System;
   Purdue University
RP Running, K (corresponding author), Idaho State Univ, Dept Sociol Social Work & Criminol, 921 S 8th Ave,STOP 8114, Pocatello, ID 83209 USA.
EM runnkatr@isu.edu
RI Hawes, Jason/AAA-2001-2020; Ma, Zhao/M-7657-2013
OI Burnham, Morey/0000-0001-5716-9964; du Bray,
   Margaret/0000-0002-4295-3550; Ma, Zhao/0000-0002-9103-3996; Hawes,
   Jason/0000-0001-8215-5046
FU National Science Foundation EPSCoR MILES (Managing Idaho's Landscapes
   for Ecosystem Services) Program [IIA-1301792]; United States Department
   of Agriculture's National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2018-69
   002-27 963]
FX We would like to thank the National Science Foundation EPSCoR MILES
   (Managing Idaho's Landscapes for Ecosystem Services) Program, award
   number IIA-1301792, and the United States Department of Agriculture's
   National Institute of Food and Agriculture award number 2018-69 002-27
   963, for contributing funding for this research. Our funding sources had
   no role in study design, data interpretation, or the decision to submit
   this article for publication.
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NR 39
TC 15
Z9 17
U1 1
U2 11
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD NOV
PY 2019
VL 14
IS 11
AR 115010
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/ab4ccc
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA JR0KV
UT WOS:000499325100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Worku, G
   Teferi, E
   Bantider, A
   Dile, YT
AF Worku, Gebrekidan
   Teferi, Ermias
   Bantider, Amare
   Dile, Yihun T.
TI Observed changes in extremes of daily rainfall and temperature in Jemma
   Sub-Basin, Upper Blue Nile Basin, Ethiopia
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
ID PRECIPITATION EXTREMES; MONITORING CHANGES; TRENDS; VARIABILITY; RUNOFF;
   IMPACT
AB Climate variability has been a threat to the socio-economic development of Ethiopia. This paper examined the changes in rainfall, minimum, and maximum temperature extremes of Jemma Sub-Basin of the Upper Blue Nile Basin for the period of 1981 to 2014. The nonparametric Mann-Kendall, seasonal Mann-Kendall, and Sen's slope estimator were used to estimate annual trends. Ten rainfall and 12 temperature indices were used to study changes in rainfall and temperature extremes. The results showed an increasing trend of annual and summer rainfall in more than 78% of the stations and a decreasing trend of spring rainfall in most of the stations. An increase in rainfall extreme events was detected in the majority of the stations. Several rainfall extreme indices showed wetting trends in the sub-basin, whereas limited indices indicated dryness in most of the stations. Annual maximum and minimum temperature and extreme temperature indices showed warming trend in the sub-basin. Presence of extreme rainfall and a warming trend of extreme temperature indices may suggest signs of climate change in the Jemma Sub-Basin. This study, therefore, recommended the need for exploring climate induced risks and implementing appropriate climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies.
C1 [Worku, Gebrekidan; Teferi, Ermias] Addis Ababa Univ, Ctr Environm & Dev Studies, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
   [Bantider, Amare] Addis Ababa Univ, Ctr Food Secur Studies, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
   [Bantider, Amare] Addis Ababa Univ, Water & Land Resources Ctr, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
   [Dile, Yihun T.] Texas A&M Univ, Coll Agr & Life Sci, College Stn, TX USA.
C3 Addis Ababa University; Addis Ababa University; Addis Ababa University;
   Texas A&M University System; Texas A&M University College Station
RP Worku, G (corresponding author), Addis Ababa Univ, Ctr Environm & Dev Studies, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
EM kidanw1@gmail.com
RI Dagnew, Amare/GWZ-9391-2022; Tefera, Gebrekidan Worku/AFJ-7307-2022
OI Teferi, Ermias/0000-0002-4481-5362; Tefera, Gebrekidan
   Worku/0000-0003-3750-0490
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NR 57
TC 54
Z9 55
U1 0
U2 8
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI Vienna
PA Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 8-10, A-1040 Vienna, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD FEB
PY 2019
VL 135
IS 3-4
BP 839
EP 854
DI 10.1007/s00704-018-2412-x
PG 16
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA HT9QD
UT WOS:000464905800003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Christoff, PS
   Sommer, JM
AF Christoff, Peggy Spitzer
   Sommer, Jamie M.
BE Demos, V
   Segal, MT
   Kelly, K
TI RESTRUCTURING WOMEN'S LEADERSHIP IN CLIMATE SOLUTIONS: ANALYZING THE W
   plus ™ STANDARD
SO GENDER AND PRACTICE: INSIGHTS FROM THE FIELD
SE Advances in Gender Research
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Women; leadership; climate change; Asia; non-governmental organizations;
   social change; philanthropy
ID GENDER; FABLES; MYTHS
AB In recent years, non-governmental organizations across the globe aim to improve women's leadership in adapting to the environmental challenges brought on by climate change. Many of these activities involve outreach and network building and, in the process, seek to establish protocols for specific projects and interventions. In this chapter, the authors review the history of development funding, and then present and analyze a different model, a pilot project based in Nepal that encourages monetary contributions from outside of the country to support women's work in climate change adaptation and mitigation as a result of deforestation. The W+(TM) Standard is a certification label that endorses projects that socially and economically empower women and improve the environment. It was developed to measure and quantify women's work in these areas to enable them to receive monetary benefits from promoting biogas cook stoves. Below, the authors assess the economic and social benefits and drawbacks of this model and complement our critique with interview data from the creator of the W+ Standard, and climate change leader, Jeannette Gurung. The authors conclude by giving recommendations for program monitoring and evaluation that can be applied to projects in similar areas.
C1 [Christoff, Peggy Spitzer] SUNY Stony Brook, Coll Arts & Sci, Stony Brook, NY 11794 USA.
   [Sommer, Jamie M.] Univ S Florida, Sociol, Tampa, FL 33620 USA.
C3 State University of New York (SUNY) System; Stony Brook University;
   State University System of Florida; University of South Florida
RP Christoff, PS (corresponding author), SUNY Stony Brook, Coll Arts & Sci, Stony Brook, NY 11794 USA.
CR [Anonymous], 2006, GENDER RELATIONS INT
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   Leach M, 2007, DEV CHANGE, V38, P67, DOI 10.1111/j.1467-7660.2007.00403.x
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   Mosse D., 2006, DEV BROKERS TRANSLAT
   Reeves-Ellington Barbara., 2010, Competing Kingdoms: Women, Mission, Nation, and the American Protestant Empire, 1812-1960
   Resurreccion BP, 2006, INT J WATER RESOUR D, V22, P433, DOI 10.1080/07900620500482949
   Resurrección BP, 2013, WOMEN STUD INT FORUM, V40, P33, DOI 10.1016/j.wsif.2013.03.011
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   Sen A., 1991, Development as Freedom
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NR 19
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 1
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY, W YORKSHIRE BD16 1WA, ENGLAND
SN 1529-2126
BN 978-1-83867-383-3; 978-1-83867-384-0
J9 ADV GEND RES
PY 2019
VL 27
BP 183
EP 197
DI 10.1108/S1529-212620190000027011
PG 15
WC Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary; Women's Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics; Women's Studies
GA BT5LG
UT WOS:000837264400012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Pratiwi, RD
   Fatimah, IS
   Munandar, A
AF Pratiwi, R. D.
   Fatimah, I. S.
   Munandar, A.
BE Kaswanto, RL
TI Spatial planning for green infrastructure in Yogyakarta City based on
   land surface temperature
SO 3RD INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM FOR SUSTAINABLE LANDSCAPE DEVELOPMENT (ISSLD
   2017)
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 3rd International Symposium for Sustainable Landscape Development
   (ISSLD)
CY NOV 14-15, 2017
CL Bogor, INDONESIA
SP Bogor Agr Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Landscape Architecture, Bogor Agr Univ, Directorate Res & Innovat, Inst Pertanian Bogor, Asosiasi Pendidikan Arsitektur Lanskap Indonesia, IOP, Minist Agr, Food Secur Agcy, Sentul City, BNI, EPSON, IALI
DE climate change; green infrastructure; land surface temperature; urban
   heat island
ID URBAN; IMPACTS
AB Green infrastructure (GI) planning has developed as an important approach that aids the creation of functional, sustainable, and liveable cities. GI can play a role in climate change adaptation and mitigation through reducing air and surface temperature by providing shading and enhancing evapotranspiration. The aim of this study is to introduce a spatial analysis approach by identify priority areas thus GI can be strategically placedto improve local temperature regulation. We used a method to evaluate the local temperature regulation by green cover at land use unit level using information on land cover and LST, the mean of LST was calculated for each land use and land cover classes. LST map result shows that across the study area, LST values increased from the outskirts towards the centre of urban areas with surface ranging from 30 degrees C to 42 degrees C with average temperature 36.3 degrees C. The results was shown that land use unit such as industrial, health buildings, offices, and tourism areas with built up areas land cover are become priority areas for GI planning Awareness of this environmental issues is crucial as it can serve as a tool for cities to adapt and mitigate climate change to improve green infrastructure planning strategies.
C1 [Pratiwi, R. D.; Fatimah, I. S.; Munandar, A.] Bogor Agr Univ IPB, Fac Agr, Dept Landscape Architecture, Kampus IPB Dramaga, Bogor 16680, Indonesia.
C3 Bogor Agricultural University
RP Pratiwi, RD (corresponding author), Bogor Agr Univ IPB, Fac Agr, Dept Landscape Architecture, Kampus IPB Dramaga, Bogor 16680, Indonesia.
EM ririk.26@gmail.com
RI Fatimah, Is/K-9879-2016
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NR 17
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 12
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2018
VL 179
AR 012004
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/179/1/012004
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BM6WZ
UT WOS:000467452600004
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Thieken, AH
AF Thieken, Annegret H.
BE Fekete, A
   Fiedrich, F
TI Contributions of Flood Insurance to Enhance Resilience-Findings from
   Germany
SO URBAN DISASTER RESILIENCE AND SECURITY: ADDRESSING RISKS IN SOCIETIES
SE Urban Book Series
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Flood losses; Recovery; Climate change adaptation Saxony; Bavaria
ID AFFECTED RESIDENTS; RISK; PREPAREDNESS; MITIGATION; RECOVERY
AB In 2002, a severe flood caused financial losses of EUR 11.6 billion in Germany and triggered many changes in flood risk management. This chapter focuses on flood insurance, which is a voluntary supplementary insurance in Germany: it is explored how flood insurance has contributed to enhance resilience of flood-prone residents. The analyses are based on empirical data collected by post-event surveys in the federal states of Saxony and Bavaria and refer to the three pillars upon which the concept of flood resilience usually builds in the natural hazards context: recovery, adaptive capacity and resistance. Overall, the penetration of flood insurance has increased since 2002 and there is strong empirical evidence that losses of insured residents are more often and better compensated than those of uninsured despite the provision of governmental financial disaster assistance after big floods. This facilitation of recovery is, however, not the only contribution to flood resilience. Insured residents tend to invest more in further flood mitigation measures at their properties than uninsured. Obviously, flood insurance is embedded in a complex safety strategy of property owners that needs more investigation in order to be addressed more effectively in risk communication and integrated risk management strategies.
C1 [Thieken, Annegret H.] Univ Potsdam, Inst Earth & Environm Sci, Potsdam, Germany.
C3 University of Potsdam
RP Thieken, AH (corresponding author), Univ Potsdam, Inst Earth & Environm Sci, Potsdam, Germany.
EM thieken@uni-potsdam.de
RI Thieken, Annegret/B-1946-2017
OI Thieken, Annegret/0000-0001-7068-2615
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   Thieken AH, 2005, WATER RESOUR RES, V41, DOI 10.1029/2005WR004177
   Thieken AH, 2006, RISK ANAL, V26, P383, DOI 10.1111/j.1539-6924.2006.00741.x
   Thieken AH, 2015, DKKV SCHRIFTENREIHE, V53, P170
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NR 22
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 4
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2365-757X
BN 978-3-319-68606-6; 978-3-319-68605-9
J9 URBAN BOOK SERIES
PY 2018
BP 129
EP 144
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-68606-6_9
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-68606-6
PG 16
WC Geography; Urban Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Geography; Urban Studies
GA BK3ZJ
UT WOS:000435911800010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Andersen, JS
   Lerer, SM
   Backhaus, A
   Jensen, MB
   Sorup, HJD
AF Andersen, Jonas Smit
   Lerer, Sara Maria
   Backhaus, Antje
   Jensen, Marina Bergen
   Sorup, Hjalte Jomo Danielsen
TI Characteristic Rain Events: A Methodology for Improving the Amenity
   Value of Stormwater Control Measures
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE amenity value; SCMs; Source Control Measures; staging rainwater; utility
   value
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE;
   URBAN; DESIGN; MANAGEMENT; TOOLS; SYSTEMS; MODEL
AB Local management of rainwater using stormwater control measures (SCMs) is gaining increased attention as a sustainable alternative and supplement to traditional sewer systems. Besides offering added utility values, many SCMs also offer a great potential for added amenity values. One way of achieving amenity value is to stage the rainwater and thus bring it to the attention of the public. We present here a methodology for creating a selection of rain events that can help bridge between engineering and landscape architecture when dealing with staging of rainwater. The methodology uses quantitative and statistical methods to select Characteristic Rain Events (CREs) for a range of frequent return periods: weekly, bi-weekly, monthly, bi-monthly, and a single rarer event occurring only every 1-10 years. The methodology for selecting CREs is flexible and can be adjusted to any climatic settings; here we show its use for Danish conditions. We illustrate with a case study how CREs can be used in combination with a simple hydrological model to visualize where, how deep and for how long water is visible in a landscape designed to manage rainwater.
C1 [Andersen, Jonas Smit; Backhaus, Antje; Jensen, Marina Bergen] Univ Copenhagen, Dept Geosci & Nat Resource Management, Rolighedsvej 23, DK-1958 Frederiksberg, Denmark.
   [Andersen, Jonas Smit] Orbicon AS, Linnes Alle 2, DK-2630 Taastrup, Denmark.
   [Lerer, Sara Maria; Sorup, Hjalte Jomo Danielsen] Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Environm Engn, Bygning 115, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
   [Backhaus, Antje] Grp F Landschaftsarchitekten, Gneisenaustr 41, D-10961 Berlin, Germany.
   [Sorup, Hjalte Jomo Danielsen] Tech Univ Denmark, Global Decis Support Initiat, Bygning 115, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
C3 University of Copenhagen; Technical University of Denmark; Technical
   University of Denmark
RP Andersen, JS (corresponding author), Univ Copenhagen, Dept Geosci & Nat Resource Management, Rolighedsvej 23, DK-1958 Frederiksberg, Denmark.; Andersen, JS (corresponding author), Orbicon AS, Linnes Alle 2, DK-2630 Taastrup, Denmark.
EM jonas.smit.anderesen@gmail.com; smrl@env.dtu.dk; abac@ign.ku.dk;
   mbj@ign.ku.dk; hjds@env.dtu.dk
RI Sørup, Hjalte/R-5263-2018; Jensen, Marina/H-4135-2011; Jensen, Marina
   Bergen/C-9841-2015
OI Sorup, Hjalte Jomo Danielsen/0000-0002-7110-6975; Backhaus,
   Antje/0009-0006-9126-4360; Jensen, Marina Bergen/0000-0003-0202-0366
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NR 44
TC 6
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 13
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD OCT
PY 2017
VL 9
IS 10
AR 1793
DI 10.3390/su9101793
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FM3HW
UT WOS:000414896200123
OA gold, Green Submitted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ratnapradipa, D
AF Ratnapradipa, Dhitinut
TI 2012 NEHA/UL Sabbatical Report Vulnerability to Potential Impacts of
   Climate Change: Adaptation and Risk Communication Strategies for
   Environmental Health Practitioners in the United Kingdom
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
AB Climate change risk assessment, adaptation, and mitigation planning have become increasingly important to environmental health practitioners (EHPs). The NEHA/UL Sabbatical Exchange Award allowed me to investigate how EHPs in the UK are incorporating climate change planning and communication strategies into their work. Projected climate change risks in the UK include flooding, extreme heat, water shortages, severe weather, decreased air quality, and changes in vectors. Despite public perception and funding challenges, all the local government representatives with whom I met incorporated climate change risk assessment, adaptation, and mitigation planning into their work. The mandated Community Risk Register serves as a key planning document developed by each local government authority and is a meaningful way to look at potential climate change health risks. Adaptation and sustainability were common threads in my meetings. These often took the form of "going green" with transportation, energy efficiency, conserving resources, and building design because the efforts made sense monetarily as future cost savings. Communication strategies targeted a variety of audiences (EHPs, non-EHP government employees, politicians, and the general public) using a broad range of communication channels (professional training, lobbying, conferences and fairs, publications, print materials, Internet resources, social media, billboards, etc).
C1 So Illinois Univ, Dept Hlth Educ & Recreat, Carbondale, IL 62901 USA.
C3 Southern Illinois University System; Southern Illinois University
RP Ratnapradipa, D (corresponding author), So Illinois Univ, Dept Hlth Educ & Recreat, Carbondale, IL 62901 USA.
EM dhitinut@siu.edu
CR [Anonymous], HLTH EFF CLIM CHANG
   Chartered Institute of Environmental Health, 2008, UNH CLIM CALL ACT CH
   Chartered Institute of Environmental Health, 2008, CLIM CHANG ITS HLTH
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NR 13
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 18
PU NATL ENVIRON HEALTH ASSOC
PI DENVER
PA 720 S COLORADO BLVD SUITE 970, SOUTH TOWER, DENVER, CO 80246 USA
SN 0022-0892
J9 J ENVIRON HEALTH
JI J. Environ. Health
PD APR
PY 2014
VL 76
IS 8
BP 28
EP 33
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA AO7NS
UT WOS:000341540500005
PM 24749223
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yung, EHK
   Chan, EHW
AF Yung, Esther H. K.
   Chan, Edwin H. W.
TI Implementation challenges to the adaptive reuse of heritage buildings:
   Towards the goals of sustainable, low carbon cities
SO HABITAT INTERNATIONAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive reuse; Built heritage; Sustainable development; Low carbon
   city; Hong Kong
ID URBAN HERITAGE; CONSERVATION; REGENERATION; FRAMEWORK; CITY
AB It is well acknowledged that low carbon emissions is one of the key factors contributing to sustainable urban development and effectively tackling climate change. Adaptive reuse of buildings is a form of sustainable urban regeneration, as it extends the building's life and avoids demolition waste, encourages reuses of the embodied energy and also provides significant social and economic benefits to the society. Thus, it embraces the different dimensions of sustainability. However, the debates over which sustainability factors are key, and how to address them all in practice, remain unresolved. This study begins with an intensive literature review of the factors that contribute to the goal of sustainable development in the conservation of built heritage. This is followed by in-depth interviews with practitioners who have participated in adaptive reuse projects in Hong Kong. These interviews confirm the reliability of the shortlisted sustainability factors. More importantly, this paper examines the challenges in incorporating a sustainability framework into adaptive reuse projects. The authors stress that the framework for achieving sustainable, low carbon adaptive reuse should be viewed more holistically, integrating social, economic, environmental, urban and political policies. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Yung, Esther H. K.; Chan, Edwin H. W.] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Bldg & Real Estate Dept, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
C3 Hong Kong Polytechnic University
RP Chan, EHW (corresponding author), Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Bldg & Real Estate Dept, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
EM ehkyung@gmail.com; bsedchan@inet.polyu.edu.hk
RI Yung, Esther/ABF-3279-2020; Chan, Edwin Hon Wan/D-9630-2012
OI Yung, Esther/0000-0003-0028-9062; Chan, Edwin Hon
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NR 79
TC 228
Z9 240
U1 17
U2 173
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0197-3975
EI 1873-5428
J9 HABITAT INT
JI Habitat Int.
PD JUL
PY 2012
VL 36
IS 3
BP 352
EP 361
DI 10.1016/j.habitatint.2011.11.001
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies; Regional & Urban Planning;
   Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public
   Administration; Urban Studies
GA 929AR
UT WOS:000303034100002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barati, MK
   Soundharajan, BS
   Nikoo, MR
AF Barati, Masoud K.
   Soundharajan, Bankaru-Swamy
   Nikoo, Mohammad Reza
TI Simulation of climate-adaptation responses to rainfall variability on
   rainfed yield anomalies
SO ENVIRONMENTAL AND SUSTAINABILITY INDICATORS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate-resilient agriculture; Supplemental irrigation; Sowing date;
   AquaCrop
ID TREND ANALYSIS; IMPACT; STRATEGIES; AQUACROP; FARMERS
AB Climate adaptation offers promising approaches to cope with the detrimental impacts of climate change on rainfed agriculture, intending to mitigate yield losses and safeguard food security worldwide. This is especially critical in the semi-arid tropics, characterized by highly variable and often intensified rainfall regimes. The current study explored the potential contribution of climate adaptation measures, specifically sowing windows and supplemental irrigation (SI), to offset the impacts of rainfall variability on rainfed crop yield in the Thondamuthur block, India. Under the proposed adaptation measures, this study analyzed the relationship between historical rainfall variability (1951 - 2019) and rice, maize, and sorghum yield anomalies. A seamlessly integrated framework was developed to link rainfall variability analysis with yield response simulations using the AquaCrop model. Rainfall classification analysis indicated an increase in rainfall availability during the Kharif season and a decrease during the Rabi season in Period III compared with the baseline. The late-sown Kharif and early-sown Rabi crops demonstrated effective climate adaptation, with the 27th and 38th SMWs identified as optimal climate-adapted sowing weeks, respectively. Significant decreases of 10% and 12% in SI requirements were observed in early-sown Rabi maize and sorghum, respectively. The results showed that substituting Rabi rice and maize with Rabi sorghum led to reductions of 90% and 75% in seasonal SI requirements, respectively. The earlysown Rabi rice and maize contributed to 88% and 12% relative yield increases, respectively, compared with the normal-sown. This study highlights the effectiveness of climate adaptation measures in enabling farmers to withstand climate-induced anomalies.
C1 [Barati, Masoud K.; Soundharajan, Bankaru-Swamy] Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Amrita Sch Sustainable Futures, Clappana Po 690525, Kollam, India.
   [Soundharajan, Bankaru-Swamy] Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Amrita Sch Engn, Dept Civil Engn, Coimbatore 641112, India.
   [Nikoo, Mohammad Reza] Sultan Qaboos Univ, Dept Civil & Architectural Engn, Muscat 123, Oman.
C3 Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham; Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham Amritapuri;
   Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham; Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham Coimbatore;
   Sultan Qaboos University
RP Soundharajan, BS (corresponding author), Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Amrita Sch Sustainable Futures, Clappana Po 690525, Kollam, India.
EM b_soundharajan@cb.amrita.edu
RI Nikoo, Mohammad Reza/AAY-7583-2021
OI Soundharajan, Bankaru Swamy/0000-0001-6143-9293
FU E4LIFE International Ph.D. Fellowship Program by Amrita Vishwa
   Vidyapeetham; Amrita Live-in-Labs (R) academic programme
FX This project has been funded by the E4LIFE International Ph.D.
   Fellowship Program offered by Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham. We extend our
   gratitude to the Amrita Live-in-Labs (R) academic programme for
   providing all the support.
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NR 71
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 3
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2665-9727
J9 ENVIRON SUSTAIN IND
JI Environ. Sustain. Indic.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 22
AR 100411
DI 10.1016/j.indic.2024.100411
EA MAY 2024
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XX5Q1
UT WOS:001264992700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mesdaghi, B
   Ghorbani, A
   de Bruijne, M
AF Mesdaghi, Batoul
   Ghorbani, Amineh
   de Bruijne, Mark
TI Institutional dependencies in climate adaptation of transport
   infrastructures: an Institutional Network Analysis approach
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Institutional grammar; Institutional network analysis; Climate
   adaptation; Institutional conflict; Institutional void; Transport
   infrastructures
ID INTERCONNECTED INFRASTRUCTURES; STRATEGIES; MANAGEMENT; POLICY
AB Climate adaptation measures are shaped and implemented through processes of governance, where the interactions and decision-making among actors lead to the creation and reinforcement of institutions. Institutions in this respect are the rules that shape the interactions of actors in different phases of climate adaptation. Currently there is no comprehensive method to systematically identify and map dependencies between institutions. This study proposes the Institutional Network Analysis (INA) approach that is based on the Institutional Grammar as a systematic and comprehensive tool to (1) visualise institutional dependencies, (2) identify points of concern in the institutional landscape such as conflicts and voids, and (3) provide quantitative insights into the centrality of actors, embeddedness of institutional outcomes, and dependencies between institutions. The approach is applied to the case of climate adaptation of transport infrastructures surrounding the Port of Rotterdam, the Netherlands. The analysis reveals a conflict in the use of risk assessment criteria, as parties in the Port may follow their own matrices in the presence of a shared decision-making framework. Nonetheless, the network metric analysis reveals that the criteria, whether shared or individual, build on the same source of risk analysis, suggesting that this duality may not be detrimental for climate adaptation efforts. Additionally, an institutional void is identified for financial responsibilities in locations where infrastructures overlap. Finally, the network metrics show high dependency between institutions in the risk dialogue phase, and reveal the centrality of infrastructure owners ProRail and RWS in the institutional landscape instead of local or regional governmental bodies.
C1 [Mesdaghi, Batoul; Ghorbani, Amineh; de Bruijne, Mark] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Technol Policy & Management, Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Delft University of Technology
RP Ghorbani, A (corresponding author), Delft Univ Technol, Fac Technol Policy & Management, Delft, Netherlands.
EM a.ghorbani@tudelft.nl
RI Ghorbani, Amineh/KIC-8485-2024; de Bruijne, Mark/ABF-7512-2020
OI Ghorbani, Amineh/0000-0002-9985-8239
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NR 61
TC 14
Z9 15
U1 0
U2 14
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD JAN
PY 2022
VL 127
BP 120
EP 136
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2021.10.010
EA OCT 2021
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA WS1VW
UT WOS:000714978200001
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Clouse, C
   Anderson, N
   Shippling, T
AF Clouse, Carey
   Anderson, Naomi
   Shippling, Taylor
TI Ladakh's artificial glaciers: climate-adaptive design for water scarcity
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE artificial glaciers; Ladakh; climate-adaptation; infrastructure; water
   management
ID IRRIGATION; INDIA
AB For decades, the artificial glaciers in Ladakh, North India, have been trumpeted as useful water-harvesting devices for subsistence farming communities. In this context, the massive masonry structures link low-tech, vernacular hydrological thinking with design innovation to create a popular climate-adaptive design solution. While these interventions appear to provide promising new strategies for water harvesting in this dry desert region, very little data exist to substantiate, quantify, or contradict the project claims. This paper interrogates these structures through the lens of the design disciplines and considers the functional aspects of a prototypical artificial glacier system. Six different artificial glacier systems were studied over a period of two summer months, revealing a variety of design and construction approaches. These findings give rise to a number of engineering patterns that may be found in an archetypical artificial glacier system.
C1 [Clouse, Carey] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Architecture, 151 Presidents Dr, Amherst, MA 01003 USA.
   [Anderson, Naomi; Shippling, Taylor] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Engn, Pittsburgh, PA USA.
C3 University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Amherst;
   Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); University
   of Pittsburgh
RP Clouse, C (corresponding author), Univ Massachusetts, Dept Architecture, 151 Presidents Dr, Amherst, MA 01003 USA.
EM clouse@umass.edu
RI Clouse, Carey/JDV-7390-2023
FU Fulbright-Nehru Senior Research Fellowship; University of Pittsburgh
   Swanson School of Engineering; University of Pittsburgh Mascaro Center
   for Sustainable Innovation
FX Fieldwork was supported in part by funding from a Fulbright-Nehru Senior
   Research Fellowship, the University of Pittsburgh Swanson School of
   Engineering, and the University of Pittsburgh Mascaro Center for
   Sustainable Innovation.
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NR 43
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 1
U2 25
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2017
VL 9
IS 5
BP 428
EP 438
DI 10.1080/17565529.2016.1167664
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EY1EJ
UT WOS:000403707000004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vaughn, SE
AF Vaughn, Sarah E.
TI Caribbean Technological Thought and Climate Adaptation
SO SMALL AXE
LA English
DT Article
ID DISASTER
C1 [Vaughn, Sarah E.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Anthropol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley
RP Vaughn, SE (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Anthropol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
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NR 36
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Z9 4
U1 0
U2 1
PU DUKE UNIV PRESS
PI DURHAM
PA 905 W MAIN ST, STE 18-B, DURHAM, NC 27701 USA
SN 0799-0537
EI 1534-6714
J9 SMALL AXE
JI Small Axe
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 24
IS 2
BP 110
EP 121
DI 10.1215/07990537-8604526
PG 12
WC Humanities, Multidisciplinary
WE Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Arts & Humanities - Other Topics
GA NH6FR
UT WOS:000564764400009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hernández, RC
   Camerin, F
AF Hernandez, Rafael Cordoba
   Camerin, Federico
TI The application of ecosystem assessments in land use planning: A case
   study for supporting decisions toward ecosystem protection
SO FUTURES
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainable development; Resilience; Ecosystem assessment; Urban
   development; Ecosystem risks
ID SERVICES; RESILIENCE; FRAMEWORK; CAPACITY
AB This paper proposes a flexible methodology for ecosystem assessment oriented to climate-change adaptation and mitigation policies focused on ecosystem protection. This analysis is based on a methodology developed at the European level which is adapted and applied in a specific Spanish context, providing a practical application that can be replicated in other European contexts after cartographic adaptation. The novelty of the proposed method is the inclusion of ecosystem assessment for land use planning as an element to consider when justifying the reasons for land protection. It involves three main steps. The first step introduces the spatial information of the different ecosystems of the study area, including the identification of ecosystem services (ES) and the capacity of the different ecosystems to provide them. The second step proposes the ecosystem assessment methodology at the regional and local planning scale based on the Mapping and Assessment of Ecosystems and their Services (MAES) project. The third step concerns the evaluation of the expected impacts on the ecosystems due to land-use-planning-related development trajectories to depict the possible negative consequences on ES. Such results show how the integration of ES assessments into land use planning tools could motivate land protection through providing evidence information on ecosystem risks, ES loss, or both.
C1 [Hernandez, Rafael Cordoba] Univ Politecn Madrid, Escuela Tecn Super Arquitectura, Dept Urbanist & Ordenac Terr, Grp Invest Arquitectura Urbanismo & Sostenibilidad, Madrid, Spain.
   [Camerin, Federico] Univ Politecn Madrid, Univ UVA Valladolid, Grp Invest Arquitectura Urbanismo & Sostenibilidad, Madrid, Spain.
C3 Universidad Politecnica de Madrid; Universidad Politecnica de Madrid;
   Universidad de Valladolid
RP Hernández, RC (corresponding author), Univ Politecn Madrid, Escuela Tecn Super Arquitectura, Dept Urbanist & Ordenac Terr, Grp Invest Arquitectura Urbanismo & Sostenibilidad, Madrid, Spain.
EM rafael.cordoba@upm.es
RI CAMERIN, FEDERICO/AAX-5847-2020
OI CAMERIN, FEDERICO/0000-0002-8659-3761
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NR 62
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 3
U2 6
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0016-3287
EI 1873-6378
J9 FUTURES
JI Futures
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 161
AR 103399
DI 10.1016/j.futures.2024.103399
EA JUN 2024
PG 16
WC Economics; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Public Administration
GA UY9G9
UT WOS:001251736600001
OA hybrid
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sahani, J
   Kumar, P
   Debele, SE
AF Sahani, Jeetendra
   Kumar, Prashant
   Debele, Sisay E.
TI Efficacy assessment of green-blue nature-based solutions against
   environmental heat mitigation
SO ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Heatwaves; Green-blue-grey Infrastructure (GBGI); Climate change
   adaptation; In-situ & mobile monitoring; Sustainable Development Goals;
   NBS cooling efficiency
ID URBAN; IMPACT; TREES
AB Nature-based solutions (NBS) such as green (vegetation) and blue (waterbodies) infrastructure are being promoted as cost-effective and sustainable strategies for managing the heatwaves risks, but long-term monitoring evidence is needed to support their implementation. This work aims to conduct a comparative assessment of the cooling efficiency of green (woodland and grassland) and blue (waterbody) NBS in contrast to a built-up area. Over a year of continuous fixed monitoring showed that the average daily maximum temperatures at NBS locations were 2-3(degrees)C (up-to 15%) lower than the built-up area. Woodland showed the maximum temperature reduction in almost all seasons, followed by waterbody and grassland. NBS performed the best during the summers, peak sunshine, and heatwave hours (up to similar to 6(degrees)C cooler than built-up area). Using an e-bike for mobile monitoring, the areas where green-blue NBS were combined showed the highest spatial cooling extent, followed by waterbody, woodland, and grassland areas. The database generated can validate city-scale environmental models and assist city planners to incorporate NBS into urban dwellings based on the opportunity, need and scope, aligning with Sustainable Development Goals 11 (sustainable cities and communities) and 13 (climate action).
C1 [Sahani, Jeetendra; Kumar, Prashant; Debele, Sisay E.] Univ Surrey, Fac Engn & Phys Sci, Global Ctr Clean Air Res GCARE, Sch Sustainabil Civil & Environm Engn, Guildford GU2 7XH, England.
   [Kumar, Prashant] Univ Surrey, Inst Sustainabil, Guildford GU2 7XH, Surrey, England.
C3 University of Surrey; University of Surrey
RP Kumar, P (corresponding author), Univ Surrey, Fac Engn & Phys Sci, Global Ctr Clean Air Res GCARE, Sch Sustainabil Civil & Environm Engn, Guildford GU2 7XH, England.
EM prashant.kumar@cantab.net
RI ; Kumar, Prashant/C-6357-2011
OI Sahani, Jeetendra/0000-0003-3277-0651; Kumar,
   Prashant/0000-0002-2462-4411
FU NERC [NE/X002799/1]; AHRC [776848]; H2020; UKRI - EPSRC; RECLAIM Network
   Plus; Ove Arup Foundation;  [EP/W034034/1]; EPSRC [EP/W034034/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI; NERC [NE/X002799/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX PK acknowledges the support received from the NERC-funded GreenCities
   (NE/X002799/1) , H2020-funded OPERANDUM project (Grant Agreement No:
   776848) , UKRI-funded RECLAIM Network Plus, jointly funded by the EPSRC,
   NERC and AHRC (EP/W034034/1) , RECLAIM Network Plus funded LivGBGI, and
   the Ove Arup Foundation supported Heat-Cool projects. The authors also
   thank Dr Belen Marti-Cardona for providing the access to weather station
   data for colocation study, and the team members of the GCARE, Guildford
   Borough Council (GBC) and the Guildford Living Lab (GLL) for their help
   and support in data logger installation in Guildford.
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NR 60
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 13
U2 37
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0160-4120
EI 1873-6750
J9 ENVIRON INT
JI Environ. Int.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 179
AR 108187
DI 10.1016/j.envint.2023.108187
EA SEP 2023
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA T4MX0
UT WOS:001077756700001
PM 37699297
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Miron, IJ
AF Miron, Isidro J.
TI Food Security and Safety in the Face of Climate Change: Adaptation and
   Mitigation
SO REVISTA DE SALUD AMBIENTAL
LA Spanish
DT Article
DE climate change; food security; food safety; adaptation; mitigation;
   public health
ID RESPONSES; CO2; TEMPERATURE; TILLAGE
AB Climate change is negatively affecting crop yields and food-producing industries other than the farming industry, thus compromising global food security. However, a review of the scientific literature reveals that adaptive proposals have been made that might lessen these effects provided they are accompanied by measures for mitigating greenhouse gas emissions.
   Adaptation and mitigation measures would include the use of adapted crop varieties; efficient water management; the use of precision conservation farming tools; the promotion of organic farming; the reuse of manure; the protection of extensive livestock farming and native breeds; research into and improvements in animal feed and welfare; the control and monitoring of diseases, especially those zoonotic diseases that pose the greatest risk to public health within the "One Health" approach; the devising of fisheries policies with the aim of reestablishing and maintaining the balance between available resources and fishing activities; and the promotion of sustainable aquaculture as an option for lessening the effects of a decrease in catches from extractive fishing and supplying the market.
   Adaptation and mitigation options include alternative food sources, such as insects, and food waste reduction. Enhanced health warning, monitoring and information systems and official food control systems are essential to tackle the potential food safety risks associated with climate change.
C1 [Miron, Isidro J.] Ctr Especial Diagnost & Tratamiento SESCAM, Dist Salud Publ, Consejeria San Castilla Mancha, Estn 102, Torrijos 45500, Toledo, Spain.
RP Miron, IJ (corresponding author), Ctr Especial Diagnost & Tratamiento SESCAM, Dist Salud Publ, Consejeria San Castilla Mancha, Estn 102, Torrijos 45500, Toledo, Spain.
EM ijmiron@jccm.es
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NR 65
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 7
PU SOC ESPANOLA SANIDAD AMBIENTAL
PI MADRID
PA C LONDRES 17, MADRID, 28028, SPAIN
SN 1577-9572
EI 1697-2791
J9 REV SALUD AMBIENT
JI Rev. Salud Ambient.
PY 2023
VL 23
IS 1
BP 77
EP 88
PG 12
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA L0IH4
UT WOS:001020171400011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Miara, MD
   Negadi, M
   Tabak, S
   Bendif, H
   Dahmani, W
   Hammou, MA
   Sahnoun, T
   Snorek, J
   Porcher, 
   Reyes-García, 
   Teixidor-Toneu, 
AF Miara, M. D.
   Negadi, M.
   Tabak, S.
   Bendif, H.
   Dahmani, W.
   Hammou, M. Ait
   Sahnoun, T.
   Snorek, J.
   Porcher, V
   Reyes-Garcia, V
   Teixidor-Toneu, I
TI Climate Change Impacts Can Be Differentially Perceived Across Time
   Scales: A Study Among the Tuareg of the Algerian Sahara
SO GEOHEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE celestial calendar; desert; ecological calendar; indigenous peoples and
   local communities; drylands
ID TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE; SEASONAL CALENDARS; INDIGENOUS
   PEOPLES; DECISION-MAKING; VARIABILITY; ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT;
   COMMUNITIES; PERCEPTIONS; RAINFALL
AB As an Indigenous community of Algeria and the broader Sahel, the Tuareg hold unique ecological knowledge, which might contribute to broader models of place-based climate change impacts. Between January and April 2019, we carried out semi-structured interviews (N = 23) and focus group discussions (N = 3) in five villages of the province of Illizi, Algeria, to document the local Tuareg community's timeline and ecological calendar, both of which are instruments used to understand place-based reports of climate change impacts. The livelihoods of the Tuareg of Illizi are finely tuned to climate variability as reflected in changes reported in the cadence of events in their ecological calendar (marked by cyclical climatic and religious events). Participants reported rain and temperature irregularities and severe drought events, which have impacted their pastoral and semi-pastoral livelihoods. These reports are aligned with scientifically measured climate observations and predictions. Paradoxically, although participants recall with detail the climatic disasters that happened in the region over the last century, the Tuareg do not explicitly report decadal trends in the frequency of extreme events. The differential perception of climate change impacts across scales can have important implications for undertaking climate change adaptation measures.
C1 [Miara, M. D.; Negadi, M.; Tabak, S.; Dahmani, W.; Hammou, M. Ait] Ibn Khaldoun Univ Tiaret, Dept & Fac Nat & Life Sci, Lab Agrobiotechnol & Nutr Semiarid Areas, Tiaret, Algeria.
   [Bendif, H.] Univ Msila, Dept Nat & Life Sci, Fac Sci, Msila, Algeria.
   [Sahnoun, T.] House Agr Wilaya Illizi, Illizi, Algeria.
   [Snorek, J.] Dartmouth Coll, Dept Environm Studies, Hanover, NH USA.
   [Porcher, V; Reyes-Garcia, V] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Inst Ciencia & Tecnol Ambientals, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Reyes-Garcia, V] Inst Catalana Recerca & Estudis Avancats ICREA, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Teixidor-Toneu, I] Univ Oslo, Nat Hist Museum, Oslo, Norway.
   [Teixidor-Toneu, I] CNRS, Ctr Ecol Fonct & Evolut, Montpellier, France.
C3 Universite Ibn Khaldoun Tiaret; Universite de M'sila; Dartmouth College;
   Autonomous University of Barcelona; ICREA; University of Oslo;
   Universite PSL; Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (EPHE); Institut Agro;
   Montpellier SupAgro; CIRAD; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
   (CNRS); Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Universite
   Paul-Valery; Universite de Montpellier
RP Reyes-García,  (corresponding author), Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Inst Ciencia & Tecnol Ambientals, Barcelona, Spain.; Reyes-García,  (corresponding author), Inst Catalana Recerca & Estudis Avancats ICREA, Barcelona, Spain.; Teixidor-Toneu,  (corresponding author), Univ Oslo, Nat Hist Museum, Oslo, Norway.; Teixidor-Toneu,  (corresponding author), CNRS, Ctr Ecol Fonct & Evolut, Montpellier, France.
EM victoria.reyes@uab.cat; i.t.toneu@nhm.uio.no
RI hamdi, bendif/N-9470-2019; Porcher, Vincent/ITU-2362-2023; Reyes-Garcia,
   Victoria/C-4552-2008
OI Porcher, Vincent/0000-0003-2879-6728; Hamdi, BENDIF/0000-0002-2089-8618;
   mohamed, ait hammou/0000-0002-5187-6294; SOUHILA,
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TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 5
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
SN 2471-1403
J9 GEOHEALTH
JI GeoHealth
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 6
IS 11
AR e2022GH000620
DI 10.1029/2022GH000620
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA 6L4VH
UT WOS:000888181400001
PM 36330077
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kovaleva, M
   Filho, WL
   Borgemeister, C
   Kalungu, JW
AF Kovaleva, Marina
   Leal Filho, Walter
   Borgemeister, Christian
   Kalungu, Jokastah Wanzuu
TI Understanding Needs and Potentials for Gender-Balanced Empowerment and
   Leadership in Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation in Africa
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; African women; gender; empowerment; leadership
ID WOMEN; VULNERABILITY; GAP; PARTICIPATION; EQUALITY; POLICY
AB The past years were marked by the COVID-19 pandemic, economic downfall, the 5th anniversary of the Paris Climate Agreement, and the end of the African Women's Decade. According to the latest projections, African countries will continue to face increasing inequalities, as well as risks to human health, water and food security, due to climate change. African countries are also struggling to reduce gender-related power imbalances in adaptation and mitigation that magnify existing vulnerabilities, particularly those of women. Therefore, any advances made in this narrative are significant. This paper investigates the needs and potential for gender-balanced leadership/empowerment in adaptation and mitigation based on climate change experts' views on the advances made in Africa. This is complemented by a bibliometric analysis of the literature published on the topic between the years 2015 and 2022. The study suggests that although women's influence on climate change related decisions is growing, a series of barriers need to be overcome, among which are lack of knowledge and political will. The COVID-19 pandemic is seen as having both positive and negative potentials for gender-balanced leadership/empowerment. The findings provide a premise for identifying possible directions of further actions towards gender-balanced leadership/empowerment in climate change in African countries.
C1 [Kovaleva, Marina; Leal Filho, Walter] Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, Res & Transfer Ctr Sustainable Dev & Climate Chan, Ulmenliet 20, D-21033 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Borgemeister, Christian] Univ Bonn, Ctr Dev Res ZEF, Genscherallee 3, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
   [Kalungu, Jokastah Wanzuu] South Eastern Kenya Univ SEKU, Dept Agr Engn, POB 170-90200, Kitui, Kenya.
C3 Hochschule Angewandte Wissenschaft Hamburg; University of Bonn
RP Kovaleva, M (corresponding author), Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, Res & Transfer Ctr Sustainable Dev & Climate Chan, Ulmenliet 20, D-21033 Hamburg, Germany.
EM Marina.Kovaleva@haw-hamburg.de; walter.leal2@haw-hamburg.de;
   cb@uni-bonn.de; jokastahkalungu@gmail.com
RI Kovaleva, Marina/AAB-7840-2020; Leal, Walter/ACX-9082-2022
OI Borgemeister, Christian/0000-0001-8067-0335; Leal Filho,
   Walter/0000-0002-1241-5225
FU International Climate Change Information and Research Programme
   (ICCIRP); initiative "100 Papers to Accelerate Climate Change Mitigation
   and Adaptation" Initiative
FX This paper is funded by the International Climate Change Information and
   Research Programme (ICCIRP) and is part of the initiative "100 Papers to
   Accelerate Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation" Initiative.
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NR 135
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 4
U2 32
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 15
AR 9410
DI 10.3390/su14159410
PG 27
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 3R7RV
UT WOS:000839106200001
OA gold, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ajulo, O
   Adams, I
   Asgary, A
   Tang, PT
   Von-Meding, J
AF Ajulo, Oluwadunsin
   Adams, Ishmael
   Asgary, Ali
   Tang, Patrick
   Von-Meding, Jason
TI Modelling the Roles of Community-Based Organisations in Post-Disaster
   Transformative Adaptation
SO GEOHAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE disasters; transformative-adaptation; community-based organisations
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RESILIENCE; DISASTER; CAPACITY; GOVERNANCE;
   WORLD
AB Disasters result where hazards and vulnerabilities intersect. The concept of vulnerability itself is mainly a social construct and the extent to which this can be overcome while transforming disaster-prone systems has often been emphasised in the critical hazard literature. However, the extent to which community-based organisations contribute to post-disaster transformation at the community level remains unexamined. This paper is aimed at examining the extent of the role of community-based organisations (CBOs) in the transformative adaptation of post-earthquake Lyttelton. Quantitative data was obtained from community members using a questionnaire survey of 107 respondents, supporting interviews, and secondary data to explain the phenomenon in this study. System dynamics and agent-based modelling tools were applied to analyse the data. The results show that while CBOs played a major role in Lyttelton's transformation by fostering collaboration, innovation, and awareness, the extent of their impact was determined by differences in their adaptive capacities. The transformation was influenced by the impacts of community initiatives that were immediate, during, and a long time after the disaster recovery activities in the community. Our research extends the discourse on the role of community-based organisations in disaster recovery by highlighting the extent of CBOs' impacts in community post-disaster transformation.
C1 [Ajulo, Oluwadunsin; Tang, Patrick] Univ Newcastle, Sch Architecture & Built Environm, Newcastle 2308, Australia.
   [Adams, Ishmael] Swinburne Univ Technol, Dept Construct & Infrastruct Management, Sydney 2150, Australia.
   [Asgary, Ali] York Univ, Adv Disaster Emergency & Rapid Response Simulat AD, 4700 Keele St, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada.
   [Von-Meding, Jason] Univ Florida, Inst Built Environm Resilience, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
C3 University of Newcastle; Swinburne University of Technology; York
   University - Canada; State University System of Florida; University of
   Florida
RP Adams, I (corresponding author), Swinburne Univ Technol, Dept Construct & Infrastruct Management, Sydney 2150, Australia.
EM oluwadunsin.ajulo@uon.edu.au; ishmaeladams@swin.edu.au; asgary@yorku.ca;
   patrick.tang@newcastle.edu.au; jason.vonmeding@ufl.edu
RI Ajulo, Oluwadunsin/R-4287-2019; Adams, Ishmael/GLV-0845-2022; von
   Meding, Jason/D-6499-2013
OI Asgary, Ali/0000-0002-6253-1021; Adams, Ishmael/0000-0002-1633-1491;
   Tang, W.C./0000-0002-9305-116X; von Meding, Jason/0000-0002-2040-9298
FU University of Newcastle International Postgraduate Scholarship,
   Australia
FX The research was funded by the University of Newcastle International
   Postgraduate Scholarship, Australia.
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NR 61
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 8
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-795X
J9 GEOHAZARDS-BASEL
JI Geohazards
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 3
IS 2
BP 178
EP 198
DI 10.3390/geohazards3020010
PG 21
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geology
GA LN5B5
UT WOS:001187484900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dewan, A
   Kiselev, G
   Botje, D
AF Dewan, Ashraf
   Kiselev, Grigory
   Botje, Dirk
TI Diurnal and seasonal trends and associated determinants of surface urban
   heat islands in large Bangladesh cities
SO APPLIED GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Surface urban heat islands; MODIS; Driving factors; Urban expansion;
   Cross-city comparison; Spatiotemporal analysis
ID LOCAL BACKGROUND CLIMATE; LAND-USE; TEMPERATURE; MODIS; MITIGATION;
   GREEN; INDEX; WATER; CLASSIFICATION; PREDICTION
AB Many surface urban heat island (SUHI) studies have been conducted around the globe, however there is still a lack of information available regarding the intensity of SUHI (SUHII) in Bangladesh cities. This study focused on diurnal and seasonal SUHI variability, temporal trends and possible drivers in five major cities. Mean annual daytime SUHII ranged from 2.88 degrees C for Dhaka to 0.84 degrees C for Rajshahi, while nighttime intensity varied from 1.91 degrees C (Chittagong) to 0.30 degrees C (Sylhet). The pre-monsoon period exhibited the greatest magnitude and the seasonal amplitude during the winter season was positive for Dhaka and Khulna but negative for the other cities. Correlation analysis indicated that a dense city population, a high degree of imperviousness and the absence of greenery were likely to act singly, or in combination, to increase urban warming within these cities. An increasing warming trend during daytime was observed. The urban population of Bangladesh is projected to increase substantially in future (i.e., to 81.4 million by 2029), so the findings of this study provide valuable insights into this warming issue and will assist in the development of effective local-scale climate change adaptation plans.
C1 [Dewan, Ashraf; Kiselev, Grigory; Botje, Dirk] Curtin Univ, Sch Earth & Planetary Sci, Kent St, Perth, WA 6102, Australia.
C3 Curtin University
RP Dewan, A (corresponding author), Curtin Univ, Sch Earth & Planetary Sci, Spatial Sci Discipline, Kent St, Perth, WA 6102, Australia.
EM a.dewan@curtin.edu.au
RI Dewan, Ashraf/O-2191-2015
OI Dewan, Ashraf/0000-0001-5594-5464; Botje, Dirk/0000-0002-7498-3906
FU  [7188134]
FX This study was partially supported by a project conducted for the World
   Bank (Grant number 7188134) in which A. Dewan was the Principal
   Investigator. The funders had no role in the study design, data
   collection and analysis, nor the preparation of the manuscript. The
   au-thors wish to thank AYM Abdullah for assistance in cross-checking
   some results. We also wish to thank the two anonymous reviewers and the
   Editor, whose suggestions were helpful in significantly improving this
   manuscript.
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NR 75
TC 70
Z9 71
U1 1
U2 20
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0143-6228
EI 1873-7730
J9 APPL GEOGR
JI Appl. Geogr.
PD OCT
PY 2021
VL 135
AR 102533
DI 10.1016/j.apgeog.2021.102533
EA AUG 2021
PG 11
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA WA5CB
UT WOS:000702901900001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mclean, EL
   Becker, A
AF Mclean, Elizabeth L.
   Becker, Austin
TI Advancing Seaport Resilience to Natural Hazards Due to Climate Change:
   Strategies to Overcome Decision Making Barriers
SO FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE resilience; climate change adaptation; natural hazards; decision making;
   seaports
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; LOCAL-GOVERNMENT; VULNERABILITY; POLICY
AB Climate change and extreme weather events put in peril the critical coastal infrastructure that is vital to economies, livelihoods, and sustainability. However, for a variety of reasons, decision makers often do not implement potential adaptation strategies to plan and adjust to climate and extreme weather events. To respond to the question of how seaport decision makers perceive strategies to overcome the barriers to adaptation we used semi-structured interviews of 30 seaport directors/managers, environmental specialists, and safety managers from 15 medium- and high-use ports of the U.S. North Atlantic. This paper contributes four broad strategies identified by seaport decision makers as necessary to help them advance on this challenge: funding, better planning or guidance, research and education, and advocacy/lobbying. We coded these strategies parallel to our partner paper that identified seven key barriers faced by the same set of decision makers. Results can help direct resources in ways targeted to the needs of seaport decision makers. The proposed framework contributes to theories of resilience building and barriers to decision making. Being strategic about change facilitates effective adaptation, decreasing risk, and enables continuity of safe, and sustainable, operations of U.S. seaports in the face of climate and extreme weather events.
C1 [Mclean, Elizabeth L.; Becker, Austin] Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Marine Affairs, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
C3 University of Rhode Island
RP Becker, A (corresponding author), Univ Rhode Isl, Dept Marine Affairs, Kingston, RI 02881 USA.
EM abecker@uri.edu
RI Mclean, Elizabeth/HNB-9042-2023
FU USACE project grant [W912HZ-16-C-0019]
FX This study was supported by the USACE project grant(W912HZ-16-C-0019)
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NR 61
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 2
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2673-4524
J9 FRONT SUSTAIN
JI Front. Sustain.
PD JUN 23
PY 2021
VL 2
AR 673630
DI 10.3389/frsus.2021.673630
PG 14
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YS5Z7
UT WOS:001270499400001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Iglesias, A
   Garrote, L
   Bardají, I
   Santillán, D
   Esteve, P
AF Iglesias, Ana
   Garrote, Luis
   Bardaji, Isabel
   Santillan, David
   Esteve, Paloma
TI Looking into individual choices and local realities to define adaptation
   options to drought and climate change
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Drought; Climate change; Adaptation; Risk perception; Audience
   segmentation; Latent profile analysis
ID PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTANCE; AUDIENCE-SEGMENTATION; OVERCOMING BARRIERS;
   WILLINGNESS; PERCEPTIONS; EXPERIENCE; BEHAVIOR; SUPPORT
AB Climate change adaptation choices defined by local communities reflect individual risk perception and contextual factors. This study examines how local contextual environmental factors contribute to individual choices for adapting to water scarcity in three locations in central Spain. The study evaluates citizens' choices by audience segmentation and explore the role of geographical location in segments' engagement with adaptation and adaptation measure preference. The results of the analysis of the effect of local experience support the findings of other studies that suggest that local experience is linked to risk perception but does not necessarily drive adaptive behaviour. The results suggest that respondents from most degraded areas show a higher local risk perception, but do not show homogeneous commitment to adaptation. The results also indicate differences over adaptation measure preferences across locations. Respondents of less degraded areas have a lower risk perception and show individualistic responses as compared to respondents in water stressed communities. These results highlight the relevance of local experience-driven risk perception in support to adaptation actions. Spain exemplifies many countries in southern Europe and North Africa, where drought is already a challenge to society and it is affecting an increasing number of people.
C1 [Iglesias, Ana; Bardaji, Isabel; Esteve, Paloma] Univ Politecn Madrid UPM, Dept Agr Econ Stat & Business Management CEIGRAM, ETSIAAB, Avda Puerta Hierro 2, Madrid 28040, Spain.
   [Garrote, Luis; Santillan, David] Univ Politecn Madrid UPM, Dept Civil Engn Hydraul Energy & Environm, ETSICCP, C Prof Aranguren 3, Madrid 28040, Spain.
C3 Universidad Politecnica de Madrid; Universidad Politecnica de Madrid
RP Esteve, P (corresponding author), Univ Politecn Madrid UPM, Dept Agr Econ Stat & Business Management CEIGRAM, ETSIAAB, Avda Puerta Hierro 2, Madrid 28040, Spain.
EM ana.iglesias@upm.es; l.garrote@upm.es; isabel.bardaji@upm.es;
   david.santillan@upm.es; paloma.esteve@upm.es
RI SANCHEZ, DAVID/AAX-1110-2021; Iglesias, Ana/AEN-3261-2022; Garrote,
   Luis/B-5925-2013; Esteve, Paloma/Y-6746-2019
OI SANTILLAN SANCHEZ, DAVID/0000-0002-9749-0522; Garrote,
   Luis/0000-0001-9087-3638; BARDAJI DE AZCARATE,
   ISABEL/0000-0002-6122-525X; Esteve, Paloma/0000-0003-1216-9156;
   IGLESIAS, ANA/0000-0002-3183-6658
FU European Commission iSQAPPER project [635750]; European Commission BASE
   project [308337]; Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, ADAPTA project
   [RP170433021]
FX This work was supported by the European Commission iSQAPPER project
   (Grant number 635750) , http:// www.isqaperpr oject.eu/ (AI, LG) ; the
   European Commission BASE project (Grant number 308337)
   https://baseadaptation.eu/ (AI, LG) ; and the Uni-versidad Politecnica
   de Madrid, ADAPTA project (Grant number RP170433021) , (AI, LG) .
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Z9 6
U1 0
U2 17
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4797
EI 1095-8630
J9 J ENVIRON MANAGE
JI J. Environ. Manage.
PD SEP 1
PY 2021
VL 293
AR 112861
DI 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.112861
EA JUN 2021
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TP8PC
UT WOS:000677855600005
PM 34087643
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Horváthová, E
   Badura, T
   Duchková, H
AF Horvathova, Eva
   Badura, Tomas
   Duchkova, Helena
TI The value of the shading function of urban trees: A replacement cost
   approach
SO URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING
LA English
DT Article
DE City trees; Ecosystem services; Microclimate benefits; Prague; Urban
   cooling
ID HEAT-ISLAND; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; CONTINGENT VALUATION; MITIGATION;
   CLIMATE; STREET; TEMPERATURE; BENEFITS; SURFACE; CITIES
AB Cooling is one of the most important benefits of street trees, yet city planners lack estimates of the value of this benefit. Estimation of the value of the cooling effect could help to strengthen the case for investment in a tree cover as a part of the urban infrastructure for climate change adaptation. This article aims to address this research gap by presenting a novel application of a replacement cost method using the costs of parasols for estimating the value of shade provided by urban trees. Using the method, we calculated the net present value of the shade from a generic tree and used these estimates in a case study in Prague, Czech Republic. The results showed that the costs of tree planting and maintenance were higher than the estimated shading benefits in the short term (20-30 years), but the situation reversed when the tree life expectancy increased (> 40 years). Street trees are hence a long-term investment in terms of microclimate regulation. The proposed approach can assist city planners with an assessment of microclimate regulation by urban trees as it can be easily applied with local data, and can complement other methods to show the wider benefits of urban trees.
C1 [Horvathova, Eva; Badura, Tomas; Duchkova, Helena] Czech Acad Sci, Dept Human Dimens Global Change, Global Change Res Inst, Belidla 986-4a, Brno 60300, Czech Republic.
   [Horvathova, Eva] Mendel Univ Brno, Brno, Czech Republic.
C3 Czech Academy of Sciences; Global Change Research Centre of the Czech
   Academy of Sciences; Mendel University in Brno
RP Horváthová, E (corresponding author), Czech Acad Sci, Global Change Res Inst, Dept Human Dimens Global Change, V Jircharich 149-6, Prague 11000, Czech Republic.
EM horvathova.e@czechglobe.cz; badura.t@czechglobe.cz;
   duchkova.h@czechglobe.cz
RI Duchkova, Helena/HCH-9218-2022; Badura, Tomas/AAE-7366-2020; Horvathova,
   Eva/G-3329-2019
OI Duchkova, Helena/0000-0002-5022-8180; Badura, Tomas/0000-0001-8264-0850;
   Horvathova, Eva/0000-0003-1188-4895
FU Czech Science Foundation (GACR) [20-18261S]
FX This work was supported by the Czech Science Foundation (GACR), Grant
   No. 20-18261S. We thank Alice D.ede.ckov ' a (Prague City Hall,
   Environmental Protection Department) and Eva Jakubcov ' a (Technical
   Road Administration Prague) for providing data and consultations.
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NR 93
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 10
U2 57
PU ELSEVIER GMBH
PI MUNICH
PA HACKERBRUCKE 6, 80335 MUNICH, GERMANY
SN 1618-8667
EI 1610-8167
J9 URBAN FOR URBAN GREE
JI Urban For. Urban Green.
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 62
AR 127166
DI 10.1016/j.ufug.2021.127166
EA MAY 2021
PG 10
WC Plant Sciences; Environmental Studies; Forestry; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Plant Sciences; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Forestry; Urban
   Studies
GA SV3NM
UT WOS:000663729200004
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chrysoulakis, N
   Somarakis, G
   Stagakis, S
   Mitraka, Z
   Wong, MS
   Ho, HC
AF Chrysoulakis, Nektarios
   Somarakis, Giorgos
   Stagakis, Stavros
   Mitraka, Zina
   Wong, Man-Sing
   Ho, Hung-Chak
TI Monitoring and Evaluating Nature-Based Solutions Implementation in Urban
   Areas by Means of Earth Observation
SO REMOTE SENSING
LA English
DT Article
DE earth observation; nature-based solutions; monitoring and evaluation;
   environmental impacts; urban energy balance
ID AIR-TEMPERATURE; LAND-COVER; SURFACE; ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT;
   MORPHOLOGY; SCALE
AB Climate change influences the vulnerability of urban populations worldwide. To improve their adaptive capacity, the implementation of nature-based solutions (NBS) in urban areas has been identified as an appropriate action, giving urban planning and development an important role towards climate change adaptation/mitigation and risk management and resilience. However, the importance of extensively applying NBS is still underestimated, especially regarding its potential to induce significantly positive environmental and socioeconomic impacts across cities. Concerning environmental impacts, monitoring and evaluation is an important step of NBS management, where earth observation (EO) can contribute. EO is known for providing valuable disaggregated data to assess the modifications caused by NBS implementation in terms of land cover, whereas the potential of EO to uncover the role of NBS in urban metabolism modifications (e.g., energy, water, and carbon fluxes and balances) still remains underexplored. This study reviews the EO potential in the monitoring and evaluation of NBS implementation in cities, indicating that satellite observations combined with data from complementary sources may provide an evidence-based approach in terms of NBS adaptive management. EO-based tools can be applied to assess NBS' impacts on urban energy, water, and carbon balances, further improving our understanding of urban systems dynamics and supporting sustainable urbanization.
C1 [Chrysoulakis, Nektarios; Somarakis, Giorgos; Stagakis, Stavros; Mitraka, Zina] Fdn Res & Technol Hellas FORTH, Inst Appl & Computat Math, Remote Sensing Lab, Iraklion 70013, Greece.
   [Stagakis, Stavros] Univ Basel, Dept Environm Sci, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland.
   [Wong, Man-Sing] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Land Surveying & Geoinformat, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Ho, Hung-Chak] Univ Hong Kong, Dept Urban Planning & Design, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
C3 University of Basel; Hong Kong Polytechnic University; University of
   Hong Kong
RP Somarakis, G (corresponding author), Fdn Res & Technol Hellas FORTH, Inst Appl & Computat Math, Remote Sensing Lab, Iraklion 70013, Greece.
EM zedd2@iacm.forth.gr; somarage@iacm.forth.gr; stavros.stagakis@unibas.ch;
   mitraka@iacm.forth.gr; ls.charles@polyu.edu.hk; hcho21@hku.hk
RI Mitraka, Zina/AAG-6592-2020; Somarakis, Giorgos/AAW-1834-2021;
   Chrysoulakis, Nektarios/AAG-6092-2020; ho, Hung/U-5942-2019; Wong, Man
   Sing/A-2718-2014; Stagakis, Stavros/O-4181-2014; Chrysoulakis,
   Nektarios/R-7341-2017
OI Wong, Man Sing/0000-0002-6439-6775; Stagakis,
   Stavros/0000-0001-6377-2268; Chrysoulakis,
   Nektarios/0000-0002-5208-626X; Mitraka, Zina/0000-0002-5884-1860;
   Somarakis, Giorgos/0000-0003-3910-6761
FU EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme [870337]; General
   Research Fund, Hong Kong [15602619]; H2020 - Industrial Leadership
   [870337] Funding Source: H2020 - Industrial Leadership
FX The research was partially conducted in the framework of the project
   CURE (http://curecopernicus.eu, accessed on 22 December 2020), that has
   received funding from the EU Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation
   Programme, under Grant Agreement No 870337. Also, M. S. Wong would like
   to thank the funding support from a grant by the General Research Fund,
   Hong Kong (Grant No 15602619).
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NR 65
TC 11
Z9 14
U1 7
U2 55
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2072-4292
J9 REMOTE SENS-BASEL
JI Remote Sens.
PD APR
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 8
AR 1503
DI 10.3390/rs13081503
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Remote Sensing;
   Imaging Science & Photographic Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Remote Sensing; Imaging
   Science & Photographic Technology
GA RT7ZD
UT WOS:000644675100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU O'Donnell, EC
   Netusil, NR
   Chan, FKS
   Dolman, NJ
   Gosling, SN
AF O'Donnell, Emily C.
   Netusil, Noelwah R.
   Chan, Faith K. S.
   Dolman, Nanco J.
   Gosling, Simon N.
TI International Perceptions of Urban Blue-Green Infrastructure: A
   Comparison across Four Cities
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE blue-green infrastructure; perceptions; climate change adaptation; urban
   water management; resilience; multiple benefits
ID NEW-YORK-CITY; WATER MANAGEMENT; SPONGE CITY; IMPLEMENTATION; CLIMATE;
   STORMWATER; CHINA; ADAPTATION; GOVERNANCE; CHALLENGES
AB Blue-Green infrastructure (BGI) is recognised internationally as an approach for managing urban water challenges while enhancing society and the environment through the provision of multiple co-benefits. This research employed an online survey to investigate the perceptions of BGI held by professional stakeholders in four cities with established BGI programs: Newcastle (UK), Ningbo (China), Portland (Oregon USA), and Rotterdam (The Netherlands) (64 respondents). The results show that challenges associated with having too much water (e.g., pluvial and fluvial flood risk, water quality deterioration) are driving urban water management agendas. Perceptions of governance drivers for BGI implementation, BGI leaders, and strategies for improving BGI uptake, are markedly different in the four cities reflecting the varied local, regional and national responsibilities for BGI implementation. In addition to managing urban water, BGI is universally valued for its positive impact on residents' quality of life; however, a transformative change in policy and practice towards truly multifunctional infrastructure is needed to optimise the delivery of multiple BGI benefits to address each city's priorities and strategic objectives. Changes needed to improve BGI uptake, e.g., increasing the awareness of policy-makers to multifunctional BGI, has international relevance for other cities on their journeys to sustainable blue-green futures.
C1 [O'Donnell, Emily C.; Gosling, Simon N.] Univ Nottingham, Sch Geog, Nottingham NG7 2RD, England.
   [Netusil, Noelwah R.] Reed Coll, Dept Econ, Portland, OR 97202 USA.
   [Chan, Faith K. S.] Univ Nottingham Ningbo China, Sch Geog Sci, Fac Sci & Engn, Ningbo 315100, Peoples R China.
   [Chan, Faith K. S.] Univ Leeds, Sch Geog, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Chan, Faith K. S.] Univ Leeds, Water Leeds Res Inst, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Dolman, Nanco J.] Royal HaskoningDHV, NL-1090 GE Amsterdam, Netherlands.
C3 University of Nottingham; Reed College - Oregon; University of
   Nottingham Ningbo China; University of Leeds; University of Leeds
RP O'Donnell, EC (corresponding author), Univ Nottingham, Sch Geog, Nottingham NG7 2RD, England.
EM emily.o'donnell@nottingham.ac.uk; netusil@reed.edu;
   faith.chan@nottingham.edu.cn; nanco.dolman@rhdhv.com;
   simon.gosling@nottingham.ac.uk
RI Dolman, Nanco/AGM-8983-2022; Gosling, Simon/A-3013-2012; Chan, Faith Ka
   Shun/H-1541-2017
OI Netusil, Noelwah/0000-0002-0806-1153; Gosling,
   Simon/0000-0001-5973-6862; Chan, Faith Ka Shun/0000-0001-6091-6596;
   O'Donnell, Emily/0000-0003-4303-4705; Dolman, Nanco/0000-0002-8134-6307
FU British Academy [IC3\100093]; Reed College; Bernard Goldhammer Grant for
   Research on Economics and Natural Resources at Reed College
FX This research was performed as part of the British Academy project
   `Developing new Blue-Green futures: multifunctional infrastructure to
   address water challenges', part of the British Academy programme on
   Tackling the UK's International Challenges (grant reference IC3\100093).
   Additional funding provided by Reed College and the Bernard Goldhammer
   Grant for Research on Economics and Natural Resources at Reed College.
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PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
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DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hasui, S
   Komatsu, H
AF Hasui, Seiichiro
   Komatsu, Hiroshi
TI Climate Security and Policy Options in Japan
SO POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; climate disasters; comprehensive security;
   environmental security; human security; violent conflict
ID CONFLICT; VARIABILITY; DISCOURSES; AFRICA; RISK
AB Climate security has been discussed in both academia and policy documents in the West. A key point that surfaces from these discussions is that the cooperation of non-military organizations is essential for effective responses to climate change-related threats. This overlaps considerably with debates on security in Japan, where the use of force is constitutionally restricted. Therefore, it is possible to localize the concept of climate security to the genealogy of Japan's security policy that, in the 1980s and 1990s, sought a non-traditional security strategy that did not rely solely on military power in the name of "comprehensive security," "environmental security," and "human security." In Japan, the perspective of climate security is rare. However, the introduction of a unique climate security concept into security policy enables the maintenance of national security and environmental conservation. Additionally, struggling with climate change alongside neighboring countries contributes to mutual confidence building and stability in international relations in Northeast Asia. To achieve this objective, we first show that climate security includes many kinds of security concerns by surveying previous studies and comparing Western countries' climate security policies. Second, we follow the evolution of Japan's security policy from 1980 to 2021. Finally, we review Japanese climate security policies and propose policy options.
C1 [Hasui, Seiichiro] Ibaraki Univ, Coll Humanities & Social Sci, Mito, Ibaraki, Japan.
   [Komatsu, Hiroshi] Seikei Univ, Ctr Asian & Pacif Studies, Musashino, Tokyo, Japan.
C3 Ibaraki University; Seikei University
RP Hasui, S (corresponding author), Ibaraki Univ, Coll Humanities & Social Sci, Mito, Ibaraki, Japan.
EM seiichiro.hasui.irps@vc.ibaraki.ac.jp; hkomatsu@ejs.seikei.ac.jp
RI Komatsu, Hiroshi/F-9005-2019
OI Komatsu, Hiroshi/0000-0003-3248-7901
FU Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan
   [JPMEERF20182001]
FX This research was performed by the Environment Research and Technology
   Development Fund (JPMEERF20182001) of the Environmental Restoration and
   Conservation Agency of Japan.
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DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hossen, MA
   Chowdhury, MA
   Hans, A
   Tagoe, CA
   Allan, A
   Nelson, W
   Patel, A
   Mondal, MS
   Salehin, M
   Quaye, RM
   Das, S
AF Hossen, M. Anwar
   Chowdhury, Md. Arif
   Hans, Asha
   Tagoe, Cynthia Addoquaye
   Allan, Andrew
   Nelson, Winfred
   Patel, Amrita
   Mondal, M. Shahjahan
   Salehin, Mashfiqus
   Quaye, Ruth M.
   Das, Shouvik
TI Governance Challenges in Addressing Climatic Concerns in Coastal Asia
   and Africa
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; delta; coastal people; governance; policy; livelihood;
   adaptation; Asia and Africa
ID ADAPTATION; MIGRATION; CONTEXT; DELTA
AB Coastal people, especially those living within deltaic areas, encounter major climatic concerns which affect their livelihoods. To cope with this problem, different types of planned adaptation strategies have been implemented guided by laws, policies and programs. However, these guiding documents sometimes fall short of addressing the needs of climate-affected people, especially in natural resource-dependent societies in Asia and Africa. Based on this premise, this paper sought to evaluate the effectiveness of existing policy documents which affect the lives of people living in one large delta (Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna in Bangladesh), two medium-sized deltas (Indian Bengal deltapart of the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna and Mahanadi in India), and a small-sized delta (Volta in Ghana). The study followed a mixed methods research design, which included desktop analyses of policies, laws and programs, a questionnaire survey conducted among individuals who played various roles in the policy and legal development processes at national and local levels and focus group discussions at the community level in the three countries. National laws, policies and programs were assessed in the context of climate change adaptation through three lenses: human rights, natural resource management and disaster response. Findings of this paper reveal that the existing documents have some strengths to promote adaptation, although they have some major limitations that cause concerns among the delta communities.
C1 [Hossen, M. Anwar; Chowdhury, Md. Arif; Hans, Asha; Tagoe, Cynthia Addoquaye; Allan, Andrew; Nelson, Winfred; Patel, Amrita; Mondal, M. Shahjahan; Salehin, Mashfiqus; Quaye, Ruth M.; Das, Shouvik] Univ Dhaka, Dept Sociol, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
C3 University of Dhaka
RP Hossen, MA (corresponding author), Univ Dhaka, Dept Sociol, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
EM anwar_sociology@du.ac.bd; arifchowdhury065@gmail.com;
   ashahans10@gmail.com; candy_tagoe@yahoo.com; a.a.allan@dundee.ac.uk;
   winfred.nelson@ndpc.gov.gh; amritapatel1965@gmail.com;
   mshahjahanmondal@iwfm.buet.ac.bd; msalehin1968@gmail.com;
   ruthquay@gmail.com; geo.shk@gmail.com
RI Mondal, M./AAG-4055-2021; Allan, Alfred/I-7332-2019; Chowdhury, Md.
   Arif/N-1322-2018
OI Chowdhury, Md. Arif/0000-0002-0646-512X; Allan,
   Andrew/0000-0002-3528-2613; Addoquaye Tagoe,
   Cynthia/0000-0002-7287-7843; Das, Shouvik/0000-0002-3872-6662
FU UK government's Department for International Development (DFID);
   International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada
FX This work was carried out under the DEltas, vulnerability and Climate
   Change: Migration and Adaptation (DECCMA) project which is part of
   Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia
   (CARIAA), with financial support from the UK government's Department for
   International Development (DFID) and the International Development
   Research Centre (IDRC), Canada. The views expressed in this work are
   those of the creators and do not necessarily represent those of DFID and
   IDRC or its board of governors.
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NR 44
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 0
U2 13
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD APR 1
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 7
AR 2148
DI 10.3390/su11072148
PG 17
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HW2WV
UT WOS:000466551600325
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hileman, J
   Bodin, Ö
AF Hileman, Jacob
   Bodin, Orjan
TI Balancing Costs and Benefits of Collaboration in an Ecology of Games
SO POLICY STUDIES JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE actor collaboration; capacity; ecology of games; polycentric governance;
   trade-off; venue participation
ID ADVOCACY COALITION FRAMEWORK; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; NETWORK
   GOVERNANCE; WATER GOVERNANCE; SOCIAL NETWORKS; POLICY NETWORKS;
   COMANAGEMENT; CONSERVATION; LEGITIMACY; COMPLEXITY
AB The growth of collaborative approaches to governance has resulted in increasingly complex policy and management landscapes, where actors are presented with ever-increasing numbers of decision-making venues they can participate in and actors they can collaborate with. Given that actors face constraints on their capacity to manage actor and venue relationships in such polycentric governance systems, we assume the marginal benefit of yet another relationship should begin to diminish at some level of engagement. Furthermore, we hypothesize that such capacity limitations are not static, but decrease as actors learn, develop skills, and formulate strategies for how to navigate complex polycentric systems more effectively. Drawing on the Ecology of Games framework, this article investigates two Swedish collaborative governance initiatives where a multitude of actors came together to address a range of different, but interrelated, policy issues and management tasks. The empirical findings suggest that actors' capacities to successfully navigate polycentric governance arrangements increase as they gain experience and develop their networking skills. Our findings imply there is a need to balance increased complexity in polycentric systems with increased capacity, otherwise the overall effect of an ever-increasing number of venues and actors could be collaborative fatigue and decreased abilities to address diverse governance challenges.
C1 [Hileman, Jacob; Bodin, Orjan] Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Stockholm University
RP Hileman, J (corresponding author), Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, Stockholm, Sweden.
RI Hileman, Jacob/JQH-9516-2023; Bodin, Orjan/A-5098-2010
OI Bodin, Orjan/0000-0002-8218-1153; Hileman, Jacob/0000-0002-5617-6318
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NR 65
TC 31
Z9 33
U1 3
U2 49
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0190-292X
EI 1541-0072
J9 POLICY STUD J
JI Policy Stud. J.
PD FEB
PY 2019
VL 47
IS 1
SI SI
BP 138
EP 158
DI 10.1111/psj.12292
PG 21
WC Political Science; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law; Public Administration
GA HL4KD
UT WOS:000458686000006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, JC
   Mohegh, A
   Li, Y
   Levinson, R
   Ban-Weiss, G
AF Zhang, Jiachen
   Mohegh, Arash
   Li, Yun
   Levinson, Ronnen
   Ban-Weiss, George
TI Systematic Comparison of the Influence of Cool Wall versus Cool Roof
   Adoption on Urban Climate in the Los Angeles Basin
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
ID HEAT-ISLAND MITIGATION; LAND EXPANSION; CANOPY MODEL; IMPACTS; SURFACE;
   PARAMETERIZATION; SIMULATION; STRATEGIES; VEGETATION; ALBEDO
AB This study for the first time assesses the influence of employing solar reflective "cool" walls on the urban energy budget and summertime climate of the Los Angeles basin. We systematically compare the effects of cool walls to cool roofs, a heat mitigation strategy that has been widely studied and employed, using a consistent modeling framework (the Weather Research and Forecasting model). Adoption of cool walls leads to increases in urban grid cell albedo that peak in the early morning and late afternoon, when the ratio of solar radiation onto vertical walls versus horizontal surfaces is at a maximum. In Los Angeles County, daily average increase in grid cell reflected solar radiation from increasing wall albedo by 0.80 is 9.1 W m(-2), 43% of that for increasing roof albedo. Cool walls reduce canyon air temperatures in Los Angeles by 0.43 K (daily average), with the peak reduction (0.64 K) occurring at 09:00 LST and a secondary peak (0.53 K) at 18:00 LST. Per 0.10 wall (roof) albedo increase, cool walls (roofs) can reduce summertime daily average canyon air temperature by 0.05 K (0.06 K). Results reported here can be used to inform policies on urban heat island mitigation or climate change adaptation.
C1 [Zhang, Jiachen; Mohegh, Arash; Li, Yun; Ban-Weiss, George] Univ Southern Calif, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.
   [Levinson, Ronnen] Lawrence Berkeley Natl Lab, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
C3 University of Southern California; United States Department of Energy
   (DOE); Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
RP Ban-Weiss, G (corresponding author), Univ Southern Calif, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.
EM banweiss@usc.edu
RI Levinson, Ronnen/JBR-7692-2023; Zhang, Jiachen/KHY-7838-2024
OI Levinson, Ronnen/0000-0003-1463-1359; Ban-Weiss,
   George/0000-0001-8211-2628
FU California Energy Commission [EPC-14-010]; National Science Foundation
   [CBET-1512429, 1752522]; Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and
   Renewable Energy, Building Technologies Office of the U.S. Department of
   Energy [DE-AC02-05CH11231]; Directorate For Engineering; Div Of Chem,
   Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys [1752522] Funding Source: National Science
   Foundation
FX This research was supported by the California Energy Commission under
   contract EPC-14-010 and the National Science Foundation under grants
   CBET-1512429 and 1752522. This work was also supported by the Assistant
   Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Building
   Technologies Office of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No.
   DE-AC02-05CH11231. Computation for the work described in this paper was
   supported by the University of Southern California's Center for
   High-Performance Computing (hpcc.usc.edu). We thank Pablo Rosado for
   providing calculations on solar irradiance incident to surfaces with
   different orientations and window-to-wall ratios for different building
   prototypes. We also thank Gert-Jan Steeneveld, Pouya Vahmani, Dan Li,
   Ravan Ahmadov, Stu McKeen, Trevor Krasowsky, Mo Chen, Mohammad
   Taleghani, Wei Tao, Joachim Fallmann, Haley Gilbert, Jan Kleissl, and
   Junfeng Liu for their helpful suggestions.
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NR 41
TC 28
Z9 30
U1 5
U2 36
PU AMER CHEMICAL SOC
PI WASHINGTON
PA 1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA
SN 0013-936X
EI 1520-5851
J9 ENVIRON SCI TECHNOL
JI Environ. Sci. Technol.
PD OCT 2
PY 2018
VL 52
IS 19
BP 11188
EP 11197
DI 10.1021/acs.est.8b00732
PG 10
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GW0GR
UT WOS:000446542100032
PM 30157379
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Akter, S
   Krupnik, TJ
   Khanam, F
AF Akter, Sonia
   Krupnik, Timothy J.
   Khanam, Fahmida
TI Climate change skepticism and index versus standard crop insurance
   demand in coastal Bangladesh
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Weather index insurance; Climate change adaptation; Skepticism;
   Bangladesh; Choice experiment; Maize
ID RICE-MAIZE SYSTEMS; TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION; FOOD SECURITY; MICROINSURANCE;
   COMMUNITIES; VARIABILITY; PERCEPTIONS; ADAPTATION; DESIGN; RISKS
AB This paper investigates if climate change skepticism, farmers' fatalistic beliefs, and insurance plan design influence interest in crop weather insurance. While studies of the influence of fatalism on disaster preparedness are common, the ways in which fatalism influences climate change skepticism, and in turn affects farmers' interest in crop insurance, have not been previously investigated. An additional objective was to understand farmers' preferences for index versus standard insurance options, the former entailing damage compensation based on post-hazard assessment, the latter tying damage compensation to a set of weather parameter thresholds. A discrete choice experiment was conducted with maize farmers on a climate-risk prone island in coastal Bangladesh. Most farmers were insurance averse. Those who chose insurance were however significantly more likely to select standard as opposed to index-based insurance. Insurance demand was significantly and positively correlated with farmers' concern about the adverse livelihood impacts of climate change. Farmers who exhibited fatalistic views regarding the consequences of climate change were significantly less likely to opt for insurance of either kind. These findings imply that the prospect for farmers' investment in insurance is conditioned by their understanding of climate change risks and the utility of adaptation, in addition to insurance scheme design.
C1 [Akter, Sonia] Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, 469C Bukit Timah Rd, Singapore 259772, Singapore.
   [Akter, Sonia; Khanam, Fahmida] Int Rice Res Inst, Social Sci Div, Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
   [Krupnik, Timothy J.; Khanam, Fahmida] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, House 10-B,Rd 53,Gulshan 2, Dhaka 1213, Bangladesh.
C3 National University of Singapore; CGIAR; International Rice Research
   Institute (IRRI); CGIAR; International Maize & Wheat Improvement Center
   (CIMMYT)
RP Akter, S (corresponding author), Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, 469C Bukit Timah Rd, Singapore 259772, Singapore.; Akter, S (corresponding author), Int Rice Res Inst, Social Sci Div, Los Banos 4031, Laguna, Philippines.
EM sonia.akter@nus.edu.sg
RI Krupnik, Timothy/J-6363-2019; Akter, Sonia/J-2208-2014
OI Akter, Sonia/0000-0001-5644-9403
FU Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA) at Yale University, through the
   Microfinance and Payment Innovations Initiative; Bill and Melinda Gates
   Foundation (BMGF); BMFG; USAID through the CSISA Phase II; CSISA
   expansion in Bangladesh - USAID-Bangladesh Mission in Bangladesh; Global
   Rice Science Partnership (GRiSP) program under the Consultative Group on
   International Agricultural Research (CGIAR)
FX This research was funded by Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA) at Yale
   University, through the Microfinance and Payment Innovations Initiative,
   supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF). Other
   portions of this research were made possible by support from the BMFG
   and USAID through the CSISA Phase II, the CSISA expansion in Bangladesh
   funded by the USAID-Bangladesh Mission in Bangladesh, and through
   support from the Global Rice Science Partnership (GRiSP) program under
   the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR).
   The content and opinions resulting from this research are those of the
   authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of IPA, BMFG, USAID, or
   the United States Government, and shall not be used for advertising or
   product endorsement purposes; nor do they reflect positions or policies
   of the aforementioned organizations. We thank Sreejith Aravindakshan for
   comments that improved this manuscript.
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NR 40
TC 27
Z9 27
U1 3
U2 53
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2017
VL 17
IS 8
BP 2455
EP 2466
DI 10.1007/s10113-017-1174-9
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FM6CP
UT WOS:000415136200023
PM 32009850
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Müller, B
   Johnson, L
   Kreuer, D
AF Mueller, Birgit
   Johnson, Leigh
   Kreuer, David
TI Maladaptive outcomes of climate insurance in agriculture
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Index insurance; Resilience; Climate change adaptation; Smallholder
   agriculture; Vulnerability; Agroecology
ID GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; WEATHER INDEX INSURANCE;
   DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; FIELD EXPERIMENT; CROP
   INSURANCE; RISK; SUSTAINABILITY; ADAPTATION; RESILIENCE
AB Agricultural insurance programs are currently being championed by international donors in many developing countries. They are acclaimed as promising instruments for coping with climate risk. However, research on their impacts has mainly focused on economic considerations. Studies on broader social and ecological consequences are sparse and have produced ambiguous and inconclusive results. We address this knowledge deficit by (a) advocating for a holistic view of social-ecological systems and vulnerability when considering insurance impacts; (b) offering a systematic overview highlighting the potential beneficial and adverse effects of 'climate insurance' in agriculture, particularly where programs target intensifying agricultural production; and (c) suggesting preliminary principles for avoiding maladaptive outcomes, including specific recommendations for designing appropriate impact studies and insurance programs. Our synopsis brings together scientific knowledge generated in both developing and developed countries, demonstrating that agricultural insurance programs shape land-use decisions and may generate serious economic, social, and ecological consequences. If insurance is to be an appropriate tool for mitigating the impacts of climate change, it needs to be carefully developed with specific local social-ecological contexts and existing risk coping strategies in mind. Otherwise, it is liable to create long-term maladaptive outcomes and undermine the ability of these systems to reduce vulnerability.
C1 [Mueller, Birgit; Kreuer, David] UFZ Helmholtz Ctr Environm Res, Dept Ecol Modelling, Jr Res Grp POLISES, Permoserstr 15, D-04318 Leipzig, Germany.
   [Johnson, Leigh] Univ Oregon, Dept Geog, Eugene, OR 97403 USA.
C3 Helmholtz Association; Helmholtz Center for Environmental Research
   (UFZ); University of Oregon
RP Müller, B (corresponding author), UFZ Helmholtz Ctr Environm Res, Dept Ecol Modelling, Jr Res Grp POLISES, Permoserstr 15, D-04318 Leipzig, Germany.
EM birgit.mueller@ufz.de
RI Müller, Birgit/AFH-8212-2022; Kreuer, David/E-6184-2016
OI Kreuer, David/0000-0002-9941-8970; Muller, Birgit/0000-0001-8780-4420
FU German Federal Ministry of Education and Research within the Junior
   Research Group POLISES [BMBF-01LN1315A]
FX We would like to thank Robert Finger, Volker Grimm, Thomas Hahn, Niklas
   Hase, Felix John, Christian Kuhlicke, Roland Steinmann, Russell Toth,
   and two anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments on earlier
   versions of this paper. BM & DK acknowledge funding by the German
   Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF-01LN1315A) within the
   Junior Research Group POLISES. BM thanks the participants of the Seminar
   "Insurance, Finance, and the Biosphere" at the Royal Swedish Academy of
   Sciences in April 2016 for their valuable contributions and discussions
   on this topic.
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   [No title captured]
NR 112
TC 82
Z9 92
U1 11
U2 78
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD SEP
PY 2017
VL 46
BP 23
EP 33
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2017.06.010
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA FK3JN
UT WOS:000413381500003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Groot, MP
   Kubisch, A
   Ouborg, NJ
   Pagel, J
   Schmid, KJ
   Vergeer, P
   Lampei, C
AF Groot, Maartje P.
   Kubisch, Alexander
   Ouborg, N. Joop
   Pagel, Joern
   Schmid, Karl J.
   Vergeer, Philippine
   Lampei, Christian
TI Transgenerational effects of mild heat in <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i>
   show strong genotype specificity that is explained by climate at origin
SO NEW PHYTOLOGIST
LA English
DT Article
DE grandparental effects; heat stress; maternal effects; parental effects;
   phenotypic plasticity; temporal autocorrelation; transgenerational
   plasticity
ID PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; LOCAL ADAPTATION; FLOWERING TIME; PLANT;
   TEMPERATURE; EVOLUTION; STRESS; MECHANISMS; GENES; RESPONSES
AB Transgenerational environmental effects can trigger strong phenotypic variation. However, it is unclear how cues from different preceding generations interact. Also, little is known about the genetic variation for these life history traits.
   Here, we present the effects of grandparental and parental mild heat, and their combination, on four traits of the third-generation phenotype of 14 Arabidopsis thaliana genotypes. We tested for correlations of these effects with climate and constructed a conceptual model to identify the environmental conditions that favour the parental effect on flowering time.
   We observed strong evidence for genotype-specific transgenerational effects. On average, A. thaliana accustomed to mild heat produced more seeds after two generations. Parental effects overruled grandparental effects in all traits except reproductive biomass. Flowering was generally accelerated by all transgenerational effects. Notably, the parental effect triggered earliest flowering in genotypes adapted to dry summers. Accordingly, this parental effect was favoured in the model when early summer heat terminated the growing season and environments were correlated across generations.
   Our results suggest that A. thaliana can partly accustom to mild heat over two generations and genotype-specific parental effects show non-random evolutionary divergence across populations that may support climate change adaptation in the Mediterranean.
C1 [Groot, Maartje P.; Ouborg, N. Joop; Vergeer, Philippine] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Inst Water & Wetland Res, Expt Plant Ecol, POB 9010, NL-6500 GL Nijmegen, Netherlands.
   [Kubisch, Alexander; Pagel, Joern] Univ Hohenheim, Landscape & Plant Ecol, August Hartmann Str 3, D-70599 Stuttgart, Germany.
   [Kubisch, Alexander] Univ Wurzburg, Dept Anim Ecol & Trop Biol, Theoret Ecol Grp, Emil Fischerstr 32, D-97074 Wurzburg, Germany.
   [Schmid, Karl J.; Lampei, Christian] Univ Hohenheim, Inst Plant Breeding Seed Sci & Populat Genet, Fruwirthstr 21, D-70599 Stuttgart, Germany.
   [Vergeer, Philippine] Plant Ecol & Nat Conservat Grp, POB 47, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Radboud University Nijmegen; University Hohenheim; University of
   Wurzburg; University Hohenheim
RP Groot, MP (corresponding author), Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Inst Water & Wetland Res, Expt Plant Ecol, POB 9010, NL-6500 GL Nijmegen, Netherlands.; Lampei, C (corresponding author), Univ Hohenheim, Inst Plant Breeding Seed Sci & Populat Genet, Fruwirthstr 21, D-70599 Stuttgart, Germany.
EM grootmp@gmail.com; christian.lampei@uni-hohenheim.de
RI Pagel, Joern/A-9897-2012; Kubisch, Alexander/C-2103-2015; Ouborg,
   Joop/C-1028-2011; Lampei, Christian/IQW-7748-2023
OI Lampei, Christian/0000-0003-2866-2869
FU ESF grant (EpiCOL) from the ESF-Eurocores program EuroEEFG; DFG [DFG
   SCHM 1354/4-1]; German Research Foundation [DFG KU 3384/1-1]
FX This study was supported by an ESF grant (EpiCOL) from the ESF-Eurocores
   program EuroEEFG. C.L. and K.J.S. were supported by a DFG grant (DFG
   SCHM 1354/4-1). A.K. thanks the German Research Foundation for funding
   (DFG KU 3384/1-1). The authors would like to thank Annemiek
   Smit-Tiekstra, Erik Dekker, Hannie de Caluwe, Isabella Visschers, Peter
   Cruijsen and several students for their help with the planting and
   harvesting of the plants. In addition, they would like to thank Niels
   Wagemaker, Hans de Kroon and the members of the EpiCOL consortium for
   valuable discussions and help.
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NR 68
TC 51
Z9 53
U1 4
U2 69
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0028-646X
EI 1469-8137
J9 NEW PHYTOL
JI New Phytol.
PD AUG
PY 2017
VL 215
IS 3
BP 1221
EP 1234
DI 10.1111/nph.14642
PG 14
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA FA1KF
UT WOS:000405197500027
PM 28590553
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Candel, JJL
   Biesbroek, R
AF Candel, Jeroen J. L.
   Biesbroek, Robbert
TI Toward a processual understanding of policy integration
SO POLICY SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Policy integration; Policy coordination; Integrated strategies; Policy
   coherence; Cross-cutting policy problems
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; COORDINATION; COHERENCE; FRAMEWORK; STATE;
   COLLABORATION; NETHERLANDS; ENVIRONMENT; GOVERNMENT; NETWORKS
AB The role of policy integration in the governance of cross-cutting policy problems has attracted increasing scholarly attention in recent years. Nevertheless, the concept of policy (dis)integration is still under theorized, particularly regarding its inherent processual nature. The main argument of this paper is that policy integration should be understood as a process that entails various elements that do not necessarily move in a concerted manner but may develop at different paces or even in opposite directions. To study such dynamic integration pathways, the paper proposes a multi-dimensional framework. Drawing on existing literature, the framework distinguishes four dimensions of integration: (1) policy frame, (2), subsystem involvement, (3) policy goals, and (4) policy instruments. For each of these dimensions, we describe different manifestations that are associated with lesser or more advanced degrees of policy integration within a governance system. Apart from offering an innovative theoretical approach that does justice to the dynamic and oftentimes asynchronous nature of integration processes, the framework allows for holding decision-makers accountable for promises they make about enhancing policy integration. Simultaneously, it is argued that the merit of lower degrees of integration should not be underestimated, as these may sometimes be the most feasible or appropriate for the governance of a cross-cutting problem.
C1 [Candel, Jeroen J. L.; Biesbroek, Robbert] Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Hollandseweg 1, NL-6706 KN Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research
RP Candel, JJL (corresponding author), Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Hollandseweg 1, NL-6706 KN Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM jeroen.candel@wur.nl; robbert.biesbroek@wur.nl
RI Biesbroek, Robbert/GZZ-4476-2022; Biesbroek, Robbert/I-2384-2013
OI Biesbroek, Robbert/0000-0002-2906-1419; Candel,
   Jeroen/0000-0003-2302-9159
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NR 108
TC 276
Z9 298
U1 9
U2 143
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0032-2687
EI 1573-0891
J9 POLICY SCI
JI Policy Sci.
PD SEP
PY 2016
VL 49
IS 3
BP 211
EP 231
DI 10.1007/s11077-016-9248-y
PG 21
WC Public Administration; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA EC1JQ
UT WOS:000387861100001
OA hybrid
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Evans, LS
   Hicks, CC
   Adger, WN
   Barnett, J
   Perry, AL
   Fidelman, P
   Tobin, R
AF Evans, Louisa S.
   Hicks, Christina C.
   Adger, W. Neil
   Barnett, Jon
   Perry, Allison L.
   Fidelman, Pedro
   Tobin, Renae
TI Structural and Psycho-Social Limits to Climate Change Adaptation in the
   Great Barrier Reef Region
SO PLOS ONE
LA English
DT Article
ID OCEAN ACIDIFICATION; AUSTRALIA; FISHERIES; FUTURE; RISK
AB Adaptation, as a strategy to respond to climate change, has limits: there are conditions under which adaptation strategies fail to alleviate impacts from climate change. Research has primarily focused on identifying absolute bio-physical limits. This paper contributes empirical insight to an emerging literature on the social limits to adaptation. Such limits arise from the ways in which societies perceive, experience and respond to climate change. Using qualitative data from multi-stakeholder workshops and key-informant interviews with representatives of the fisheries and tourism sectors of the Great Barrier Reef region, we identify psycho-social and structural limits associated with key adaptation strategies, and examine how these are perceived as more or less absolute across levels of organisation. We find that actors experience social limits to adaptation when: i) the effort of pursuing a strategy exceeds the benefits of desired adaptation outcomes; ii) the particular strategy does not address the actual source of vulnerability, and; iii) the benefits derived from adaptation are undermined by external factors. We also find that social limits are not necessarily more absolute at higher levels of organisation: respondents perceived considerable opportunities to address some psycho-social limits at the national-international interface, while they considered some social limits at the local and regional levels to be effectively absolute.
C1 [Evans, Louisa S.; Adger, W. Neil] Univ Exeter, Coll Life & Environm Sci, Geog, Exeter, Devon, England.
   [Evans, Louisa S.; Hicks, Christina C.] James Cook Univ, Australian Res Council, Ctr Excellence Coral Reef Studies, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Hicks, Christina C.] Univ Lancaster, Lancaster Environm Ctr, Lancaster, England.
   [Barnett, Jon] Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Perry, Allison L.] Oceana, C Leganitos 47, Madrid 28013, Spain.
   [Fidelman, Pedro] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr, Sunshine Coast, Australia.
   [Tobin, Renae] James Cook Univ, Ctr Sustainable Trop Fisheries & Aquaculture, Sch Earth Environm Sci, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
C3 University of Exeter; James Cook University; Lancaster University;
   University of Melbourne; University of the Sunshine Coast; James Cook
   University
RP Evans, LS (corresponding author), Univ Exeter, Coll Life & Environm Sci, Geog, Exeter, Devon, England.; Evans, LS (corresponding author), James Cook Univ, Australian Res Council, Ctr Excellence Coral Reef Studies, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
EM Louisa.evans@exeter.ac.uk
RI Fidelman, Pedro/N-1466-2014; Barnett, Jon/AAQ-9002-2021; Tobin,
   Renae/B-4677-2012; Adger, William Neil/F-7676-2010; Barnett,
   Jon/E-2122-2013; Hicks, Christina/M-6182-2015
OI Adger, William Neil/0000-0003-4244-2854; Barnett,
   Jon/0000-0002-0862-0808; Hicks, Christina/0000-0002-7399-4603; Fidelman,
   Pedro/0000-0001-7780-0952
FU Australian National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility; HELIX
   (High-End Climate Impacts and Extremes) project - European Union
FX Australian National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility (no
   grant number) funded a project on limits to climate change adaptation.
   The project on the Great Barrier Reef was one component. WNA
   acknowledges support from the HELIX (High-End Climate Impacts and
   Extremes) project funded by the European Union. The funders had no role
   in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or
   preparation of the manuscript.
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Z9 30
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U2 46
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PA 1160 BATTERY STREET, STE 100, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111 USA
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J9 PLOS ONE
JI PLoS One
PD MAR 9
PY 2016
VL 11
IS 3
AR e0150575
DI 10.1371/journal.pone.0150575
PG 17
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA DG3TF
UT WOS:000371992300058
PM 26960200
OA Green Published, Green Accepted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Norman-López, A
   Pascoe, S
   Thébaud, O
   van Putten, I
   Innes, J
   Jennings, S
   Hobday, A
   Green, B
   Plaganyi, E
AF Norman-Lopez, Ana
   Pascoe, Sean
   Thebaud, Olivier
   van Putten, Ingrid
   Innes, James
   Jennings, Sarah
   Hobday, Alistair
   Green, Bridget
   Plaganyi, Eva
TI Price integration in the Australian rock lobster industry: implications
   for management and climate change adaptation
SO AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE law of one price; market co-integration; rock lobster; structural
   breaks; weak exogeneity
ID MARKET INTEGRATION; COINTEGRATING RANK; UNIT-ROOT; UNKNOWN TIME; TESTS;
   FISHERY; SALMON; BREAK
AB Rock lobster fisheries are Australia's most valuable wild fisheries in terms of both value of production and value of exports. Different states harvest and export different lobster species, with most of the landings being sent to the Hong Kong market. A perception in the Australian lobster industry is that the different species are independent on the export market, such that a change in landings of one species has no impact on the price of the others. This study investigates the market integration of Australian exports to Hong Kong for the four species and different exporting states. Our results indicate all four species and producers/export states are perceived to be substitutes for one another, so that, in the long run, prices paid to operators in the industry will move together. The integrated nature of the Hong Kong export market for Australian lobster suggests that the potential impacts of alternative fisheries management and development strategies at state and species levels cannot be considered in isolation, at least from an economic perspective. In addition, impacts of external shocks affecting production in one state (e.g. climate change) can be expected to affect all Australian lobster fisheries.
C1 [Norman-Lopez, Ana; Pascoe, Sean; Thebaud, Olivier; Innes, James; Plaganyi, Eva] CSIRO Marine & Atmospher Res, Climate Adaptat Flagship, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [van Putten, Ingrid; Hobday, Alistair] CSIRO Marine & Atmospher Res, Climate Adaptat Flagship, Hobart, Tas, Australia.
   [Jennings, Sarah; Green, Bridget] Univ Tasmania, Hobart, Tas, Australia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   University of Tasmania
RP Norman-López, A (corresponding author), CSIRO Marine & Atmospher Res, Climate Adaptat Flagship, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
EM ana.norman@csiro.au
RI Hobday, Alistair/A-1460-2012; van putten, ingrid/AAV-1301-2021; Thebaud,
   Olivier/D-9792-2011; Green, Bridget/G-3368-2014; Norman,
   Ana/K-4501-2012; Innes, James/D-9424-2011; Pascoe, Sean/D-9710-2011;
   Plaganyi, Eva/C-5130-2011; Jennings, Sarah/J-7888-2014
OI Norman, Ana/0000-0002-3193-0951; Innes, James/0000-0003-1975-6062;
   Pascoe, Sean/0000-0001-6581-2649; Thebaud, Olivier/0000-0001-8665-3827;
   Plaganyi, Eva/0000-0002-4740-4200; Jennings, Sarah/0000-0002-5760-4193
FU FRDC-DCCEE on behalf of the Australian Government [FRDC 2012/233]
FX This research was part of the 'Growth opportunities and critical
   elements in the value chain for wild fisheries and aquaculture in a
   changing climate (FRDC 2012/233)', which was supported by funding from
   the FRDC-DCCEE on behalf of the Australian Government. We also thank
   Simon Vieira from ABARES for his support.
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NR 42
TC 23
Z9 24
U1 1
U2 27
PU WILEY-BLACKWELL
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1364-985X
EI 1467-8489
J9 AUST J AGR RESOUR EC
JI Aust. J. Agr. Resour. Econ.
PD JAN
PY 2014
VL 58
IS 1
BP 43
EP 59
DI 10.1111/1467-8489.12020
PG 17
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Economics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics
GA 304DI
UT WOS:000330726700003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cosoveanu, FS
   Hegger, D
   Mees, H
   Buijs, JM
   Terpstra, T
   Driessen, PPJ
AF Cosoveanu, Flavia Simona
   Hegger, Dries
   Mees, Heleen
   Buijs, Jean-Marie
   Terpstra, Teun
   Driessen, Peter P. J.
TI The roles and unexplored potential of policy experimentation in climate
   adaptation governance: A systematic literature review
SO ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE climate adaptation governance; empirical knowledge; policy
   experimentation; systematic literature review
ID PILOT PROJECTS; SCALING-UP; LESSONS; MANAGEMENT; FRAMEWORK; DYNAMICS;
   CITIES
AB Policy experimentation has emerged globally as a novel governance approach to address complex socio-environmental problems. In the climate adaptation literature, policy experiments that test technical and governance innovations on a small scale in real-world conditions are increasingly utilized to explore new pathways for climate adaptation. However, there is a lack of empirical evidence on how policy experiments lead to transformative change in climate adaptation governance, particularly regarding their role as a change strategy. This systematic literature review aims to thoroughly investigate the topic by mapping the empirical characteristics of policy experiments, their role and their outcomes. An existing analytical framework was adapted to fulfill this objective by qualitatively and quantitatively analyzing 27 empirical papers. The findings reveal that policy experiments in climate adaptation often address multiple climate hazards, sectors and actors, yet they are spatially and temporally limited, being predominantly located in Europe. Moreover, the study highlights the transformative potential of policy experiments in climate adaptation governance, emphasizing their effectiveness in testing technical and governing innovations, as well as implementing adaptation policies. Policy experiments predominantly contribute to social learning rather than direct policy changes, requiring specific strategies to upscale the knowledge generated. We conclude the paper with a research agenda that stresses the need for more cumulative and comparative (post)assessments of climate adaptation experiments. This is important given the potential of policy experiments as governing approaches in the advancement of climate adaptation.
C1 [Cosoveanu, Flavia Simona; Buijs, Jean-Marie; Terpstra, Teun] HZ Univ Appl Sci, Het Groene Woud 1, NL-4331 NB Middelburg, Netherlands.
   [Hegger, Dries; Mees, Heleen; Driessen, Peter P. J.] Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Utrecht, Netherlands.
C3 Utrecht University
RP Cosoveanu, FS (corresponding author), HZ Univ Appl Sci, Het Groene Woud 1, NL-4331 NB Middelburg, Netherlands.
EM f.cosoveanu@hz.nl
RI Hegger, Dries/S-8727-2016; Mees, Heleen/L-5394-2013; Hegger,
   Dries/L-9301-2013
OI Mees, Heleen/0000-0002-4401-6106; Hegger, Dries/0000-0003-2721-3527
FX We would like to thank the graphic designer of Utrecht University for
   the tables and figures and one anonymous English editor for his
   constructive comments.
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NR 78
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 6
U2 6
PU WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA ONE MONTGOMERY ST, SUITE 1200, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104 USA
SN 1756-932X
EI 1756-9338
J9 ENVIRON POLICY GOV
JI Environ. Policy Gov.
PD 2024 OCT 9
PY 2024
DI 10.1002/eet.2127
EA OCT 2024
PG 24
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA I2K1C
UT WOS:001328586700001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Busch, T
AF Busch, Timo
TI Industrial ecology, climate adaptation, and financial risk
SO JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; carbon emissions; climate change; environmental impact
   assessment; IE concepts; IE tools; risk management
AB Climate adaptation has become an important topic for risk management in companies. This article investigates the usefulness of Industrial Ecology tools and concepts in this context. The conclusion is that the established tools and concepts were not designed with the purpose of assisting managers in the climate adaptation and related financial risk context. Nevertheless, the tools and concepts offer plenty of aspects and features that are helpful for the assessment and management of climate risks. The tools primarily provide guidance for the managerial decision-making process, notably in terms of data handling. The concepts can be used as a starting point for developing new climate risk management frameworks.
C1 [Busch, Timo] Univ Hamburg, Sch Business Econ & Social Sci, Von Melle Pk 9, D-20146 Hamburg, Germany.
C3 University of Hamburg
RP Busch, T (corresponding author), Univ Hamburg, Sch Business Econ & Social Sci, Von Melle Pk 9, D-20146 Hamburg, Germany.
EM timo.busch@.uni-hamburg.de
RI Busch, Timo/A-9558-2017
OI Busch, Timo/0000-0001-6405-5252
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NR 29
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 3
U2 32
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1088-1980
EI 1530-9290
J9 J IND ECOL
JI J. Ind. Ecol.
PD APR
PY 2020
VL 24
IS 2
SI SI
BP 285
EP 290
DI 10.1111/jiec.12938
PG 6
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA LD6LK
UT WOS:000526142200004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Smith, VK
AF Smith, V. Kerry
BE Fullerton, D
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TI How Can Policy Encourage Economically Sensible Climate Adaptation?
SO DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF US CLIMATE POLICY
SE National Bureau of Economic Research Conference Report
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT NBER Conference on Design and Implementation of U.S. Climate Policy
CY MAY 13-14, 2010
CL Washington, DC
SP Natl Bur Econ Res, Smith Richardson Fdn
ID STOCHASTIC DEMAND; WATER DEMAND; OUTPUT; PRICE
C1 [Smith, V. Kerry] Arizona State Univ, Global Inst Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.
C3 Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Tempe
CR Borenstein Severin, 2005, 142 U CAL I CTR STUD
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NR 13
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 0
PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
PI CHICAGO
PA 1427 E 60 ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637 USA
SN 1557-3737
BN 978-0-226-26914-6
J9 NBER CONF R
PY 2012
BP 229
EP 244
PG 16
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA BHH94
UT WOS:000325472300015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Glatthorn, J
   Maier, B
   Binder, F
   Brang, P
   Frischbier, N
   Horna, V
   Klumpp, R
   Nikolova, PS
   Aas, G
AF Glatthorn, Jonas
   Maier, Bernhard
   Binder, Franz
   Brang, Peter
   Frischbier, Nico
   Horna, Viviana
   Klumpp, Raphael
   Nikolova, Petia Simeonova
   Aas, Gregor
TI Limited influence of air temperature and precipitation on six-year
   survival and growth of non-native tree species in a Central European
   multi-site field trial
SO FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive forest management; Tree performance; Mortality; Height growth;
   Assisted migration; Common garden experiment
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE IMPACTS; FOREST TREES; MORTALITY; DROUGHT; L.
AB The biggest challenge for forest management in the near future will be the silvicultural adaptation of forests on sites where climate change will increase the risk for drought induced tree mortality and for a decrease of the growth performance. One management option is the diversification by promoting climate change adapted nonnative tree species. Currently, we have in depth experience with only a few non-native tree species in Central Europe. Other tree species that may complement the species pool in Central Europe need to be carefully selected by a range of criteria. Before establishing larger silvicultural experiments at stand-level, the suitability of species to grow well with a low risk of failure under expected future climatic conditions as well as a good performance already today should be tested, amongst other aspects. We present results of a multi-site common garden experiment where growth and survival of five non-native tree species (Abies bornmuelleriana, Cedrus libani, Fagus orientalis, Tilia tomentosa, and Tsuga heterophylla) and one climate adapted local native species per site are tested in five field trials in Austria, Germany and Switzerland along a temperature (7.9-10.4 degrees C mean annual Temperature) and precipitation (490-1147 mm annual precipitation) gradient. Each species was replicated on three plots per site using a block-wise design. Lower survival and growth of the non-native species as the native reference on most sites indicate that the studied non-native species are today not as well adapted to current climatic conditions as native species. However, the performance of the non-native species was sufficiently high to justify further trials. Survival and growth rates were mostly equally high on the two sites at the opposing ends of the temperature and humidity gradient and lower on all other sites. Height growth and survival were only marginally affected by the strong summer drought in 2018 in all except one site, presumably due to the low water storage capacity of the sandy soils on this site. This indicates that the tested non-native tree species grow well in the wide range of climatically changing weather conditions from our transnational study sites across Central Europe. So far, the tested tree species did not reach their climatic growth limitation. However, edaphic site conditions may have influenced the performance of the tested non-native species as well and must be considered when discussing the suitability of these tree species.
C1 [Glatthorn, Jonas; Brang, Peter; Nikolova, Petia Simeonova] Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res WSL, Zurcherstrasse 111, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
   [Maier, Bernhard; Aas, Gregor] Univ Bayreuth, Ecol Bot Garden, D-95440 Bayreuth, Germany.
   [Binder, Franz] Bavarian State Inst Forestry LWF, Hans Carl von Carlowitz Pl 1, D-85354 Freising Weihenstephan, Germany.
   [Frischbier, Nico] Forestry Res & Competence Ctr FFK, ThuringenForst, Jagerstr 1, D-99867 Gotha, Germany.
   [Horna, Viviana] Max Planck Inst Biogeochem, Hans Knoll Str 10, D-07745 Jena, Germany.
   [Klumpp, Raphael] Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci BoKu, Inst Silviculture, Peter Jordan Str 82, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute
   for Forest, Snow & Landscape Research; University of Bayreuth; Max
   Planck Society; BOKU University
RP Glatthorn, J (corresponding author), Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res WSL, Zurcherstrasse 111, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
EM jonas.glatthorn@wsl.ch
RI Brang, Peter/C-8238-2009; Glatthorn, Jonas/R-9802-2016
OI Glatthorn, Jonas/0000-0002-7019-1899
FU Bavarian Ministry; Federal State of Thuringia; Federal State of
   Burgenland; Research Program Forests and Climate Change of the Federal
   Office of the Environment; Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and
   Landscape Research WSL in the project 'Introduced Species'
FX We thank the Bavarian Ministry, the Federal State of Thuringia and the
   Federal State of Burgenland for funding this project. Funding for the
   Swiss partner study was provided by the Research Program Forests and
   Climate Change of the Federal Office of the Environment and the Federal
   Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL in the project
   'Introduced Species'.
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NR 57
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 3
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-1127
EI 1872-7042
J9 FOREST ECOL MANAG
JI For. Ecol. Manage.
PD FEB 1
PY 2024
VL 553
AR 121645
DI 10.1016/j.foreco.2023.121645
EA DEC 2023
PG 13
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA FQ4H2
UT WOS:001147296800001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Li, HY
   Yu, CG
   Qin, BQ
   Li, Y
   Jin, JL
   Luo, LC
   Wu, ZX
   Shi, K
   Zhu, GW
AF Li, Huiyun
   Yu, Chuanguan
   Qin, Boqiang
   Li, Yuan
   Jin, Junliang
   Luo, Liancong
   Wu, Zhixu
   Shi, Kun
   Zhu, Guangwei
TI Modeling the Effects of Climate Change and Land Use/Land Cover Change on
   Sediment Yield in a Large Reservoir Basin in the East Asian Monsoonal
   Region
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; land use; land cover change; sediment response; multiple
   scenarios; modeling
ID DEEP SUBTROPICAL RESERVOIR; SOIL-EROSION; WATER-QUALITY; THERMAL
   STRUCTURE; LAKE QIANDAOHU; LOESS PLATEAU; RIVER-BASIN; HYDROLOGY;
   IMPACT; STRATIFICATION
AB This research addresses the separate and combined impacts of changes in climate and land use/land cover on the hydrological processes and sediment yield in the Xin'anjiang Reservoir Basin (XRB) in the southeast of China by using the soil and water assessment tool (SWAT) hydrological model in combination with the downscaled general circulation model (GCM) projection outputs. The SWAT model was run under a variety of prescribed scenarios including three climate changes, two land use changes, and three combined changes for the future period (2068-2100). The uncertainty and attribution of the sediment yield variations to the climate and land use/land cover changes at the monthly and annual scale were analyzed. The responses of the sediment yield to changes in climate and land use/land cover were considered. The results showed that all scenarios of climate changes, land use/land cover alterations, and combined changes projected an increase in sediment yield in the basin. Under three representative concentration pathways (RCP), climate change significantly increased the annual sediment yield (by 41.03-54.88%), and deforestation may also increase the annual sediment yield (by 1.1-1.2%) in the future. The comprehensive influence of changes in climate and land use/land cover on sediment yield was 97.33-98.05% (attributed to climate change) and 1.95-2.67% (attributed to land use/land cover change) at the annual scale, respectively. This means that during the 2068-2100 period, climate change will exert a much larger influence on the sediment yield than land use/land cover alteration in XRB if the future land use/land cover remains unchanged after 2015. Moreover, climate change impacts alone on the spatial distribution of sediment yield alterations are projected consistently with those of changes in the precipitation and water yield. At the intra-annual scale, the mean monthly transported sediment exhibits a significant increase in March-May, but a slight decrease in June-August in the future. Therefore, the adaptation to climate change and land use/land cover change should be considered when planning and managing water environmental resources of the reservoirs and catchments.
C1 [Li, Huiyun; Qin, Boqiang; Shi, Kun; Zhu, Guangwei] Chinese Acad Sci, Nanjing Inst Geog & Limnol, State Key Lab Lake Sci & Environm, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China.
   [Yu, Chuanguan; Wu, Zhixu] Hangzhou Bur Ecol & Environm, Chunan Branch, Hangzhou 311700, Peoples R China.
   [Li, Yuan] Zhejiang Gongshang Univ, Sch Tourism & Urban & Rural Planning, Hangzhou 310018, Peoples R China.
   [Jin, Junliang] Nanjing Hydraul Res Inst, Yangtze Inst Conservat & Dev, Nanjing 210098, Peoples R China.
   [Luo, Liancong] Yunnan Univ, Sch Ecol & Environm Sci, Inst Ecol Res & Pollut Control Plateau Lakes, Kunming 650504, Yunnan, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Nanjing Institute of Geography & Limnology,
   CAS; Zhejiang Gongshang University; Nanjing Hydraulic Research
   Institute; Yunnan University
RP Qin, BQ (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Nanjing Inst Geog & Limnol, State Key Lab Lake Sci & Environm, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China.; Luo, LC (corresponding author), Yunnan Univ, Sch Ecol & Environm Sci, Inst Ecol Res & Pollut Control Plateau Lakes, Kunming 650504, Yunnan, Peoples R China.
EM hyli@niglas.ac.cn; qinbq@niglas.ac.cn; liyuan@zjgsu.edu.cn;
   jljin@nhri.cn; billluo@ynu.edu.cn; caepb@126.com; kshi@niglas.ac.cn;
   gwzhu@niglas.ac.cn
RI Shi, Kun/O-2638-2013
OI Luo, Bill (Liancong)/0000-0002-8359-0733; Li, Yuan/0000-0003-0381-2605
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [42171034, 41671205,
   41830757]; Yunnan University [C176220100043]
FX This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (42171034, 41671205 and 41830757) and Yunnan University
   (C176220100043).
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NR 60
TC 9
Z9 11
U1 3
U2 50
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 15
AR 2346
DI 10.3390/w14152346
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA 3R6XZ
UT WOS:000839054200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Leicht, K
   Seppälä, K
   Seppälä, O
AF Leicht, Katja
   Seppala, Katri
   Seppala, Otto
TI Potential for adaptation to climate change: family-level variation in
   fitness-related traits and their responses to heat waves in a snail
   population
SO BMC EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE G x E interaction; Global warming; Great pond snail; Immunocompetence;
   Life history trait; Mollusc
ID LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; LYMNAEA-STAGNALIS; IMMUNE
   DEFENSE; PHENOLOXIDASE ACTIVITY; ANTIMICROBIAL PEPTIDES;
   SCHISTOSOMA-MANSONI; NATURAL-SELECTION; LOCAL ADAPTATION;
   HIGH-TEMPERATURE
AB Background: On-going global climate change poses a serious threat for natural populations unless they are able to evolutionarily adapt to changing environmental conditions (e.g. increasing average temperatures, occurrence of extreme weather events). A prerequisite for evolutionary change is within-population heritable genetic variation in traits subject to selection. In relation to climate change, mainly phenological traits as well as heat and desiccation resistance have been examined for such variation. Therefore, it is important to investigate adaptive potential under climate change conditions across a broader range of traits. This is especially true for life-history traits and defences against natural enemies (e.g. parasites) since they influence organisms' fitness both directly and through species interactions. We examined the adaptive potential of fitness-related traits and their responses to heat waves in a population of a freshwater snail, Lymnaea stagnalis. We estimated family-level variation and covariation in life history (size, reproduction) and constitutive immune defence traits [haemocyte concentration, phenoloxidase (PO)-like activity, antibacterial activity of haemolymph] in snails experimentally exposed to typical (15 degrees C) and heat wave (25 degrees C) temperatures. We also assessed variation in the reaction norms of these traits between the treatments.
   Results: We found that at the heat wave temperature, snails were larger and reproduced more, while their immune defence was reduced. Snails showed high family-level variation in all examined traits within both temperature treatments. The only negative genetic correlation (between reproduction and antibacterial activity) appeared at the high temperature. However, we found no family-level variation in the responses of most examined traits to the experimental heat wave (i.e. largely parallel reaction norms between the treatments). Only the reduction of PO-like activity when exposed to the high temperature showed family-level variation, suggesting that the cost of heat waves may be lower for some families and could evolve under selection.
   Conclusion: Our results suggest that there is genetic potential for adaptation within both thermal environments and that trait evolution may not be strongly affected by trade-offs between them. However, rare differences in thermal reaction norms across families indicate limited evolutionary potential in the responses of snails to changing temperatures during extreme weather events.
C1 [Leicht, Katja; Seppala, Katri; Seppala, Otto] Swiss Fed Inst Aquat Sci & Technol, Eawag, CH-8600 Dubendorf, Switzerland.
   [Leicht, Katja] Univ Jyvaskyla, Dept Biol & Environm Sci, Jyvaskyla 40014, Finland.
   [Seppala, Otto] ETH, Inst Integrat Biol IBZ, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute
   of Aquatic Science & Technology (EAWAG); University of Jyvaskyla; Swiss
   Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich
RP Seppälä, O (corresponding author), Swiss Fed Inst Aquat Sci & Technol, Eawag, CH-8600 Dubendorf, Switzerland.; Seppälä, O (corresponding author), ETH, Inst Integrat Biol IBZ, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
EM otto.seppaelae@eawag.ch
OI Seppala, Otto/0000-0001-7902-3069
FU Biological Interactions Doctoral Program (BIOINT); Emil Aaltonen
   Foundation; Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A 140876]; Swiss
   National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_140876] Funding Source: Swiss
   National Science Foundation (SNF)
FX KL was supported by the Biological Interactions Doctoral Program
   (BIOINT), and OS by the Emil Aaltonen Foundation and the Swiss National
   Science Foundation (grant 31003A 140876).
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NR 78
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 48
PU BMC
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1471-2148
J9 BMC EVOL BIOL
JI BMC Evol. Biol.
PD JUN 15
PY 2017
VL 17
AR 140
DI 10.1186/s12862-017-0988-x
PG 10
WC Evolutionary Biology; Genetics & Heredity
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Evolutionary Biology; Genetics & Heredity
GA EX7DW
UT WOS:000403409300002
PM 28619023
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zeng, MX
   Ma, CM
   Zhu, C
   Song, YG
   Zhu, TX
   He, KY
   Chen, J
   Huang, M
   Jia, TJ
   Guo, TH
AF Zeng, Mengxiu
   Ma, Chunmei
   Zhu, Cheng
   Song, Yougui
   Zhu, Tongxin
   He, Kunyu
   Chen, Jian
   Huang, Ming
   Jia, Tianjiao
   Guo, Tianhong
TI Influence of climate change on the evolution of ancient culture from
   4500 to 3700 cal. yr BP in the Chengdu Plain, upper reaches of the
   Yangtze River, China
SO CATENA
LA English
DT Article
DE Baodun Culture; Chengdu Plain; Subsistence strategy; Flood; Farming;
   Ancient walled site
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; MONSOON VARIABILITY; PANICUM-MILIACEUM; HOLOCENE;
   AGRICULTURE; PLATEAU; CAVE; CIVILIZATIONS; STALAGMITE; TRANSITION
AB Numerous environmental archaeology studies have been undertaken in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, but limited research has been carried out in the upper reaches of the Yangtze River (UYR). During the period of the Baodun Culture (approximately 4500-3700 cal. yr BP), the inhabitants of the Chengdu Plain (CDP) in the UYR of southwestern China were confronted with a dynamic climate. Archaeological sites, including 9 walled sites located in a relatively small region, were built during the migration process. This paper attempts to demonstrate the linkage between the evolutionary history of the Baodun Culture and paleoclimate change. Subsistence strategies during the Baodun period, such as farming, tool use and food resources were investigated. Furthermore, the spatiotemporal distribution of the archaeological sites, the construction method of the sites' walls, and the growth of weeds were examined and assessed based on archaeological excavations and the literature. The ancient water network at the Baodun site was investigated based on auger surveys and borehole data. By comparing multiple paleoclimatic proxies from regions mainly controlled by the Indian Monsoon, we found that: (1) the drying and cooling climate conditions were responsible for the increases of proportions of millet and supplementary food resources and for the transformation of tool assemblages during the late Baodun period; (2) the increasing numbers of flood events were caused by the weakening of the monsoon and the dramatic climate during the Baodun period, and the interconnected river networks at low elevations in the CDP exacerbated the impact of flooding, which may have partially caused the frequent human migration and the construction method of the site walls; (3) the Baodun people that originally lived in the southwestern and western CDP were forced to gradually migrate to higher elevations in the northern and central territories because of the rapid climate change; and (4) the topography and river-grade also influenced human migration and settlement selection. Climate deterioration hindered the sustainable development of the Baodun Culture and eventually caused it to decline. Common subsistence strategies in human history, such as site location, migration, flood-control methods, agricultural changes, and food diversification, played important roles in the Baodun people's adaptation to climate change. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Zeng, Mengxiu; Ma, Chunmei; Zhu, Cheng; Jia, Tianjiao; Guo, Tianhong] Nanjing Univ, Sch Geog & Oceanog Sci, Nanjing 210023, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Song, Yougui] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Earth Environm, State Key Lab Loess & Quaternary Geol, Xian 710061, Peoples R China.
   [Zhu, Tongxin] Univ Minnesota, Dept Geog Urban Environm & Sustainabil Studies, Duluth, MN 55812 USA.
   [He, Kunyu; Chen, Jian; Huang, Ming] Inst Cultural Rel & Archaeol Chengdu, Chengdu 610072, Peoples R China.
C3 Nanjing University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Earth
   Environment, CAS; University of Minnesota System; University of
   Minnesota Duluth
RP Ma, CM; Zhu, C (corresponding author), Nanjing Univ, Sch Geog & Oceanog Sci, Nanjing 210023, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
EM chunmeima@nju.edu.cn; zhuchengnj@126.com
RI Song, Yougui/I-8813-2014
OI Song, Yougui/0000-0003-0064-3260; Pandey, Alok Kumar/0000-0001-5604-3243
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41371204, 41571179];
   Graduate Student Research Innovation Program of Jiangsu Province
   [KYZZ_0032]; Major Program of National Social Science Foundation of
   China [11ZD183]; National Key Project of Scientific and Technical
   supporting program of China [2013BAK08B02]
FX We would like to express our sincere gratitude to the editors and
   reviewers (Andy Howard and two anonymous reviewers), who put
   considerable time and effort into their valuable suggestions and
   critical comments on this paper. We are also grateful to Prof. Yi Wang,
   Prof. Zhanghua Jiang and Dr. Zhanfeng Yang from the Institute of
   Cultural Relics and Archaeology of Chengdu for their help during the
   field work. We are also grateful to Prof. Guanghui Dong for valuable
   comments on the earlier version of our manuscript. Financial support for
   this study was provided by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (Grant No. 41371204, 41571179), Graduate Student Research
   Innovation Program of Jiangsu Province (Grant No. KYZZ_0032), Major
   Program of National Social Science Foundation of China (Grant No.
   11&ZD183) and National Key Project of Scientific and Technical
   supporting program of China (Grant No. 2013BAK08B02).
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NR 99
TC 23
Z9 24
U1 7
U2 159
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0341-8162
EI 1872-6887
J9 CATENA
JI Catena
PD DEC
PY 2016
VL 147
BP 742
EP 754
DI 10.1016/j.catena.2016.08.028
PG 13
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Soil Science; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Geology; Agriculture; Water Resources
GA DZ1LB
UT WOS:000385598800070
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fleming, RA
   Barclay, HJ
   Candau, JN
AF Fleming, RA
   Barclay, HJ
   Candau, JN
TI Scaling-up an autoregressive time-series model (of spruce budworm
   population dynamics) changes its qualitative behavior
SO ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT Annual Meeting of the Resource-Modeling-Association (RMA)
CY JUN 26-30, 2000
CL WAGENINGEN, NETHERLANDS
SP Resource Modeling Assoc
DE spatial transmutation; hierarchy theory; aggregation error;
   Choristoneura fumiferana; climate change modeling
ID AGGREGATION
AB The emergence of issues such as climate change has motivated the development of time-dependent models to forecast how plant and animal populations will react over large spatial extents. Usually the best data available for constructing such models comes from intensive, detailed field studies. Models, thus implicitly developed at the fine spatial resolution of experimental studies, are then scaled-up to coarser resolution for management decision-making. Typically, this process of scaling-up involves merely adapting the models computer code for data input so that it will accept the large scale spatial averages (often derived from relatively remote (e.g. aerial) sensing) that form the basis for management planning. Unfortunately, such scaling-up can inadvertently affect model predictions and dynamical behavior. Improper incorporation of data collected at multiple resolutions during model development and use, and misinterpretation of model output can result. The consequences of scaling-up a linear, second-order, autoregressive. time series model of spruce budworm population dynamics on the model's predictions and on the interpretation of the model's output are considered. Such time series models have been proposed as templates for incorporating outbreak dynamics in the decision systems supporting forest insect management that tire currently being adapted to climatic change problems. Analysis of the underlying deterministic component of the time series model showed that: (1) parameter estimates changed with the spatial resolution-parameter values estimated from time series data consisting of large area averages were negatively correlated (r = -0.931, P<0.0005) and as much as 40 or 50 times greater in absolute value than the parameters generating the fine resolution data from sampling sites 1600 times smaller in extent. (2) Even the qualitative nature of the dynamics appeared to change in response to scaling-up. The long cycle, converging oscillations generated at fine resolutions gave way to five additional types of qualitative behavior at coarser resolutions including various types of divergent behavior and non-oscillating behavior. (3) The amount of distortion involved in scaling-up depends on the model's degree of non-linearity and on the fine scale spatial variation in population densities. An approach to correcting for such distortion is outlined. The potential consequences of scaling-up deserve consideration whenever data measured at different spatial resolutions are integrated during model development. as often happens in climate change research. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 Canadian Forest Serv, Great Lakes Forest Res Ctr, Sault Ste Marie, ON P6A 2E5, Canada.
   Canadian Forest Serv, Pacific Forestry Ctr, Victoria, BC V8Z 1M5, Canada.
   Ontario Forest Res Inst, Sault Ste Marie, ON P6A 5N5, Canada.
C3 Natural Resources Canada; Canadian Forest Service; Great Lakes Forestry
   Centre; Natural Resources Canada; Canadian Forest Service
RP Canadian Forest Serv, Great Lakes Forest Res Ctr, 1219 Queen St E,POB 490, Sault Ste Marie, ON P6A 2E5, Canada.
EM rfleming@nrcan.gc.ea; hbarclay@nrcan.gc.ca;
   jean-noel.candau@mnr.gov.on.ca
OI Candau, Jean-Noel/0000-0001-9356-3950
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NR 45
TC 16
Z9 18
U1 0
U2 18
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0304-3800
EI 1872-7026
J9 ECOL MODEL
JI Ecol. Model.
PD MAR 15
PY 2002
VL 149
IS 1-2
BP 127
EP 142
AR PII S0304-3800(01)00519-1
DI 10.1016/S0304-3800(01)00519-1
PG 16
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 539LF
UT WOS:000174871000010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Connelly, A
   Snow, A
   Carter, J
   Wendler, J
   Lauwerijssen, R
   Glentworth, J
   Barker, A
   Handley, J
   Haughton, G
   Rothwell, J
AF Connelly, Angela
   Snow, Andrew
   Carter, Jeremy
   Wendler, Jana
   Lauwerijssen, Rachel
   Glentworth, Joseph
   Barker, Adam
   Handley, John
   Haughton, Graham
   Rothwell, James
TI What approaches exist to evaluate the effectiveness of UK-relevant
   natural flood management measures? A systematic map
SO ENVIRONMENTAL EVIDENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Flooding; Flood risk management; Environmental Impact Assessment;
   Climate change adaptation; River catchments; Nature-based solutions;
   Natural Flood Management
AB BackgroundThis systematic map principally sought to understand the different forms of effectiveness that existing studies evaluate in relation to Natural Flood Management (NFM) in the UK with a supplementary question of whether studies engaged with climate change and future flood risk. NFM measures seek to protect, enhance, emulate, or restore the natural function of rivers as part of approaches to flood risk management (FRM). While there is agreement in both academic and practice/policy literature that NFM should be part of a holistic FRM strategy to address current and future flood risk, the specifics of how to expand the application of and consistently implement NFM successfully in practice are less well known. A core focus of this study is on how the effectiveness of NFM measures is evaluated in different studies based on approaches drawn from the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) literature: procedural, substantive, transactive and normative. The systematic map also examines how studies account for climate change, which is a crucial issue given the connections between NFM and climate change adaptation and resilience.MethodsWe searched 13 bibliographic databases, Google scholar as a web-based search engine, and 21 organisational sites. Articles were screened by title, abstract, and full text based on defined eligibility criteria. Checks were performed for consistency amongst reviewers. Forms of effectiveness were coded on the basis of the included studies in the systematic map. The quantity and characteristics of the available evidence are summarised with the frequencies of effectiveness forms for each NFM measure are presented in heat maps.Review findingsA total of 216 articles reported eligible studies that were coded as part of the systematic map. Overall, the systematic map shows that the majority of studies considered at least one approach to effectiveness; however, very few studies considered multiple forms of effectiveness. The systematic map also demonstrates that climate change is considered systematically by around one-quarter of studies although many studies make claims about NFM's effectiveness in the face of future climatic change.ConclusionsNFM can be effective in several different ways owing to their multiple benefits; however, there are evidence gaps around understanding these different forms of effectiveness. This is particularly marked for studies considering transactive and normative effectiveness. Interdisciplinary studies are more likely to consider multiple forms of effectiveness. This systematic map also found that whilst 75% of studies mention future climate change in their studies, only 24.1% contain a systematic consideration of the issue through, for example, using climate change projections. NFM is also at risk of climate change (e.g. through drought) and therefore it is imperative that study designs seek to incorporate consideration of effectiveness under future climate change. Policymakers should be made aware of the lack of understanding of how NFM measures perform under future climate change.
C1 [Connelly, Angela; Lauwerijssen, Rachel] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Manchester Sch Architecture, Manchestear, England.
   [Snow, Andrew; Carter, Jeremy; Lauwerijssen, Rachel; Glentworth, Joseph; Barker, Adam; Handley, John; Haughton, Graham] Univ Manchester, Dept Planning & Environm Management, Manchester, England.
   [Wendler, Jana; Lauwerijssen, Rachel] Berlin Sch Publ Engagement & Open Sci, Berlin, Germany.
   [Lauwerijssen, Rachel; Rothwell, James] Univ Manchester, Dept Geog, Manchester, England.
C3 Manchester Metropolitan University; University of Manchester; University
   of Manchester
RP Connelly, A (corresponding author), Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Manchester Sch Architecture, Manchestear, England.
EM angela.connelly@mmu.ac.uk
RI Barker, Adam/KBC-7707-2024; Connelly, Angela/HII-7115-2022; Snow,
   Andrew/GXV-7922-2022
OI Haughton, Graham/0000-0002-0862-4884; Barker, Adam/0000-0001-8835-7837;
   Carter, Jeremy/0000-0003-1640-3747; Connelly,
   Angela/0000-0003-1040-8678; Lauwerijssen, Rachel/0000-0003-4682-602X;
   Glentworth, Joe/0009-0005-3625-8104
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NR 31
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 1
U2 7
PU BMC
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2047-2382
J9 ENVIRON EVID
JI Environ. Evid.
PD MAY 23
PY 2023
VL 12
IS 1
AR 12
DI 10.1186/s13750-023-00297-z
PG 22
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA G9QI7
UT WOS:000992411500001
PM 39294822
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chu, WX
   Vicidomini, M
   Calise, F
   Duic, N
   Ostergaard, PA
   Wang, QW
   Carvalho, MD
AF Chu, Wenxiao
   Vicidomini, Maria
   Calise, Francesco
   Duic, Neven
   Ostergaard, Poul Alberg
   Wang, Qiuwang
   Carvalho, Maria da Graca
TI Hot Topics at the 18th SDEWES Conference in 2023: A Conference Report
SO ENERGIES
LA English
DT Article
DE biomass energy; energy saving; low-carbon development; hybrid
   application; energy storage; SDEWES conference
ID ENERGY-STORAGE; HYDROGEN; CONFIGURATIONS; COMMUNITY; DISTRICT; BATTERY;
   SYSTEMS
AB The present paper reviews the hot topics at the 18th Conference on Sustainable Development of Energy, Water, and Environment Systems (SDEWES) held from 24 to 29 September 2023 in Dubrovnik, Croatia. The selected papers, including aspects of biomass energy application, energy saving in building, low-carbon development and climate change adaptation, hybrid application of sustainable energy, energy storage system, and other measures in sustainable development, are published in this Special Issue of Energies. The 12 selected papers in Energies and corresponding literature that relates to the above topics and has been published in the most recent year are reviewed. In particular, diversifying energy applications are trending towards comprehensive integration with more efficient clean energy capacities for global energy procurement, which can also offer increased resilience and sustainability, reduce reliance on fossil fuels, mitigate environmental impacts, and enhance energy security through a mix of renewable sources and innovative technologies. Meanwhile, energy storage has become increasingly important, which can manage the intermittent of renewable energy, stabilize the grid, and improve energy security and resilience against disruptions. In addition to conventional solar energy storage, biomass energy storage, building energy storage, water storage, etc., can also reduce the overall energy costs, deferring investments in additional transmission infrastructure.
C1 [Chu, Wenxiao; Wang, Qiuwang] Xian Jiaotong Tong Univ, Key Lab Thermo Fluid Sci & Engn, Minist Educ, Xian 710049, Peoples R China.
   [Vicidomini, Maria; Calise, Francesco] Univ Naples Federico II, Dept Ind Engn, Ple Tecchio 80, I-80125 Naples, Italy.
   [Duic, Neven] Univ Zagreb, Fac Mech Engn & Naval Architecture, Ivana Lucica 5, Zagreb 10000, Croatia.
   [Ostergaard, Poul Alberg] Aalborg Univ, Dept Planning, Rendsburggade 14, DK-9000 Aalborg, Denmark.
   [Carvalho, Maria da Graca] Univ Lisbon, Dept Mech Engn, Inst Super Tecn, Ave Rovisco Pais 1, P-1049001 Lisbon, Portugal.
C3 University of Naples Federico II; University of Zagreb; University of
   Zagreb Faculty of Mechanical Engineering & Naval Architecture; Aalborg
   University; Universidade de Lisboa
RP Calise, F (corresponding author), Univ Naples Federico II, Dept Ind Engn, Ple Tecchio 80, I-80125 Naples, Italy.
EM wxchu84@xjtu.edu.cn; maria.vicidomini@unina.it; frcalise@unina.it;
   neven.duic@fsb.hr; poul@plan.aau.dk; wangqw@mail.xjtu.edu.cn;
   maria.carvalho@europarl.europa.eu
RI Østergaard, Poul/K-3264-2012; Chu, Wenxiao/C-9756-2019
OI Ostergaard, Poul Alberg/0000-0002-6796-6526; Chu,
   Wenxiao/0000-0001-9041-1417
FX This research received no external funding.
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NR 90
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1996-1073
J9 ENERGIES
JI Energies
PD SEP
PY 2024
VL 17
IS 18
AR 4702
DI 10.3390/en17184702
PG 19
WC Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Energy & Fuels
GA H9A3W
UT WOS:001326286400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Konda, G
   Chowdary, JS
   Gnanaseelan, C
   Vissa, NK
   Parekh, A
AF Konda, Gopinadh
   Chowdary, Jasti S.
   Gnanaseelan, C.
   Vissa, Naresh Krishna
   Parekh, Anant
TI Temporal and spatial aggregation of rainfall extremes over India under
   anthropogenic warming
SO SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; PRECIPITATION EXTREMES; EVENTS; VARIABILITY
AB India experienced several unprecedented floods in the recent decades. The increase in the extreme rainfall events (EREs) is the primary cause for these floods, manifesting its societal impacts. The daily downscaled and bias corrected (DBC) Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6) rainfall and sea surface temperature (SST) are prepared for the Indian region and are utilized to examine the characteristics of EREs. The DBC products capture the characteristic features of EREs for the baseline period, which inspired us to assess the EREs over India in CMIP6 future projections. Consistent with the observations, DBC product shows similar to 8% of Indian land found to experienced extremely heavy rainfall associated with the long duration EREs in the baseline period. However, area and extreme rainfall thresholds are projected to increase by about 18(13)% and 58(50)%, respectively in the far future under SSP5-8.5 (SSP2-4.5) emission scenario relative to the baseline period. A two-fold-65(62)% increase in long-duration EREs compared to the short-duration EREs and substantial warming similar to 2.4(2.9) degrees C of Indian Ocean SSTs in the far future under SSP5-8.5 (SSP2-4.5) emission scenario compared to baseline period are reported. These findings may provide fundamental insights to formulate national climate change adaptation policies for the EREs.
C1 [Konda, Gopinadh; Chowdary, Jasti S.; Gnanaseelan, C.; Parekh, Anant] Minist Earth Sci, Indian Inst Trop Meteorol, Pune 411008, India.
   [Vissa, Naresh Krishna] Natl Inst Technol, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, Rourkela 769008, India.
C3 Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES) - India; Indian Institute of Tropical
   Meteorology (IITM); National Institute of Technology (NIT System);
   National Institute of Technology Rourkela
RP Konda, G (corresponding author), Minist Earth Sci, Indian Inst Trop Meteorol, Pune 411008, India.
EM gopinadh.konda@tropmet.res.in
RI Vissa, Naresh/GQZ-0544-2022; Jasti, Sriranga/C-6225-2014
FU Ministry of Earth Sciences [PDF/2022/001886]
FX The authors would like to acknowledge the CMIP6 Modeling groups for
   making data available, G.N.K would like to thank SERB-DST Govt. of India
   for providing financial support under NPDF (PDF/2022/001886). We also
   thank IMD for providing rainfall data. The authors would like to thank
   Director, IITM and the Ministry of Earth Sciences for the support and
   computational facility.
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NR 58
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2045-2322
J9 SCI REP-UK
JI Sci Rep
PD MAY 31
PY 2024
VL 14
IS 1
AR 12538
DI 10.1038/s41598-024-63417-w
PG 11
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA ST6P3
UT WOS:001236740000004
PM 38822065
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kramer, KL
   Hackman, JV
AF Kramer, K. L.
   Hackman, J. V.
TI Small-scale farmer responses to the double exposure of climate change
   and market integration
SO PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; Yucatec Maya; smallholder farmers; small-scale
   societies; double exposure; market integration
ID VULNERABILITY; SMALLHOLDER; ECONOMIES; FERTILITY; NETWORKS; RISK
AB Anthropologists have long studied how small-scale societies manage climate variation. Here, we investigate how Yucatec Maya subsistence farmers respond to climate stress, and the ways in which market integration may enhance or disturb response stategies. Using information on harvest returns, climate perceptions, household economics and helping networks, modelling results show that as farmers rely more on market inputs (e.g. seed, tractors, fertilizer) for a successful yield, the reasons given for a bad harvest shift from climate variables to access to quality inputs. We also find that social and economic diversification is key to mediating a household's experience of climate and market shocks. The Maya are astute stewards of climate knowledge, and have effective social and economic means to mitigate potential fluctuations in food availability. In the transition from a subsistence to a market integrated economy, these traditional strategies become strained. Reliance on market inputs forges a more rigid food production system that conflicts with the diversity and flexibility on which traditional strategies depend to manage climate variation. Moving forward, the best policies would be those that facilitate maintaining an equal footing in both a subsistence maize economy, while incorporating new market opportunities.This article is part of the theme issue 'Climate change adaptation needs a science of culture'.
C1 [Kramer, K. L.; Hackman, J. V.] Univ Utah, Dept Anthropol, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA.
C3 Utah System of Higher Education; University of Utah
RP Kramer, KL (corresponding author), Univ Utah, Dept Anthropol, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA.
EM karen.kramer@anthro.utah.edu
FU National Science Foundation [BCS-0964031, BCS-1632338, BCS-2051264];
   National Institutes of Health [AG 19044-01]; Milton Foundation; Harvard
   University; University of Utah
FX The Maya research was funded by the National Science Foundation (grant
   nos BCS-0964031, BCS-1632338 and BCS-2051264), National Institutes of
   Health (grant no. AG 19044-01), the Milton Foundation, Harvard
   University and the University of Utah.
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NR 55
TC 3
Z9 4
U1 3
U2 8
PU ROYAL SOC
PI LONDON
PA 6-9 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE, LONDON SW1Y 5AG, ENGLAND
SN 0962-8436
EI 1471-2970
J9 PHILOS T R SOC B
JI Philos. Trans. R. Soc. B-Biol. Sci.
PD NOV 6
PY 2023
VL 378
IS 1889
AR 20220396
DI 10.1098/rstb.2022.0396
PG 11
WC Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
GA S0SY8
UT WOS:001068365900006
PM 37718597
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Manner, J
AF Manner, Jukka
TI Black software - the energy unsustainability of software systems in the
   21st century
SO OXFORD OPEN ENERGY
LA English
DT Article
DE ICT; energy; processor; electronics; software; green ICT; sustainability
AB Climate change is happening, and the information and communication technology (ICT) industry is providing solutions to enable a more sustainable future. ICT enables enhanced manufacturing processes, optimized logistics, solutions supporting environmental protection and solutions facilitating climate change adaptation, for example. The performance of ICT hardware and electronics has increased tremendously. The capabilities of microchips have increased similar to 100,000-fold in the past 30 years and the power efficiency has increased a million-fold. Yet, various reports show that the ICT sector increases its carbon footprint and energy consumption, while other sectors are lowering their impact on our planet. Thus, there seems to be an adverse development ongoing where most industry sectors can lower their carbon footprint while the ICT sector increases its consumption. This paper looks at the development of the ICT sector and seeks to understand the current development. We argue that a major reason for the rebound effect we are seeing within the ICT sector is the lack of understanding in energy consumption and the cost pressures of developing digital services. The results are software and services that could be much greener and energy efficient but seem to rather go toward a darker direction. The ICT industry and software engineering needs to do a clear change of course and take accountability of their activities.
C1 [Manner, Jukka] Aalto Univ, Dept Commun & Networking, Maarintie 8, Espoo 02150, Finland.
C3 Aalto University
RP Manner, J (corresponding author), Aalto Univ, Dept Commun & Networking, Maarintie 8, Espoo 02150, Finland.
EM jukka.manner@aalto.fi
RI Manner, Jukka/G-2350-2013
OI Manner, Jukka/0000-0002-9133-473X
FU Academy of Finland ICT for Sustainability
FX This paper is partly based on research done within the Academy of
   Finland funded 'ICT for Sustainability' project.
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Z9 3
U1 3
U2 3
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
EI 2752-5082
J9 OXF OPEN ENERGY
JI Oxf. Open Energy
PD DEC 27
PY 2022
VL 2
AR oiac011
DI 10.1093/ooenergy/oiac011
PG 8
WC Energy & Fuels; Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA A1Q4H
UT WOS:001280346700002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kim, J
   Kwon, H
AF Kim, Jungmin
   Kwon, Heongak
TI Calculation of a Climate Change Vulnerability Index for Nakdong
   Watersheds Considering Non-Point Pollution Sources
SO APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE shared socioeconomic pathways; climate change vulnerability index;
   climate exposure; sensitivity; adaptive capacity
ID IMPACTS
AB As a response to climate change, South Korea has established its third National Climate Change Adaptation Plan (2021-2025) alongside the local governments' plans. In this study, proxy variables in 22 sub-watersheds of the Nakdong River, Korea were used to investigate climate exposure, sensitivity, adaptive capacity, and non-point pollution in sub-watersheds, a climate change vulnerability index (CCVI) was established, and the vulnerability of each sub-watershed in the Nakdong River was evaluated. Climate exposure was highest in the Nakdong Estuary sub-watershed (75.5-81.7) and lowest in the Geumhogang sub-watershed (21.1-28.1). Sensitivity was highest (55.7) in the Nakdong Miryang sub-watershed and lowest (19.6) in the Habcheon dam sub-watershed. Adaptive capacity and the resulting CCVI were highest in the Geumhogang sub-watershed (96.2 and 66.2-67.9, respectively) and lowest in the Wicheon sub-watershed (2.61 and 18.5-20.4, respectively), indicating low and high vulnerabilities to climate change, respectively. The study revealed that the high CCVI sensitivity was due to adaptive capacity. These findings can help establish rational climate change response plans for regional water resource management. To assess climate change vulnerability more accurately, regional bias can be prevented by considering various human factors, including resources, budget, and facilities.
C1 [Kim, Jungmin; Kwon, Heongak] Natl Inst Environm Res, Nakdong River Environm Res Ctr, 24-11 Gukgasan,Dan Daero 52 Gil, Daegu 43008, South Korea.
C3 National Institute of Environmental Research (NIER), Republic of Korea
RP Kim, J (corresponding author), Natl Inst Environm Res, Nakdong River Environm Res Ctr, 24-11 Gukgasan,Dan Daero 52 Gil, Daegu 43008, South Korea.
EM jungminkim6214@gmail.com; hun7082@korea.kr
OI Kwon, Heongak/0000-0003-2153-037X
FU National Institute of Environmental Research (NIER) - Ministry of
   Environment (ME) of the Republic of Korea [NIER-2021-01-01-042]
FX This work was supported by the National Institute of Environmental
   Research (NIER), funded by the Ministry of Environment (ME) of the
   Republic of Korea (grant number NIER-2021-01-01-042).
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NR 36
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 15
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2076-3417
J9 APPL SCI-BASEL
JI Appl. Sci.-Basel
PD MAY
PY 2022
VL 12
IS 9
AR 4775
DI 10.3390/app12094775
PG 19
WC Chemistry, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Materials
   Science, Multidisciplinary; Physics, Applied
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Chemistry; Engineering; Materials Science; Physics
GA 1G8SX
UT WOS:000796120800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Khan, IA
   Rafiq, M
   Panezai, S
   Saqib, SE
   Ullah, R
   Atiq, M
AF Khan, Imtiaz Alam
   Rafiq, Muhammad
   Panezai, Sanaullah
   Saqib, Shahab E.
   Ullah, Raza
   Atiq, Muhammad
TI How do farmers cope with climate change? An analysis of alternative
   adaptation strategies in drought-hit areas of Khyber
   Pakhtunkhwa-Pakistan
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change impacts; Droughts; Farmers; Adaptation; Risk management;
   Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
ID RISK-MANAGEMENT; ADOPTION; DETERMINANTS; PREFERENCES; PERCEPTIONS;
   DISTRICT; CHOICE
AB In Asia and the Pacific, the agriculture sector is the most important, but it is also the most at risk from climate chnage. Droughts are one of the main sources of disaster risks that can change yield levels and cause sizeable productivity losses in agricultural products. In response, the farmers are taking a number of climate-related risk-reduction steps. As a result, this study has investigated farmers' preferences for climate change adaptation strategies as well as their socioeconomic determinants. A random sample of 200 farmers in Nowshehra, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, were surveyed. A multivariate probit model was used in the study to determine the relationship between independent variables and farmers decisions to implement a specific adaptation strategy. According to the findings of the study, the most common methods of coping with drought were rainwater harvesting, soil conservation, changing crop planting dates, ponds, and terraces with spillways. Furthermore, the study highlighted the role of socio-economic determinants in the adoption of these adaptation strategies. In light of these findings, the government may choose to help these farmers by providing them with ponds and water storage facilities. It is critical to educate farmers about climate change so that they can develop strategies to mitigate its negative effects.
C1 [Khan, Imtiaz Alam; Rafiq, Muhammad; Atiq, Muhammad] Inst Management Sci, Peshawar, Khyber Pakhtunk, Pakistan.
   [Panezai, Sanaullah] Univ Balochistan, Dept Geog & Reg Planning, Quetta, Pakistan.
   [Saqib, Shahab E.] Directorate Commerce Educ & Management Sci, Higher Educ Arch & Lib Dept, Peshawar, Pakistan.
   [Ullah, Raza] Univ Agr Faisalabad, Inst Agr & Resource Econ, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
C3 University of Balochistan; University of Agriculture Faisalabad
RP Saqib, SE (corresponding author), Directorate Commerce Educ & Management Sci, Higher Educ Arch & Lib Dept, Peshawar, Pakistan.
EM imtiazalamkhan007@gmail.com; muhammad.rafiq@imsciences.edu.pk;
   sanaullah.panezai@gmail.com; shahabmomand@gmail.com;
   raza_khalil@yahoo.com; muhammad.atiq@imsciences.edu.pk
RI Khan, Muhammad/R-2268-2017; Ullah, Raza/AAF-1319-2020; Panezai,
   Sanaullah/Y-8041-2018; Saqib, Shahab E./R-4957-2016
OI Panezai, Sanaullah/0000-0003-1460-1790; Saqib, Shahab
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NR 77
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 3
U2 16
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD JUL
PY 2022
VL 112
IS 3
BP 2259
EP 2275
DI 10.1007/s11069-022-05264-4
EA FEB 2022
PG 17
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA 2D8NN
UT WOS:000758964100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Akinbami, CAO
AF Akinbami, Catherine Abiola O.
TI Migration and Climate Change Impacts on Rural Entrepreneurs in Nigeria:
   A Gender Perspective
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE migration; rural women; livelihood practices; gender; entrepreneurship
   development; climate change
ID ECONOMICS
AB Although the effects of climate change are universal, some groups are more negatively affected than others, which has raised global concerns. The most affected are families involved with agriculture or that use natural resources in rural areas as a means of livelihood. This study aimed to assess the responses of rural dwellers to climate change and migration, determine the extent of climate change as a driver of migration, assess the viability of migration as an option for climate change adaptation, and evaluate the gender perspective of migration and the impact of climate change on entrepreneurial development in rural areas. A qualitative method was employed to solicit responses from respondents in selected rural areas under four different vegetation zones through in-depth interviews and focus group discussions. Data were analyzed using Atlas.ti. A difference was found in gender reactions to migration due to socio-cultural factors and family responsibilities. In addition, different types of migration patterns were found to exist among men and women. The study also revealed that climate change is a major driver of migration, affects livelihood practices differently in the vegetation zones, and has a negative impact on the entrepreneurship development of the rural areas. Finally, this study provides insights into the effect of migration type on the entrepreneurship development by gender.
C1 [Akinbami, Catherine Abiola O.] Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Inst Entrepreneurship & Dev Studies, Ife 220282, Nigeria.
C3 Obafemi Awolowo University
RP Akinbami, CAO (corresponding author), Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Inst Entrepreneurship & Dev Studies, Ife 220282, Nigeria.
EM caoakin@oauife.edu.ng
FU DFID/ACU, UK, under the Climate Impact Research Capacity and Leadership
   Enhancement (CIRCLE) programme" [201871]
FX "This research was funded by DFID/ACU, UK, under the Climate Impact
   Research Capacity and Leadership Enhancement (CIRCLE) programme" (grant
   number 201871) and "The APC was also paid by DIFD/ACU, UK".
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NR 56
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 2
U2 40
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD AUG
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 16
AR 8882
DI 10.3390/su13168882
PG 17
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA UH9MZ
UT WOS:000690246500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Benhizia, R
   Kouba, Y
   Szabó, G
   Négyesi, G
   Ata, B
AF Benhizia, Ramzi
   Kouba, Yacine
   Szabo, Gyorgy
   Negyesi, Gabor
   Ata, Behnam
TI Monitoring the Spatiotemporal Evolution of the Green Dam in Djelfa
   Province, Algeria
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Aleppo pine; desertification; green dam; green walls; land degradation
ID LAND-USE; COMBATING DESERTIFICATION; DEGRADATION
AB Green walls and green dams are increasingly being considered as part of many national and international desertification initiatives. This paper studies the spatiotemporal evolution of the green dam in the Moudjbara region (Djelfa Province, Algeria), from 1972 to 2019, by using Landsat imagery, Land Change Modeler, and OpenLand package. The future evolution of pine plantations, for the year 2029, was also forecasted, based on an anthropogenic scenario (i.e., anthropogenic pressure is the main driver of the green dam destruction). Our findings revealed that the green dam project was successful for a few years, but, after that, pine plantations deteriorated significantly, due to forest harvesting, livestock overgrazing, and the proliferation of the pine caterpillar processionary, which destroyed most of the reforestation. Land change modeler predicted a huge degradation of pine plantations for the year 2029, and if the deforestation continues at the same rate, the green dam in the Moudjbara region will disappear during the next few decades. Being aware of this threat, the Algerian authorities are now planning to reforest more than 1.2 million ha under the latest rural renewal policy, by introducing new principles related to sustainable development, fighting desertification, and climate change adaptation. We strongly recommend moving away from the singular tree planting focus, to diversifying desertification control methods.
C1 [Benhizia, Ramzi; Szabo, Gyorgy] Univ Debrecen, Dept Landscape Protect & Environm Geog, Egyet Ter 1, H-4032 Debrecen, Hungary.
   [Kouba, Yacine] Univ Larbi Ben Mhidi Oum El Bouaghi, Dept Geog & Reg Planning, Oum El Bouaghi 04000, Algeria.
   [Negyesi, Gabor] Univ Debrecen, Dept Nat Geog & Geoinformat, Egyet Ter 1, H-4032 Debrecen, Hungary.
   [Ata, Behnam] Univ Debrecen, Dept Social Geog & Reg Dev, Egyet Ter 1, H-4032 Debrecen, Hungary.
C3 University of Debrecen; Universite d'Oum El Bouaghi; University of
   Debrecen; University of Debrecen
RP Benhizia, R (corresponding author), Univ Debrecen, Dept Landscape Protect & Environm Geog, Egyet Ter 1, H-4032 Debrecen, Hungary.
EM benhizia.ramzi@science.unideb.hu; yacinoargelino@gmail.com;
   szabo.gyorgy@science.unideb.hu; nelesi.gabor@science.unideb.hu;
   b.behnamata@gmail.com
RI Négyesi, Gábor/K-4824-2019; Kouba, Yacine/G-1804-2012
OI Szabo, Gyorgy/0000-0003-2201-2099; Kouba, Yacine/0000-0002-2089-5337
FU National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of Hungary
   [TKP2020-IKA-04];  [2020-4.1.1TKP2020]
FX Project No. TKP2020-IKA-04 has been implemented with the support
   provided by the National Research, Development and Innovation Fund of
   Hungary, financed under the 2020-4.1.1TKP2020 funding scheme.
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NR 42
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 10
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 14
AR 7953
DI 10.3390/su13147953
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TO7ZJ
UT WOS:000677124200001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gata, L
   Losloso, J
   Nilo, P
AF Gata, Larissa
   Losloso, Jeffrey
   Nilo, Pamela
TI Gender and the Use of Climate Information in Agricultural
   Decision-Making Amidst Climate Change: The Case of Rice and Corn
   Production in Oriental Mindoro, Philippines
SO PHILIPPINE AGRICULTURAL SCIENTIST
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; climate information; gender; impacts; Philippines; smart
   agriculture
AB This paper analyzes the participation of men and women in the use of climate information for agricultural decision-making amidst climate change. Using mixed methods involving focus group discussions (n=55: male=26, female=29) and survey (n=337: male=247, female=90). The results indicated that agricultural activities in rice and corn production in the Philippines remain male-dominated despite having a more visible women's participation in grain production, especially in rice, but quite limited in corn production. While women's participation are also seen in decision-making on livelihood activities and operationalization of the use of weather and climate information, tactical and strategic farm decisions, such decisions are still male-dominated. In female-headed households, female farmers take the lead in decision-making processes in the household related to unpaid activities and income-generating activities. Both female and male farmers share their knowledge and strategies towards climate change adaptation, although there are areas in which women tend to have lesser decision-making participation and responsibilities. However, as women acquire more knowledge about climate change. They tend to share more responsibilities and are more involved in farm management such as scheduling of farm activities, expenses, and investments.
C1 [Gata, Larissa] Univ Philippines Los Banos, Coll Forestry & Nat Resources, Dept Social Forestry & Forest Governance, Laguna 4031, Philippines.
   [Losloso, Jeffrey; Nilo, Pamela] Univ Philippines Los Banos, Integrated Nat Resources Management & Environm Pr, Laguna 4031, Philippines.
C3 University of the Philippines System; University of the Philippines Los
   Banos; University of the Philippines System; University of the
   Philippines Los Banos
RP Gata, L (corresponding author), Univ Philippines Los Banos, Coll Forestry & Nat Resources, Dept Social Forestry & Forest Governance, Laguna 4031, Philippines.
EM mpgata@up.edu.ph
RI Losloso, Jeffrey/LNP-3028-2024
FU ACIAR
FX This study is part of a research project funded by ACIAR
CR [ ADB] ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK, 2017, ASIAN DEV BLOG STRAI
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NR 15
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 5
PU UNIV PHILIPPINES LOS BANOS
PI LAGUNA
PA COLLEGE AGRICULTURE, LAGUNA 4031, PHILIPPINES
SN 0031-7454
J9 PHILIPP AGRIC SCI
JI Philipp. Agric. Sci.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 103
IS 3
SI SI
BP 93
EP 104
PG 12
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA VL8CS
UT WOS:000913721300008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kumar, V
   Paramanik, S
AF Kumar, Vikram
   Paramanik, Santosh
TI Application of high-frequency spring discharge data: a case study of
   Mathamali spring rejuvenation in the Garhwal Himalaya
SO WATER SUPPLY
LA English
DT Article
DE Garhwal Himalaya; master recession curve; recession coefficients; spring
   rejuvenation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; LESSER HIMALAYAS; RECESSION; HYDROGRAPHS; HYDROLOGY;
   BASEFLOW; RAINFALL; AQUIFER; STORAGE; RIVER
AB Water scarcity is becoming the biggest threat to the global population due to unpredictable rainfall, glaciers melt, and other anthropogenic activities. This study focuses on the analysis of monitored high-frequency continuous spring discharge and rainfall data in the contact and fracture type Mathamali spring located in the Garhwal Himalaya. Discharge from the spring and its storage behavior has been studied by analyzing recession components and flow duration curves. Analyzed discharge data revealed that the spring can generate maximum volume during monsoon as compared to winter due to aquifer properties and tendencies to store and transmit water. Springshed intervention practices were implemented in early April 2017. The measured average flow was 16.9 lpm but soon after the interventions, the average flow increased by 2.6 times. The minimum average spring flow was 2.3 lpm which increased by 5 times whereas the average maximum flow increased by 1.8 times. Post-intervention, storage duration has increased by 16%, decaying from 143 lpm (peak flow) to 12.7 lpm (baseflow). The preliminary findings from this spring can be considered as a check for establishing benchmarks for sustainable development of springsheds, climate change adaptation, and development plans to cope up with growing water insecurity in the rural Himalayas.
C1 [Kumar, Vikram; Paramanik, Santosh] Indian Inst Technol, Dept Hydrol, Roorkee 247667, Uttar Pradesh, India.
C3 Indian Institute of Technology System (IIT System); Indian Institute of
   Technology (IIT) - Roorkee
RP Kumar, V (corresponding author), Indian Inst Technol, Dept Hydrol, Roorkee 247667, Uttar Pradesh, India.
EM 25.vikram@gmail.com
RI Kumar, Vikram/KHC-8460-2024
OI Kumar, Vikram/0000-0001-5703-4998
FU Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee [F.I.G.-100582]; Department of
   Science and Technology [SER-776]
FX Both of the authors contributed to the writing of this paper. The
   authors would like to acknowledge Prof. Sumit Sen, Department of
   Hydrology, Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee, and Dr Debashish
   Sen, Director, People's Science Institute, for scientific inputs and
   field support. The authors further thank the Indian Institute of
   Technology, Roorkee, for funding under grant #F.I.G.-100582 and the
   Department of Science and Technology under grant #SER-776 towards field
   visits and instrumentation. The authors would also like to thank the
   anonymous reviewer(s) for their valuable comments and positive
   suggestions to improve the quality of this paper.
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NR 35
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 10
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 1606-9749
EI 1607-0798
J9 WATER SUPPLY
JI Water Supply
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 20
IS 8
BP 3380
EP 3392
DI 10.2166/ws.2020.223
PG 13
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA QF8LB
UT WOS:000617140800035
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fuentes, L
   Asselin, H
   Bélisle, AC
   Labra, O
AF Fuentes, Laura
   Asselin, Hugo
   Belisle, Annie Claude
   Labra, Oscar
TI Impacts of Environmental Changes on Well-Being in Indigenous Communities
   in Eastern Canada
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE Aboriginal people; wellness; environmental distress
ID CONNOR-DAVIDSON RESILIENCE; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; HUMAN HEALTH;
   LAND; CREE; PERCEPTIONS; VALIDATION; KNOWLEDGE; ELDERS; PLACE
AB Climate change and natural resource exploitation can affect Indigenous people's well-being by reducing access to ecosystem services, in turn impeding transmission of traditional knowledge and causing mental health problems. We used a questionnaire based on the Environmental Distress Scale (EDS) and the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC-10) to examine the impacts of environmental changes on 251 members of four Indigenous communities in the eastern Canadian boreal forest. We also considered the potential mitigating effects of sociodemographic characteristics (i.e., age, gender, parenthood, and time spent on the land) and protective factors (i.e., health, quality of life, resilience, life on the land, life in the community, and support from family and friends). Using linear regression, model selection, and multi-model inference, we show that the felt impacts of environmental changes increased with age but were lower for participants with higher quality of life. The effect of resilience was opposite to expectations: more resilient participants felt more impacts. This could be because less resilient individuals ceased to go on the land when environmental changes exceeded a given threshold; thus, only the most resilient participants could testify to the impacts of acute changes. Further research will be needed to test this hypothesis.
C1 [Fuentes, Laura; Asselin, Hugo] Univ Quebec Abitibi Temiscamingue, Ecole Etud Autochtones, Rouyn Noranda, PQ J9X 5E4, Canada.
   [Belisle, Annie Claude] Univ Quebec Abitibi Temiscamingue, Inst Rech Forets, Rouyn Noranda, PQ J9X 5E4, Canada.
   [Labra, Oscar] Univ Quebec Abitibi Temiscamingue, Dept Sci Dev Humain & Social, Rouyn Noranda, PQ J9X 5E4, Canada.
C3 University of Quebec; University Quebec Abitibi-Temiscamingue;
   University of Quebec; University Quebec Abitibi-Temiscamingue;
   University of Quebec; University Quebec Abitibi-Temiscamingue
RP Asselin, H (corresponding author), Univ Quebec Abitibi Temiscamingue, Ecole Etud Autochtones, Rouyn Noranda, PQ J9X 5E4, Canada.
EM marcela.laura406@gmail.com; hugo.asselin@uqat.ca;
   annieclaude.belisle@uqat.ca; oscar.labra@uqat.ca
RI Bélisle, Annie/V-5937-2019; Asselin, Hugo/H-9980-2013; Labra,
   Oscar/AAS-9906-2020
OI Asselin, Hugo/0000-0002-9542-4994; Belisle, Annie
   Claude/0000-0003-1370-2805; Labra, Oscar/0000-0002-9394-1410
FU Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
   [435-2014-1705]
FX This research was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research
   Council of Canada, grant number 435-2014-1705.
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NR 60
TC 22
Z9 23
U1 2
U2 26
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD JAN 2
PY 2020
VL 17
IS 2
AR 637
DI 10.3390/ijerph17020637
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA KQ3LG
UT WOS:000516827400258
PM 31963806
OA Green Published, Green Accepted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Busch, H
   Bendlin, L
   Fenton, P
AF Busch, Henner
   Bendlin, Lena
   Fenton, Paul
TI Shaping local response - The influence of transnational municipal
   climate networks on urban climate governance
SO URBAN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Transnational municipal climate networks; Urban planning; Local climate
   governance; Climate change mitigation; Climate change adaptation
ID CITIES; GOVERNMENT; POLITICS
AB In recent years, many cities have joined transnational municipal climate networks (TMCNs), which were set up in response to climate change. Despite the fact that some of these TMCNs have been active for more than two decades, there has been no systematic investigation of the networks' impact on local climate governance. In this article we attempt to answer if and how local climate governance has been influenced by municipalities' memberships in TMCNs. Our assessment is based on an online survey conducted with staff from all German cities above 50,000 inhabitants with membership in TMCNs, fieldwork and interviews in seven German cities. Network membership mainly influences local climate governance through the following processes: (1) Enabling internal mobilisation (2) Formulating emission reduction goals (3) Institutionalising Climate Trajectories (4) Enabling direct exchange and (5) Offering project support. Our data suggests that the main influences of TMCN membership unfold in internal political processes in the member cities. External interactions, such as between cities or between network staff and cities is comparably less important. We also found that many of these benefits can be associated with laggards rather than pioneering cities. We conclude that TMCNs have considerable influence on local climate governance in Germany.
C1 [Busch, Henner] Lund Univ, Dept Human Geog, Solvegatan 12, SE-22362 Lund, Sweden.
   [Busch, Henner] Lund Univ, Ctr Sustainabil Studies LUCSUS, POB 170, SE-22270 Lund, Sweden.
   [Bendlin, Lena] Deutsch Inst Urbanist gGmbH, Zimmerstr 13-15, D-10969 Berlin, Germany.
   [Fenton, Paul] Linkoping Univ, Div Environm Technol & Management, SE-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
C3 Lund University; Lund University; Linkoping University
RP Busch, H (corresponding author), Lund Univ, Ctr Sustainabil Studies LUCSUS, POB 170, SE-22270 Lund, Sweden.
EM henner.busch@keg.lu.se; bendlin@difu.de; paul.fenton@stockholm.se
RI Busch, Henner/AFP-4528-2022
OI Busch, Henner/0000-0002-0468-2155; Bendlin, Lena/0000-0003-0004-0953
FU Swedish Research Council Formas grant [259-2008-1718]
FX Henner Busch's contribution to this article was supported by the Linneus
   Centre LUCID funded by the Swedish Research Council Formas [grant number
   259-2008-1718].
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NR 34
TC 40
Z9 43
U1 1
U2 26
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0955
J9 URBAN CLIM
JI Urban CLim.
PD JUN
PY 2018
VL 24
BP 221
EP 230
DI 10.1016/j.uclim.2018.03.004
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA GH1VF
UT WOS:000433190000016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Monney, I
   Ocloo, K
AF Monney, Isaac
   Ocloo, Kafui
TI Towards sustainable utilisation of water resources: a comprehensive
   analysis of Ghana's National Water Policy
SO WATER POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Ghana; Policy analysis; Water policy; Water resources management; Water
   supply
ID MANAGEMENT
AB In the years ahead, meeting the challenges of food security in a water scarce world will require drastic changes in the way water resources are managed. Accordingly, Ghana's water sector has seen tremendous changes over the years culminating in the 2007 National Water Policy. This paper evaluates the policy to highlight its strengths and weaknesses, to inform possible future review and guide new policy development in developing countries or troubleshoot existing policies. It draws on a framework based on three thematic areas distilled from global water policy development guidelines. Using a 3-point Likert scale, sub-thematic components are ranked and used to quantitatively compute the theme-specific scores (TSS) and the overall performance (OP) of the policy. Per the study findings, cross-cutting water policy issues including integrated water resources management, climate change adaptation and gender mainstreaming are more highlighted (TSS = 67%) than country-specific water management issues (TSS = 50%). Specifically, the policy neglects key national issues including protection of coastal regions from the onslaught of sea waves, and water resource protection against oil spills, and its institutional framework for implementation excludes key sector institutions. Generally, the policy addresses most pertinent issues in the water sector (OP = 64%) and areas for improvement are further discussed in the paper.
C1 [Monney, Isaac] Univ Educ Winneba, Dept Environm Hlth & Sanitat Educ, POB M40, Mampong Ashanti, Ghana.
   [Ocloo, Kafui] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Planning, Kumasi, Ghana.
C3 Kwame Nkrumah University Science & Technology
RP Monney, I (corresponding author), Univ Educ Winneba, Dept Environm Hlth & Sanitat Educ, POB M40, Mampong Ashanti, Ghana.
EM monney.isaac@gmail.com
RI Monney, Isaac/A-7248-2014
OI Monney, Isaac/0000-0003-4990-4732
FU Regional Water and Environmental Sanitation Centre, Kumasi under the
   African Centres of Excellence Project of the World Bank
FX The authors acknowledge the support of the Regional Water and
   Environmental Sanitation Centre, Kumasi under the African Centres of
   Excellence Project of the World Bank for this study.
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NR 50
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 2
U2 36
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 1366-7017
J9 WATER POLICY
JI Water Policy
PD JUN
PY 2017
VL 19
IS 3
BP 377
EP 389
DI 10.2166/wp.2017.114
PG 13
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA EY5UD
UT WOS:000404045000001
OA hybrid, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Gharesifard, M
   Wehn, U
AF Gharesifard, Mohammad
   Wehn, Uta
BE Kommers, P
   Peng, GC
TI PARTICIPATION IN CITIZEN SCIENCE: DRIVERS AND BARRIERS FOR SHARING
   PERSONALLY-COLLECTED WEATHER DATA VIA WEB-PLATFORMS
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCES ON ICT, SOCIETY AND HUMAN
   BEINGS 2015, WEB BASED COMMUNITIES AND SOCIAL MEDIA 2015 AND CONNECTED
   SMART CITIES 2015
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference on ICT, Society and Human Beings /
   International Conference on Web Based Communities and Social Media /
   International Conference on Connected Smart Cities
CY JUL 21-23, 2015
CL Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, SPAIN
SP Int Assoc Dev Informat Soc, Univ Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
DE ICT-enabled Citizen Participation; Citizen Science; Citizen
   Observatories; Theory of Planned Behavior; data sharing
ID USER ACCEPTANCE; BEHAVIOR; TECHNOLOGY
AB The importance and potential of involving citizens in gathering data about the environment and also higher levels of participation in environmental governance and decision making are on the increase. In parallel, the diffusion of Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) that are interactive and easy to use have provided new horizons for facing extreme weather events and the threatening hazards resulted from those. Nevertheless, the success of citizen observatories hinges on the continued involvement of citizens as central actors of these initiatives. Developing strategies to (further) engage citizens requires an in-depth understanding of the behavioral determinants that encourage or impede individuals to collect and share environment-related data. In this paper, the behavioral determinants of sharing personally-collected weather data via web-platforms are analyzed by using the Theory of Planned Behavior from the behavioral sciences. The findings and analysis are based on a qualitative empirical research carried out in the Netherlands, United Kingdom and Italy. These results were complemented by a review of secondary literature. Consequently, a model was developed that identifies the main drivers and barriers for participation in citizen weather observatories. This model can be utilized as a tool to develop strategies for further enhancing ICT-enabled citizen participation in climate change adaptation.
C1 [Gharesifard, Mohammad; Wehn, Uta] UNESCO IHE Inst Water Educ, Dept Integrated Water Syst & Governance, Delft, Netherlands.
C3 IHE Delft Institute for Water Education
RP Gharesifard, M (corresponding author), UNESCO IHE Inst Water Educ, Dept Integrated Water Syst & Governance, Delft, Netherlands.
RI Gharesifard, Mohammad/AAH-9090-2021; Wehn, Uta/M-4976-2013
OI Wehn, Uta/0000-0003-1420-9721; Gharesifard, Mohammad/0000-0002-9553-0340
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NR 21
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 11
PU IADIS-INT ASSOC DEVELOPMENT INFORMATION SOCIETY
PI LISBOA
PA IADIS, LISBOA, 00000, PORTUGAL
BN 978-989-8533-41-8
PY 2015
BP 63
EP 70
PG 8
WC Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Computer Science
GA BH4JF
UT WOS:000400385500008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cairns, G
   Ahmed, I
   Mullett, J
   Wright, G
AF Cairns, George
   Ahmed, Iftekhar
   Mullett, Jane
   Wright, George
TI Scenario method and stakeholder engagement: Critical reflections on a
   climate change scenarios case study
SO TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Scenario method; Climate change adaptation; Stakeholder engagement;
   Policy; Planning; Contingent factors
AB Scenario method is presented in the literature as a means for engaging heterogeneous stakeholder groups to explore climate change futures and to inform policy and planning for adaptation responses. We discuss a case study project investigating possible interactions between climate change impacts and a proposed major port expansion in Australia. The study engaged participants from the private sector, government and environmental groups, with input from college students from the local area. Semi-structured interviews and a scenario workshop were employed, creating individual space for expression of ideas, then a collaborative space for sharing these, exploring differences of perception and meaning, and developing a set of possible and plausible scenarios. Whilst the workshop resulted in consensus on key issues and proposed actions, intended to inform policy formation and planning, there was an unforeseen lack of short term follow up and of the groups working more closely together. We discuss the reasons for this through reflective critical analysis of both our own process and of contingent factors in the wider contextual environment. We conclude that the basic scenario approach is valuable, but does not itself act as a catalyst for effecting change when multiple agencies, interests and agendas and strong contingent factors are present. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
C1 [Cairns, George] RMIT Univ, Sch Management, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia.
   [Ahmed, Iftekhar; Mullett, Jane] RMIT Univ, Global Cities Res Inst, Climate Change Adaptat Program, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia.
   [Wright, George] Univ Warwick, Warwick Business Sch, Coventry CV4 7AL, W Midlands, England.
C3 Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT); Royal Melbourne
   Institute of Technology (RMIT); University of Warwick
RP Cairns, G (corresponding author), RMIT Univ, Sch Management, Bldg 108,239 Bourke St, Melbourne, Vic 3000, Australia.
EM george.cairns@rmit.edu.au; ifte.ahmed@rmit.edu.au;
   jane.mullett@rmit.edu.au; george.wright@wbs.ac.uk
RI Ahmed, Iftekhar/GPW-8881-2022; Cairns, George/J-3731-2014
OI Cairns, George/0000-0002-6231-8060; Ahmed, Iftekhar/0000-0001-5316-4584
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NR 31
TC 59
Z9 63
U1 5
U2 69
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
PI NEW YORK
PA STE 800, 230 PARK AVE, NEW YORK, NY 10169 USA
SN 0040-1625
EI 1873-5509
J9 TECHNOL FORECAST SOC
JI Technol. Forecast. Soc. Chang.
PD JAN
PY 2013
VL 80
IS 1
BP 1
EP 10
DI 10.1016/j.techfore.2012.08.005
PG 10
WC Business; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Public Administration
GA 048OY
UT WOS:000311923000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Davison, JE
   Graumlich, LJ
   Rowland, EL
   Pederson, GT
   Breshears, DD
AF Davison, Jennifer E.
   Graumlich, Lisa J.
   Rowland, Erika L.
   Pederson, Gregory T.
   Breshears, David D.
TI Leveraging modern climatology to increase adaptive capacity across
   protected area networks
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Biodiversity; Climate change adaptation; Ecosystem management; Protected
   area networks; Southwestern US
ID BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION; SPECIES-DIVERSITY; ECOSYSTEM; ECOLOGY;
   EVAPOTRANSPIRATION; CLIMATES; EARLIER; WATER; RISK
AB Human-driven changes in the global environment pose an increasingly urgent challenge for the management of ecosystems that is made all the more difficult by the uncertain future of both environmental conditions and ecological responses. Land managers need strategies to increase regional adaptive capacity, but relevant and rapid assessment approaches are lacking. To address this need, we developed a method to assess regional protected area networks across biophysically important climatic gradients often linked to biodiversity and ecosystem function. We plot the land of the southwestern United States across axes of historical climate space, and identify landscapes that may serve as strategic additions to current protected area portfolios. Considering climate space is straightforward, and it can be applied using a variety of relevant climate parameters across differing levels of land protection status. The resulting maps identify lands that are climatically distinct from existing protected areas, and may be utilized in combination with other ecological and socio-economic information essential to collaborative landscape-scale decision-making. Alongside other strategies intended to protect species of special concern, natural resources, and other ecosystem services, the methods presented herein provide another important hedging strategy intended to increase the adaptive capacity of protected area networks. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Davison, Jennifer E.; Graumlich, Lisa J.; Rowland, Erika L.; Pederson, Gregory T.; Breshears, David D.] Univ Arizona, Sch Nat Resources & Environm, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
   [Pederson, Gregory T.] US Geol Survey, No Rocky Mt Sci Ctr, Bozeman, MT 59715 USA.
   [Breshears, David D.] Univ Arizona, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
C3 University of Arizona; United States Department of the Interior; United
   States Geological Survey; University of Arizona
RP Davison, JE (corresponding author), Univ Washington, Coll Environm, 1492 NE Boat St,Suite 218,Box 355355, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
EM jnfrdvsn@u.washington.edu
RI Breshears, David/B-9318-2009; Graumlich, Lisa/A-1421-2012
FU Institute for Environment, The University of Arizona; USDA MS-CREES;
   U.S. Geological Survey's Western Mountain Initiative; DOE NICCR
   [FC02-06ER64159]
FX This work was funded in part by the Institute for Environment, The
   University of Arizona. J.E.D. was also funded through a USDA MS-CREES
   Ecohydrology Fellowship. G.T.P. was funded through the U.S. Geological
   Survey's Western Mountain Initiative. D.D.B, was supported by DOE NICCR
   FC02-06ER64159. Funding sources were not involved in any of the study
   phases, including the study design; collection, analysis and
   interpretation of data; writing of the report; nor the decision to
   submit the paper for publication. Any use of trade, product, or firm
   names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by
   the U.S. Government.
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NR 62
TC 6
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 48
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD FEB
PY 2012
VL 22
IS 1
BP 268
EP 274
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2011.10.002
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA 899LN
UT WOS:000300817500024
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Posas, PJ
AF Posas, Paula J.
TI Exploring climate change criteria for strategic environmental
   assessments
SO PROGRESS IN PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Strategic environmental assessment; Sustainability appraisal; Country
   environmental analysis; Climate change; Global warming; Equity;
   International development; Planning
ID IMPACT ASSESSMENT; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; POLICY-MAKING; SEA;
   FRAMEWORK; CONTEXT; PERSPECTIVE; PERFORMANCE; ADAPTATION; MITIGATION
AB Climate change has become a high priority worldwide at the level of governments, business, and community due to growing understanding of climate change's implications for trade, security, the economy, ecosystems, and the well-being of humans and other species. The strategic environmental assessment (SEA) process is well-positioned to systematically help strengthen treatment of climate change adaptation and mitigation in planning and development. This is due to its practical, analytical component, its participation component, and its ability to engage with ethical issues and reconcile competing agendas. This monograph explores criteria and good practices in addressing various climate change aspects in SEA and country environmental analysis (CEA). Climate change criteria are developed and applied to two datasets to provide an initial information baseline on climate change treatment in SEA and CEA, amended sets of climate change criteria for each, and an evidence-based resource for improving SEA and CEA guidance and practice amongst interested academics, professionals, and practitioners in the UK, EU, development banks, and developing countries. Overall findings are relevant to any individual, institution, or country interested in addressing climate change and climate-related natural hazards within an SEA or planning framework. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 Univ Liverpool, Dept Civ Design, Liverpool L69 7ZQ, Merseyside, England.
C3 University of Liverpool
RP Posas, PJ (corresponding author), Univ Liverpool, Dept Civ Design, 74 Bedford St S, Liverpool L69 7ZQ, Merseyside, England.
EM pjposas@gmail.com
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NR 47
TC 33
Z9 39
U1 0
U2 60
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0305-9006
J9 PROG PLANN
JI Prog. Plan.
PD APR
PY 2011
VL 75
BP 109
EP 154
DI 10.1016/j.progress.2011.05.001
PN 3
PG 46
WC Environmental Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA 802CN
UT WOS:000293487000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Tangney, P
AF Tangney, Peter
BA Tangney, P
BF Tangney, P
TI Climate Adaptation Policy and Evidence Understanding the Tensions
   between Politics and Expertise in Public Policy Introduction
SO CLIMATE ADAPTATION POLICY AND EVIDENCE: UNDERSTANDING THE TENSIONS
   BETWEEN POLITICS AND EXPERTISE IN PUBLIC POLICY
SE Science in Society Series
LA English
DT Editorial Material; Book Chapter
C1 [Tangney, Peter] Flinders Univ S Australia, Sci Policy & Commun, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
C3 Flinders University South Australia
RP Tangney, P (corresponding author), Flinders Univ S Australia, Sci Policy & Commun, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
RI /CAE-0280-2022
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NR 35
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-315-26925-2; 978-1-138-28481-4
J9 SCI SOC SER
PY 2017
BP 1
EP 22
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies; Public
   Administration
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Public Administration
GA BL0SS
UT WOS:000446568400002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dlamini, N
   Senzanje, A
   Mabhaudhi, T
AF Dlamini, Nosipho
   Senzanje, A.
   Mabhaudhi, T.
TI The water-energy-food (WEF) nexus as a tool to develop climate change
   adaptation strategies: a case study of the Buffalo River catchment,
   South Africa
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE CLEWS framework; reliability index; river basin management; scenario
   development; water allocation; water-energy-food nexus
ID SYSTEM; AVAILABILITY
AB The Buffalo River catchment in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, has limited water resource infrastructure development, and climate change is predicted to increase its water supply deficits by exacerbating water distribution inequalities. This study evaluates and optimises current climate change policy plans on the Buffalo River catchments water system to aid in assessing the sustainability of policies that address the aforementioned challenges. The water-energy-food (WEF) nexus approach, which encourages system thinking by considering interconnections among water, energy, and food resources when developing integrated natural resource management strategies, was used to perform the evaluation. The water system's reliability in meeting projected domestic, agricultural, and energy water demands under climate change conditions was used for gauging the sustainability of the development plans. Findings projected the existing water policy plans to increase the domestic water provision by >70% under climate change; however, the <3% increase in irrigation and energy generation water demand coverage yielded a significant contrast in reliability between densely populated areas and regions with extensive agricultural activities. The optimised policy plans, which improved water provision for all considered sectors increased by >20% under climate change, are thus recommended for future water resource management research and dialogue in the Buffalo River catchment.
C1 [Dlamini, Nosipho; Senzanje, A.] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Bioresources Engn Programme, P Bag X01, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.
   [Senzanje, A.] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Ctr Water Resources Res, Sch Engn, P Bag X01, ZA-3201 Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.
   [Mabhaudhi, T.] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Ctr Transformat Agr & Food Syst, Sch Agr Earth & Environm Sci, P Bag X01, ZA-3209 Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.
   [Mabhaudhi, T.] Int Water Management Inst IWMI Southern Africa, Southern Africa Off, Pretoria, South Africa.
C3 University of Kwazulu Natal; University of Kwazulu Natal; University of
   Kwazulu Natal
RP Dlamini, N (corresponding author), Univ KwaZulu Natal, Bioresources Engn Programme, P Bag X01, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.
EM nosiphodlamini27@gmail.com
RI ; Mabhaudhi, Tafadzwanashe/AAF-2418-2019
OI Senzanje, Aidan/0000-0003-4095-5912; Mabhaudhi,
   Tafadzwanashe/0000-0002-9323-8127
FU Water Research Commission [K5/2967//4]; National Research Fund (NRF);
   Nurturing Emerging Scholars Programme (NESP); Welcome Trust's Our
   Planet, Our Health Programme [205200/Z/16/Z]; CGIAR Trust Fund
FX The first author is thankful to the Water Research Commission (Project
   WRC K5/2967//4), the National Research Fund (NRF) and the Nurturing
   Emerging Scholars Programme (NESP) for financial support. This work
   forms part of the Sustainable and Healthy Food Systems (SHEFS)
   Programme, supported through the Welcome Trust's Our Planet, Our Health
   Programme [Grant number: 205200/Z/16/Z]. This work was also carried out
   as part of the Nexus Gains Initiative, which is grateful for the support
   of CGIAR Trust Fund contributors: www.cgiar.org/funders.
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NR 66
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 5
U2 15
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
EI 2408-9354
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 14
IS 12
BP 4465
EP 4488
DI 10.2166/wcc.2023.263
EA NOV 2023
PG 24
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA DT6L3
UT WOS:001105144700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Delgado-Enales, I
   Molina-Costa, P
   Del Ser, J
AF Delgado-Enales, Inigo
   Molina-Costa, Patricia
   Del Ser, Javier
GP IEEE
TI Spatial Estimation of Ground-Level Temperature for Climate-Sensitive
   Urban Mobility using Image-to-Image Deep Neural Networks
SO 2023 IEEE 26TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTELLIGENT TRANSPORTATION
   SYSTEMS, ITSC
SE IEEE International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems-ITSC
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT IEEE 26th International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems
   (ITSC)
CY SEP 24-28, 2023
CL Bilbao, SPAIN
SP IEEE
ID PROJECTIONS; IMPACT
AB Global warming is reflected by the increase in air temperature at ground level, among other factors. This increase in temperatures is more pressing in urban environments, due to the phenomenon known as Urban Heat Island (UHI). This phenomenon consists of temperatures in urban environments being higher than those in rural areas, which can be due, among other factors, to urban morphology and activities (traffic, air conditioning). UHI poses a risk to people and affects habits of urban life, such as mobility. This is why estimating air temperatures at 2 meters above ground level with a street spatial resolution can help urban planners make better decisions to achieve less thermally stressed urban areas. This paper presents the results of a preliminary study aimed to explore the use of image-to-image deep neural networks to estimate the pedestrian level air temperature in urban areas. Specifically, we propose a U-Net architecture fed with meteorological variables to produce, at its output, a estimation of the spatial distribution of the target variable. Results over data belonging to 4 major European cities show that with a suitable methodology implementation and databases, Deep Learning can be very convenient and efficient when estimating the pedestrian level air temperature, highlighting its potential for climate change adaptation of urban mobility.
C1 [Delgado-Enales, Inigo; Del Ser, Javier] Univ Basque Country, Bilbao 48013, Spain.
   [Delgado-Enales, Inigo; Molina-Costa, Patricia; Del Ser, Javier] TECNALIA, Basque Res Technol Alliance BRTA, Derio, Bizkaia, Spain.
C3 University of Basque Country
RP Delgado-Enales, I (corresponding author), Univ Basque Country, Bilbao 48013, Spain.; Delgado-Enales, I (corresponding author), TECNALIA, Basque Res Technol Alliance BRTA, Derio, Bizkaia, Spain.
EM inigo.delgado@ehu.eus; javier.delser@tecnalia.com
FU Basque Government through the ELKARTEK programme [KK-2022/00119]
FX J. Del Ser acknowledges support from the Basque Government through the
   ELKARTEK programme (EGIA project, KK-2022/00119).
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NR 41
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 4
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
SN 2153-0009
BN 979-8-3503-9946-2
J9 IEEE INT C INTELL TR
PY 2023
BP 6206
EP 6212
PG 7
WC Automation & Control Systems; Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence;
   Transportation Science & Technology
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Automation & Control Systems; Computer Science; Transportation
GA BW6MU
UT WOS:001178996706038
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Feliciano, D
AF Feliciano, Diana
TI Factors influencing the adoption of sustainable agricultural practices:
   the case of seven horticultural farms in the United Kingdom
SO SCOTTISH GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainability; agriculture; climate change; adoption
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE BELIEFS; LAND-USE SECTOR; MITIGATION OPTIONS; POLICY;
   CONSERVATION; PERCEPTIONS; PERSPECTIVES; ADAPTATION; CHALLENGES;
   EFFICIENCY
AB The production of fruits and vegetables is expected to increase in the United Kingdom (UK) as a response to increasing consumers' demand, coupled with impacts of Brexit on the imports from the European Union (EU). Retailers and consumers are more aware of the environmental impact and provenance of food and are demanding to their suppliers to implement sustainable agricultural practices. Seven horticultural farmers and farm managers across the UK were interviewed to investigate the implementation of sustainable practices, and the motivations and enablers for adoption, as well as perceptions on sustainability and climate change. Factors influencing adoption mainly were efficiency and cost reduction, regulations, and market demand, even though, environmental, and social consciousness also played a role in adoption. There was little evidence that participation in knowledge networks or the perception of climate change and impacts, and of carbon footprint assessments influenced the adoption of sustainable agricultural practices, but this finding deserves further investigation. Farmers' awareness of the importance of soil was clear and governments should encourage farmers' involvement in the monitoring of soil health, as a mean of engaging them in the wider discussion about the implementation of sustainable land management, including climate change adaptation and mitigation.
C1 [Feliciano, Diana] Teesside Univ, Int Business Sch, Middlesbrough, England.
   [Feliciano, Diana] Teesside Univ, Int Business Sch, Middlesbrough TS1 3BX, England.
C3 University of Teesside; University of Teesside
RP Feliciano, D (corresponding author), Teesside Univ, Int Business Sch, Middlesbrough TS1 3BX, England.
EM d.feliciano@tees.ac.uk
RI Feliciano, Diana/HPD-8866-2023
OI Feliciano, Diana/0000-0002-5466-4879
FU UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC);  [NE/N005619/1]; NERC
   [NE/N005619/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX The UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) has funded this
   research Project NE/N005619/1
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NR 80
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 1
U2 16
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1470-2541
EI 1751-665X
J9 SCOT GEOGR J
JI Scott. Geogr. J.
PD OCT 2
PY 2022
VL 138
IS 3-4
BP 291
EP 320
DI 10.1080/14702541.2022.2151041
EA OCT 2022
PG 30
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA 7B2ZK
UT WOS:000893305600001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tyllianakis, E
   Martin-Ortega, J
   Banwart, SA
AF Tyllianakis, Emmanouil
   Martin-Ortega, Julia
   Banwart, Steven A.
TI An approach to assess the world's potential for disaster risk reduction
   through nature-based solutions
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Nature -based solutions; Ecosystem -based Adaptation; Natural capital;
   Indicator framework; Climate change risk; Cluster analysis
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; LAND-USE; MANAGEMENT; KNOWLEDGE; COASTAL; VULNERABILITY;
   ENVIRONMENTS; FRAMEWORK; IMPACTS; DROUGHT
AB Nature-based Solutions (NBS) have been increasingly advocated as means of achieving a greener and sustainable future. Although discussion on the definition, scale and applicability of NBS in country and city-level agendas are ongoing, NBS have received less attention in terms of them supporting country-level approaches to Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR). This paper uses a series of indicators reflecting national capability and national necessity for NBS as a means to support DRR activities. Using both Principal Components Analysis and Cluster Analysis results show that of a total of 178 countries, two groups emerge; with countries in one group showing high levels of both national capability and necessity for NBS. Such countries are also found to be around 23 % more likely to be currently implementing disaster risk reduction actions than countries with lower capability and necessity scores, showing that NBS are actively supporting DRR activities around the world. Such countries are a mixture of Global South and North countries while showing no statistical significant differences with respect to socio-economic characteristics, indicating that NBS can be equitable means of achieving potential synergies between DRR-reducing NBS and grey infrastructure projects for climate change adaptation measures.
C1 [Tyllianakis, Emmanouil; Martin-Ortega, Julia] Univ Leeds, Sustainabil Res Inst, Sch Earth & Environm, Leeds LS2 9TJ, England.
   [Banwart, Steven A.] Univ Leeds, Global Food & Environm Inst, Sch Earth & Environm, Leeds LS2 9JT, England.
C3 University of Leeds; University of Leeds
RP Tyllianakis, E (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Sustainabil Res Inst, Sch Earth & Environm, Leeds LS2 9TJ, England.
EM E.tyllianakis@leeds.ac.uk
RI Tyllianakis, Emmanouil/JFA-5103-2023
OI Tyllianakis, Emmanouil/0000-0002-8604-4770; Martin-Ortega,
   Julia/0000-0003-0002-6772
FU European Union [730338]; H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [730338]
   Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme
FX This paper has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020
   research and innovation programme, Call H2020-SC5-2016-2017 Greening the
   economy, under grant agreement No 730338.
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NR 82
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 3
U2 23
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD OCT
PY 2022
VL 136
BP 599
EP 608
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2022.07.021
EA JUL 2022
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 4X3RL
UT WOS:000860763400001
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sharma, A
   Sen, S
AF Sharma, Ashish
   Sen, Subir
TI Droughts risk management strategies and determinants of preparedness:
   insights from Madhya Pradesh, India
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Drought; Risk management; Adaptation; Binary logistic regression;
   Financial relief
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; FARMERS ADAPTATION; SMALLHOLDER FARMERS;
   NATURAL DISASTERS; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; INCOME DIVERSIFICATION; RAJSHAHI
   DISTRICT; VULNERABILITY; MIGRATION; RESILIENCE
AB The study analyzes the individuals' risk management strategies and determinants of preparedness for drought in Madhya Pradesh, India. It employs the descriptive and binary logistic regression on primary data and show that more than one earning member, access to social safety schemes, migration, irrigation facilities and diversified employment are the important risk management strategies. Gender, social group, income, non-migration, employment status and the interaction of 'access to government schemes and gender' are the statistically significant determinants in order, increasing the odds of preparedness against droughts. However, in the sub-sample of farmers, the main predictor variables are gender, non-migration, social group, crop losses and income. The study is novel to generate the field evidences with respect to risk management and drought preparedness, making noteworthy contributions to the disaster literature. The results advocate to strengthen the outreach and access of the social safety schemes in the drought-affected areas. Individuals are expected to build self-resilience to cost-effectively supplement the government limited efforts and capacity. These findings are important and equally applicable to the governments, policymakers and individuals residing in the other drought-affected regions with similar socio-economic characteristics of respondents.
C1 [Sharma, Ashish] Symbiosis Int Deemed Univ SIU, Symbiosis Ctr Management Studies SCMS, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India.
   [Sen, Subir] IIT Roorkee, Dept Humanities & Social Sci, Roorkee, Uttar Pradesh, India.
C3 Symbiosis International University; Indian Institute of Technology
   System (IIT System); Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) - Roorkee
RP Sharma, A (corresponding author), Symbiosis Int Deemed Univ SIU, Symbiosis Ctr Management Studies SCMS, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India.
EM ashish.sharma@scmsnagpur.edu.in; subirfhs@iitr.ac.in
RI Sharma, Ashish/AHD-5170-2022; Sen, Subir/AAN-4659-2020
OI Sen, Subir/0000-0002-8886-6831; Sharma, Ashish/0000-0001-8653-7535
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NR 134
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 3
U2 11
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 114
IS 2
BP 2243
EP 2281
DI 10.1007/s11069-022-05470-0
EA JUL 2022
PG 39
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA 5L4WW
UT WOS:000827374200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhou, FJ
   Botzen, W
AF Zhou, Fujin
   Botzen, Wouter
TI Firm Level Evidence of Disaster Impacts on Growth in Vietnam
SO ENVIRONMENTAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Natural disaster; Disaster impact; Firm growth; Physical intensity; GMM
ID NATURAL DISASTERS; FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS; ECONOMIC-IMPACTS; PANEL-DATA;
   LABOR; SIZE; HURRICANES; INSTITUTIONS; RESILIENCE; EMPLOYMENT
AB The theory about the impacts of natural disasters on firms is ambiguous and the empirical evidence on this topic is scarce, which hampers the design of disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation policies. In this paper we identify the short-run impacts of storms and floods on firm growth in labor, capital, and sales, using Enterprise Census data (2000-2014) for Vietnam. We define storms and floods with three different disaster measures: physical intensities, number of deaths, and economic damage. The performance of these disaster measures is compared by estimating dynamic growth models using the Blundell-Bond system generalized method of moments. We find evidence that flooding increases labor growth and capital growth but reduces sales growth significantly up to 3 years after flooding. We also find some evidence of positive impacts on labor growth and capital growth but mostly negative impacts on sales growth for storms within 3 years after storms strike. The impacts of floods and storms on firm growth are more pronounced and persistent for small and medium sized firms. Finally, unlike at the macro level, the direction and scale of disaster impacts found at the firm level are fairly consistent across the three disaster measures.
C1 [Zhou, Fujin; Botzen, Wouter] Vrije Univ, Inst Environm Studies IVM, Dept Environm Econ, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, Wouter] Univ Utrecht, Utrectht Univ Sch Econ USE, Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, Wouter] Univ Penn, Wharton Sch, Risk Management & Decis Proc Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Utrecht University; University of
   Pennsylvania
RP Zhou, FJ (corresponding author), Vrije Univ, Inst Environm Studies IVM, Dept Environm Econ, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
EM fujin.zhou@vu.nl; wouter.botzen@vu.nl
RI Botzen, Wouter/L-3123-2013
OI Botzen, Wouter/0000-0002-8563-4963; ZHOU, FUJIN/0000-0001-6043-5805
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NR 93
TC 11
Z9 13
U1 10
U2 43
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0924-6460
EI 1573-1502
J9 ENVIRON RESOUR ECON
JI Environ. Resour. Econ.
PD JUN
PY 2021
VL 79
IS 2
BP 277
EP 322
DI 10.1007/s10640-021-00562-0
EA APR 2021
PG 46
WC Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SH5QA
UT WOS:000645875400001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Boateng, I
   Mitchell, S
   Couceiro, F
   Failler, P
AF Boateng, Isaac
   Mitchell, Steve
   Couceiro, Fay
   Failler, Pierre
TI An Investigation into the Impacts of Climate Change on Anthropogenic
   Polluted Coastal Lagoons in Ghana
SO COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Anthropologic pollution; climate change; coastal adaptation and Ghana's
   coast; Coastal Lagoons; water quality
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; ADAPTATION; FISHERIES; ACCRA
AB This paper discusses the impacts of Climate Change and anthropogenic activities on coastal lagoons in Ghana. Ghana's coastal lagoons provide unique ecosystem services. However, they are highly fragile and vulnerable to natural processes and anthropogenic activities. Climate Change impacts, such as increased temperatures, sea-level rise, storm surge and increased precipitation are likely to have ecological damage to lagoon ecosystems as a result of erosion, submergence of lagoon barriers, flooding and drying of the surrounding wetlands. Field observation, Geographic Information System modeling were among the methodology applied. The paper identified that anthropogenic activities and Climate Change would combine to have a serious future impact on lagoon ecosystems. Particularly, increased rainfall-induced flooding from the hinterland may be very injurious to the lagoon ecosystem, since the flood water may carry not only nutrients but also various contaminants and solid plastic waste generated by human activities around lagoons catchment into the lagoon channels. Besides, due to the barriers across most lagoon inlets, such polluted runoff water may not be able to flush out to sea, thus impacting negatively on the water quality of the lagoons. The paper proposes some adaptation strategies and recommends the early implementation of Climate Change adaptation strategies, coastal lagoon management measures to prevent potential future destructive impacts.
C1 [Boateng, Isaac] Univ Educ, Dept Construct & Wood, Winneba, Ghana.
   [Mitchell, Steve; Couceiro, Fay] Univ Portsmouth, Sch Civil Engn & Surveying, Portsmouth, Hants, England.
   [Failler, Pierre] Univ Portsmouth, Portsmouth Business Sch, Portsmouth, Hants, England.
C3 University of Portsmouth; University of Portsmouth
RP Boateng, I (corresponding author), Univ Educ Winneba, Dept Construct & Wood, Winneba, Ghana.
EM isaac.boateng@uew.edu.gh
RI ; Boateng, Isaac/AFL-3730-2022
OI Couceiro, Fay/0000-0001-5437-9106; failler, pierre/0000-0002-9225-9399;
   Boateng, Isaac/0000-0002-2203-4688; Mitchell, Steve/0000-0002-7302-5845
FU University of Portsmouth, UK
FX This research project was funded by the Research Development Fund of the
   University of Portsmouth, UK.
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NR 48
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 0
U2 9
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 0892-0753
EI 1521-0421
J9 COAST MANAGE
JI Coast. Manage.
PD AUG 5
PY 2020
VL 48
IS 6
BP 601
EP 622
DI 10.1080/08920753.2020.1803565
EA AUG 2020
PG 22
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA PC2VL
UT WOS:000557595900001
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Beller, EE
   McClenachan, L
   Zavaleta, ES
   Larsen, LG
AF Beller, Erin E.
   McClenachan, Loren
   Zavaleta, Erika S.
   Larsen, Laurel G.
TI Past forward: Recommendations from historical ecology for ecosystem
   management
SO GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Historical ecology; Ecological restoration; Ecosystem management;
   Landscape history; Climate change adaptation
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION STRATEGIES; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SPATIAL-PATTERNS;
   BASE-LINES; LAND-USE; CONSERVATION; RESTORATION; LANDSCAPE; FORESTS;
   BIODIVERSITY
AB In the context of accelerating environmental change, there is an urgent need to identify ecosystem conservation, restoration, and management strategies likely to support bio-diverse and adaptive ecosystems into the future. The field of historical ecology has generated a substantial body of recommendations for ecosystem management, yet these insights have never been synthesized. We reviewed >200 historical ecology studies and analyzed recommendations for ecosystem management emerging from the field. The majority of studies (similar to 90%) derived from North American and Europe, with forests being the focus of nearly half (48%) of all papers. Papers emphasized the need to protect and restore both habitat remnants and modified ecosystems in management, the value of ecosystems as cultural landscapes, and the importance of adopting a landscape-scale perspective for ecosystem management. Nearly one-quarter contained a recommendation that challenged status quo management, underscoring the value of a historical perspective in setting management goals, strategies, and targets. Fewer than 12% of papers contained recommendations that explicitly addressed ongoing or projected climate change, suggesting opportunities to integrate findings from historical ecology with other perspectives to create forward-looking management strategies that are rooted in place and past. (C) 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
C1 [Beller, Erin E.; Larsen, Laurel G.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Geog, 565 McCone Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
   [McClenachan, Loren] Colby Coll, Environm Studies, Waterville, ME 04901 USA.
   [Zavaleta, Erika S.] Univ Calif Santa Cruz, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, 130 McAllister Way, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 USA.
   [Beller, Erin E.] Google Inc, 1600 Amphitheater Pkwy, Mountain View, CA 94043 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley;
   Colby College; University of California System; University of California
   Santa Cruz; Google Incorporated
RP Beller, EE (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Geog, 565 McCone Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.; Beller, EE (corresponding author), Google Inc, 1600 Amphitheater Pkwy, Mountain View, CA 94043 USA.
EM ebeller@google.com
FU National Science Foundation [2017212785]
FX We gratefully acknowledge Maggi Kelly, Blair McLaughlin, Rachael
   Olliff-Yang, Nathan Sayre, Sarah Skikne, and Bronwen Stanford for
   support and insights throughout the project. Additional thanks to Henry
   Locke for assistance reviewing papers. Financial support for this paper
   was provided to EEB by the National Science Foundation Graduate Research
   Fellowship under Grant No. 2017212785.
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NR 88
TC 38
Z9 43
U1 3
U2 37
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
EI 2351-9894
J9 GLOB ECOL CONSERV
JI Glob. Ecol. Conserv.
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 21
AR e00836
DI 10.1016/j.gecco.2019.e00836
PG 14
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KR7RT
UT WOS:000517814100034
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU English, EC
   Chen, MY
   Zarins, R
   Patange, P
   Wiser, JC
AF English, Elizabeth C.
   Chen, Meiyi
   Zarins, Rebecca
   Patange, Poorna
   Wiser, Jeana C.
TI Building Resilience through Flood Risk Reduction: The Benefits of
   Amphibious Foundation Retrofits to Heritage Structures
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Amphibious architecture; buoyant foundation retrofit construction;
   Charleston South Carolina; climate change adaptation; cultural heritage
   protection; Farnsworth House; flood risk reduction; freedman's cottage;
   historic preservation; Princeville North Carolina
AB Today, many older coastal, riverine, and deltaic communities are faced with increasing flood risk, often combined with a rise in sea levels or land erosion. Until now, the options available to owners of heritage properties have been limited. Buoyant foundation retrofits offer under-resourced communities a viable and affordable adaptation alternative to buy-outs, tear-downs, and "displacement by climate change". Amphibious strategies will not solve all challenges related to the increased impacts of climate change on heritage architecture, but offer a resilient option for communities to protect their physical history and cultural identity. This paper will provide an overview of amphibious retrofit construction and its application to the preservation of historic buildings and neighborhoods. It will provide several case study examples, namely, retrofits of heritage buildings in the historically significant African-American community of Princeville, North Carolina; for a low-income neighborhood of freedman's cottages in Charleston, South Carolina; and a creative approach for amphibiating architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe's iconic Farnsworth House in Plano, Illinois. It will connect to larger themes of developing innovative and practical methods for providing flood protection to heritage structures, using an approach that emphasizes sensitivity and adaptability to the cultural values of existing communities.
C1 [English, Elizabeth C.; Chen, Meiyi; Zarins, Rebecca; Patange, Poorna] Univ Waterloo, Sch Architecture, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
   [English, Elizabeth C.; Wiser, Jeana C.] Buoyant Fdn Project, New Orleans, LA USA.
C3 University of Waterloo
RP English, EC (corresponding author), Univ Waterloo, 7 Melville St South, Cambridge, ON N1S 2H4, Canada.
EM ecenglish@uwaterloo.ca
RI Patange, Poorna/KPA-5926-2024; English, Elizabeth/W-6593-2019
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TC 7
Z9 8
U1 3
U2 44
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 1558-3058
EI 1558-3066
J9 INT J ARCHIT HERIT
JI Int. J. Archit. Herit.
PD JUL 3
PY 2021
VL 15
IS 7
SI SI
BP 976
EP 984
DI 10.1080/15583058.2019.1695154
EA DEC 2019
PG 9
WC Architecture; Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Architecture; Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA UG7OZ
UT WOS:000502229600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pahl-Wostl, C
AF Pahl-Wostl, Claudia
TI The role of governance modes and meta-governance in the transformation
   towards sustainable water governance
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Water governance system; Governance mode; Meta-governance
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; FLOOD RISK; POLICY; CHINA; MANAGEMENT;
   INSIGHTS; POLITICS; MARKETS; PERSPECTIVE; TRANSITION
AB For several decades, water policy reform and the design of governance systems were dominated by simplistic panaceas. This was accompanied by changing preferences for specific types of policy instruments and modes of steering. Such dominance has given way to a more nuanced understanding of requirements for sustainable and integrated water governance capable of addressing the challenges of global and climate change. This paper focusses on the role of governance modes and on meta-governance. Governance mode refers to a certain logic and form through which governance can be realized. The paper uses the distinction between bureaucratic hierarchies, networks and markets to denote different modes of governance. It argues that hybrid governance systems with synergistic interplay between these different governance modes are essential for dealing with, complex water management challenges. Furthermore, it argues that the development of such governance systems requires a combination of purposeful design and self-organization. An exploratory comparative analysis of water governance in Germany, the Netherlands, Australia, China and South Africa illustrates the validity and relevance of the conceptual considerations. The paper concludes by highlighting the need for meta-governance as a reflexive process of societal learning to develop, evaluate and adapt governance approaches with the purpose of addressing complex societal challenge.
C1 [Pahl-Wostl, Claudia] Univ Osnabruck, Inst Environm Syst Res, Barbarastr 12, D-49069 Osnabruck, Germany.
C3 University Osnabruck
RP Pahl-Wostl, C (corresponding author), Univ Osnabruck, Inst Environm Syst Res, Barbarastr 12, D-49069 Osnabruck, Germany.
EM cpahlwos@uni-osnabrueck.de
RI Pahl-Wostl, Claudia/ABW-9068-2022
FU German Research Foundation [WaterNeeds PA 351/8-1]
FX The research presented in this article was financially supported by the
   German Research Foundation (project WaterNeeds PA 351/8-1). Katharina
   Butke provided support in coding the legal documents. The article
   profited from numerous discussions with other members of the WaterNeeds
   team - Kathrin Knuppe, Christian Knieper and Johannes Halbe. I would
   also like to thank Catherine Allen and Richard Meissner for providing
   feedback on the analyses of Australia and South Africa, respectively.
   Furthermore, comments from two anonymous reviewers led to considerable
   restructuring and improvement of the article.
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   Yu HYH, 2016, ENVIRON SCI POLICY, V55, P65, DOI 10.1016/j.envsci.2015.08.001
   Zille Helen., 2017, Daily Maverick
NR 86
TC 126
Z9 133
U1 34
U2 126
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD JAN
PY 2019
VL 91
BP 6
EP 16
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.10.008
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HD2LX
UT WOS:000452343200002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sieber, IM
   Biesbroek, R
   de Block, D
AF Sieber, Ina Maren
   Biesbroek, Robbert
   de Block, Debora
TI Mechanism-based explanations of impasses in the governance of
   ecosystem-based adaptation
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Barriers; Climate change; Mechanisms; Ecosystem-based adaptation;
   Governance
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; CAUSAL MECHANISMS; BLACK-BOX; BARRIERS; FRAMEWORK;
   POLICY; LIMITS
AB Many climate change adaptation scholars recognise the complexities in the governance of adaptation. Most have used the concept of barriers to adaptation' in an attempt to describe why governance of adaptation is challenging. However, these studies have recently been critiqued for over simplifying complex governance processes by referring to the static concept of barriers, thereby ignoring dynamic complexity as a root explanatory cause. This paper builds the argument that how barriers are currently used in the literature is insufficient to explain why the governance of adaptation often proves difficult. We adopt a so-called mechanism-based approach to investigate how and why the governance of ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) reaches impasses in five cases in Thailand and the Netherlands. Our findings show six causal mechanisms that explain impasses in the five case studies: (1) frame polarisation, (2) timing synchronisation, (3) risk innovation, (4) rules of the game, (5) veto players and (6) lost in translation. Several of these causal mechanisms are recurring and emerge under specific contextual conditions or are activated by other mechanisms. Our findings provide valuable insights into the impasses in the governance of EbA and allow for critical reflections on the analytical value of the mechanism-based approach in explaining why the governance of adaptation proves difficult and how this can be overcome.
C1 [Sieber, Ina Maren] Leibniz Univ Hannover, Inst Phys Geog & Landschaftsokol, Schneiderberg 50, D-30167 Hannover, Germany.
   [Biesbroek, Robbert] Wageningen Univ & Res, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [de Block, Debora] Wageningen Univ & Res, Water Syst & Global Change Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Leibniz University Hannover; Wageningen University & Research;
   Wageningen University & Research
RP Sieber, IM (corresponding author), Leibniz Univ Hannover, Inst Phys Geog & Landschaftsokol, Schneiderberg 50, D-30167 Hannover, Germany.
EM sieber@phygeo.uni-hannover.de; Robbert.biesbroek@wur.nl;
   Debora.deblock@wur.nl
RI Sieber, Ina Maren/AAC-9158-2022; Biesbroek, Robbert/GZZ-4476-2022;
   Biesbroek, Robbert/I-2384-2013
OI Biesbroek, Robbert/0000-0002-2906-1419; Sieber, Ina
   M./0000-0003-2134-0429
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NR 61
TC 15
Z9 19
U1 0
U2 22
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2018
VL 18
IS 8
SI SI
BP 2379
EP 2390
DI 10.1007/s10113-018-1347-1
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HA8VS
UT WOS:000450572900017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Quigley, CF
   Che, SM
   Achieng, S
   Liaram, S
AF Quigley, Cassie F.
   Che, S. Megan
   Achieng, Stella
   Liaram, Sarah
TI "Women and the environmental are together": using Participatory Rural
   Appraisal to examine gendered tensions about the environment
SO ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Participatory Rural Appraisal; Kenya; gender issues; photo-methodology
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY; CONSERVATION; TANZANIA; KENYA
AB Environmental education research (EER) rarely includes women's perspectives. This means that in environmental education research, an entire knowledge source is largely ignored. This study employed a methodology called Participatory Rural Appraisal, a methodology new to the field of EER, of Kenyan teachers from the Maasai Mara region to understand the tensions around environmental views. The purpose of this work was to examine, through the use of a participatory methodology, the conceptions of the environmental of these teachers and to uncover gendered tensions. The analysis included a continuous, thematic review that included the participants during the analysis. The findings included the following themes: Why are people doing what they are doing? Who is or is not acting? How do we move forward? This research documented gendered tensions such as the burdens of responsibility, the power imbalance disadvantaged women feel regarding solving environmental issues, and the blame that is directed at both men and women as a result of these burdens and power imbalances. This methodology provided a way for participants to understand each other's viewpoints in layered ways, and pointed to gender issues throughout that sometimes caused blame. However, it also helped the participants think about how to work together.
C1 [Quigley, Cassie F.] Clemson Univ, Dept Teaching & Learning, Clemson, SC 29634 USA.
   [Che, S. Megan] Clemson Univ, Dept Teaching & Learning, Math Educ, Clemson, SC 29634 USA.
   [Achieng, Stella] Univ Nairobi, Int Studies, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Liaram, Sarah] Maasai Mara Natl Preserve, Community Empowerment Programme, Maasai Mara, Kenya.
C3 Clemson University; Clemson University; University of Nairobi
RP Quigley, CF (corresponding author), Clemson Univ, Dept Teaching & Learning, Clemson, SC 29634 USA.
EM cassieq@clemson.edu
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NR 74
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 17
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1350-4622
EI 1469-5871
J9 ENVIRON EDUC RES
JI Environ. Educ. Res.
PY 2017
VL 23
IS 6
BP 773
EP 796
DI 10.1080/13504622.2016.1169511
PG 24
WC Education & Educational Research; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Education & Educational Research; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EW6FI
UT WOS:000402603700002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Seifert, CA
   Lobell, DB
AF Seifert, Christopher A.
   Lobell, David B.
TI Response of double cropping suitability to climate change in the United
   States
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; agriculture; crop suitability; double
   cropping
ID TEMPERATURE; TRENDS; MAIZE
AB In adapting US agriculture to the climate of the 21st century, a key unknown is whether cropping frequency may increase, helping to offset projected negative yield impacts in major production regions. Combining daily weather data and crop phenology models, we find that cultivated area in the US suited to dryland winter wheat-soybeans, the most common double crop ( DC) system, increased by up to 28% from 1988 to 2012. Changes in the observed distribution of DC area over the same period agree well with this suitability increase, evidence consistent with climate change playing a role in recent DC expansion in phenologically constrained states. We then apply the model to projections of future climate under the RCP45 and RCP85 scenarios and estimate an additional 126-239% increase, respectively, in DC area. Sensitivity tests reveal that in most instances, increases in mean temperature are more important than delays in fall freeze in driving increased DC suitability. The results suggest that climate change will relieve phenological constraints on wheat-soy DC systems over much of the United States, though it should be recognized that impacts on corn and soybean yields in this region are expected to be negative and larger in magnitude than the 0.4-0.75% per decade benefits we estimate here for double cropping.
C1 [Seifert, Christopher A.; Lobell, David B.] Stanford Univ, Dept Environm Earth Syst Sci, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   [Lobell, David B.] Stanford Univ, Ctr Food Secur & Environm, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
C3 Stanford University; Stanford University
RP Seifert, CA (corresponding author), Stanford Univ, Dept Environm Earth Syst Sci, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
EM cseifert@stanford.edu
OI Lobell, David/0000-0002-5969-3476
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NR 26
TC 72
Z9 90
U1 3
U2 49
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD FEB
PY 2015
VL 10
IS 2
AR 024002
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/10/2/024002
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA CC7UI
UT WOS:000350573500004
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Friel, S
   Hancock, T
   Kjellstrom, T
   McGranahan, G
   Monge, P
   Roy, J
AF Friel, Sharon
   Hancock, Trevor
   Kjellstrom, Tord
   McGranahan, Gordon
   Monge, Patricia
   Roy, Joyashree
TI Urban Health Inequities and the Added Pressure of Climate Change: An
   Action-Oriented Research Agenda
SO JOURNAL OF URBAN HEALTH-BULLETIN OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF MEDICINE
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban health; Health inequity; Climate change; Evidence
ID GLOBAL HEALTH; HEAT; ADAPTATION; CRISIS; RISKS; DEATH
AB Climate change will likely exacerbate already existing urban social inequities and health risks, thereby exacerbating existing urban health inequities. Cities in low- and middle-income countries are particularly vulnerable. Urbanization is both a cause of and potential solution to global climate change. Most population growth in the foreseeable future will occur in urban areas primarily in developing countries. How this growth is managed has enormous implications for climate change given the increasing concentration and magnitude of economic production in urban localities, as well as the higher consumption practices of urbanites, especially the middle classes, compared to rural populations. There is still much to learn about the extent to which climate change affects urban health equity and what can be done effectively in different socio-political and socio-economic contexts to improve the health of urban dwelling humans and the environment. But it is clear that equity-oriented climate change adaptation means attention to the social conditions in which urban populations live-this is not just a climate change policy issue, it requires inter-sectoral action. Policies and programs in urban planning and design, workplace health and safety, and urban agriculture can help mitigate further climate change and adapt to existing climate change. If done well, these will also be good for urban health equity.
C1 [Friel, Sharon; Kjellstrom, Tord] Australian Natl Univ, Natl Ctr Epidemiol & Populat Hlth, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
   [Friel, Sharon] UCL, Dept Epidemiol & Publ Hlth, London, England.
   [Hancock, Trevor] Univ Victoria, Sch Publ Hlth & Social Policy, Victoria, BC, Canada.
   [Kjellstrom, Tord] Umea Univ, Ctr Global Hlth Res, Umea, Sweden.
   [McGranahan, Gordon] Int Inst Environm & Dev, London, England.
   [Monge, Patricia] Univ Nacl, Cent Amer Inst Studies Tox Subst IRET, Heredia, Costa Rica.
   [Roy, Joyashree] Jadavpur Univ, Kolkata 700032, W Bengal, India.
C3 Australian National University; University of London; University College
   London; University of Victoria; Umea University; Universidad Nacional
   Costa Rica; Jadavpur University
RP Friel, S (corresponding author), Australian Natl Univ, Natl Ctr Epidemiol & Populat Hlth, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
EM Sharon.Friel@anu.edu.au
OI Friel, Sharon/0000-0002-8345-5435; Roy, Joyashree/0000-0002-9270-8860
FU Rockefeller Foundation
FX This work was made possible through funding provided by the Rockefeller
   Foundation and undertaken as a contribution to the Global Research
   Network on Urban Health Equity. The views presented herein are those of
   the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the decision, policy, or
   views of our institutions.
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NR 49
TC 51
Z9 58
U1 7
U2 47
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 1099-3460
EI 1468-2869
J9 J URBAN HEALTH
JI J. Urban Health
PD OCT
PY 2011
VL 88
IS 5
BP 886
EP 895
DI 10.1007/s11524-011-9607-0
PG 10
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Medicine, General &
   Internal
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; General & Internal Medicine
GA 833FE
UT WOS:000295866900005
PM 21861210
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Oh, S
   Hotchkiss, C
   St John, I
   Durglo, M
   Goldstein, D
   Seekamp, E
AF Oh, Selin
   Hotchkiss, Courtney
   St John, Isaac
   Durglo, Michael
   Goldstein, David
   Seekamp, Erin
TI Uncovering Implicit Western Science and Indigenous Values Embedded in
   Climate Change and Cultural Resource Adaptation Policy and Guidance
SO HISTORIC ENVIRONMENT-POLICY & PRACTICE
LA English
DT Article
DE United States; Indigenous; discourse analysis; climate change; climate
   adaptation; policy review; Indigenous traditional ecological knowledge;
   terminology analysis; cultural resource management
ID KNOWLEDGE; COMANAGEMENT; PEOPLES; TRUST
AB Climate change discourse ranges from an acknowledgement of ancestral prophecy to the most urgent crisis of our time. If the terminology - words, concepts, and expressions - of discourse is understood to reflect a writer's values, perspectives, and ways of knowing, then it is important to compare the terminology used by various writers to understand key value differences. This paper provides an initial exploration into the explicit and implicit differences in terminology surrounding climate adaptation planning from the perspective of federal agencies and Tribal Nations as represented in two climate adaptation guides. As the act of utilising the same words but in different ways will likely result in conflict, we also explored the links between the values-based differences in terminology with three policies - one written from a Tribal perspective and two that govern federal agencies' stewardship of cultural resources - to assess the implications for climate adaptation of ancestral heritage located on federal lands. It is important to note that the space to compare terminology between federal and Tribal perspectives is vast; though this paper represents only an introductory step into this space, the results demonstrate a clear need to develop a process of co-constructing a shared climate adaptation terminology.
C1 [Oh, Selin] Univ Chicago, Dept Hist, Chicago, IL USA.
   [Oh, Selin] Univ Chicago, Dept Environm Studies, Chicago, IL USA.
   [Hotchkiss, Courtney; Seekamp, Erin] NC State Univ, Dept Pk Recreat & Touirsm Management, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
   [St John, Isaac] Tribal State Hist Off, Houlton Band Maliseet Indians, Houlton, ME USA.
   [Durglo, Michael] Climate Change Off, Confederated Salish & Kootenai Tribes, Pablo, MT USA.
   [Goldstein, David] Dept Interior Reg Appalachian & North Atlantic 1, US Natl Pk Serv, Tribal & Cultural Affairs, Lowell, MA USA.
C3 University of Chicago; University of Chicago; North Carolina State
   University
RP Seekamp, E (corresponding author), NC State Univ, Dept Pk Recreat & Touirsm Management, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
EM elseekam@ncsu.edu
OI Seekamp, Erin/0000-0001-5082-1921
FU NPS Region 1 Tribal and Cultural Affairs team
FX The authors are deeply grateful for everyone included in the process of
   creating this paper, including Casey Thornbrugh, Nisogaabo Ikwe (Melonee
   Montano), Rob Croll, Kristen Schmitt, Hannah Panci, Sara Smith, the
   Traditional Knowledge working group from the 2020 National Tribal and
   Indigenous Climate Conference, and the NPS Region 1 Tribal and Cultural
   Affairs team. We thank you for your time and insight.
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NR 65
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 3
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-7505
EI 1756-7513
J9 HIST ENVIRON POLICY
JI Hist. Env.-Policy Pract.
PD JAN 2
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 1
BP 53
EP 80
DI 10.1080/17567505.2023.2300175
EA JAN 2024
PG 28
WC Humanities, Multidisciplinary
WE Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Arts & Humanities - Other Topics
GA IH8E1
UT WOS:001137334700001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Meilvang, ML
AF Meilvang, Marie Leth
TI From rain as risk to rain as resource: Professional and organizational
   changes in urban rainwater management
SO CURRENT SOCIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; professional segments; rainwater; urban planning
AB This article analyzes the recent changes in urban rainwater management practices by analyzing the work of urban rainwater professionals. As a result of climate change, cities are experiencing more frequent and heavier rainfall events. The article shows how professional work on new infrastructures for managing urban climate rain contributes to the transformation of organizational practices. The article shows how a professional group within the engineering profession - climate adaptation engineers - reconceptualize how rain in cities is valued from a risk into a resource. By reconceptualizing urban rain, climate adaptation engineers contribute to the transformation of organizational practices in the emerging field of climate adaptation. Empirically, the article analyses interviews, documents, and fieldnotes from three urban rainwater management projects in Denmark which all deal with excess rainwater resulting from climate change.
C1 [Meilvang, Marie Leth] Univ Coll Lillebaelt, UCL, Niels Bohrs Alle 1, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark.
RP Meilvang, ML (corresponding author), Univ Coll Lillebaelt, UCL, Niels Bohrs Alle 1, DK-5230 Odense M, Denmark.
EM mlme@ucl.dk
OI Leth Meilvang, Marie/0000-0002-4972-2472
FU Danish Council for Independent Research - Social Sciences [DFF -
   6109-00063]
FX The Danish Council for Independent Research - Social Sciences supported
   this work, via grant number DFF - 6109-00063.
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NR 39
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 4
U2 11
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0011-3921
EI 1461-7064
J9 CURR SOCIOL
JI Curr. Sociol.
PD NOV
PY 2021
VL 69
IS 7
BP 1034
EP 1050
AR 0011392120986238
DI 10.1177/0011392120986238
EA FEB 2021
PG 17
WC Sociology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Sociology
GA WK7CR
UT WOS:000619975700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Neset, TS
   Juhola, S
   Wiréhn, L
   Käyhkö, J
   Navarra, C
   Asplund, T
   Glaas, E
   Wibeck, V
   Linnér, BO
AF Neset, Tina-Simone
   Juhola, Sirkku
   Wirehn, Lotten
   Kayhko, Janina
   Navarra, Carlo
   Asplund, Therese
   Glaas, Erik
   Wibeck, Victoria
   Linner, Bjorn-Ola
TI Supporting Dialogue and Analysis on Trade-Offs in Climate Adaptation
   Research With the Maladaptation Game
SO SIMULATION & GAMING
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; climate change; decision-making; Nordic agriculture;
   serious gaming
ID ENGAGEMENT; OPPORTUNITIES; AGRICULTURE; CHALLENGES; PATHWAYS; RISK
AB Background. Serious games are gaining increasing prominence in environmental communication research, but their potential to form an integrated part of participatory research approaches is still strikingly understudied. This is particularly the case for applications of interactive digital formats in research on environmental challenges of high complexity, such as climate adaptation, which is a specifically suitable case as it involves complex interaction between climate systems and society, but where the response also involves trade-offs with potentially negative - maladaptive - outcomes. Intervention. This article presents the Maladaptation Game, which was designed to facilitate dialogue about potential negative outcomes of agricultural climate adaptation.
   Methods. We conducted test sessions with agricultural stakeholders in Finland and Sweden, and analysed quantitative and qualitative, audio-recorded and transcribed, material for opportunities and challenges related to dialogues, engagement, interactivity and experienced relevance.
   Results. The qualitative analysis of recorded dialogues shows that the Maladaptation Game has potential to support dialogue by challenging players to negotiate between options with negative outcomes. The gameplay itself presents opportunities in terms of creating engagement with options that provoke disagreement and debates between players, as well as interactivity, that players reflected upon as quick and easy, while challenges were related to the experienced relevance, in particular the options provided in the game, and its general framing.
   Conclusions. The results indicate a need for complementary approaches to this type of game but also suggest the importance of moderation when the game design is aimed at creating dialogue around a complex environmental challenge such as agricultural climate adaptation.
C1 [Neset, Tina-Simone; Navarra, Carlo; Asplund, Therese; Glaas, Erik; Wibeck, Victoria] Linkoping Univ, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Neset, Tina-Simone; Navarra, Carlo; Asplund, Therese; Glaas, Erik; Wibeck, Victoria; Linner, Bjorn-Ola] Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Wirehn, Lotten] Linkoping Univ, Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Linner, Bjorn-Ola] Linkoping Univ, Environm Change, Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Juhola, Sirkku] Univ Helsinki, Urban Environm Policy, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Kayhko, Janina] Univ Helsinki, Urban Environm Policy Res Grp, Helsinki, Finland.
C3 Linkoping University; Linkoping University; Linkoping University;
   Linkoping University; University of Helsinki; University of Helsinki
RP Neset, TS (corresponding author), Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
EM tina.neset@liu.se; sirkku.juhola@helsinki.fi; lotten.wirehn@liu.se;
   janina.kayhko@helsinki.fi; carlo.navarra@liu.se; therese.asplund@liu.se;
   erik.glaas@liu.se; Victoria.wibeck@liu.se; bjorn-ola.linner@liu.se
RI Linnér, Björn-Ola/AAL-2040-2020; Juhola, Sirkku/IXW-8093-2023; Navarra,
   Carlo/JJC-1654-2023; Käyhkö, Janina/AAW-6163-2021
OI Juhola, Sirkku/0000-0003-0095-2282; Wirehn, Lotten/0000-0003-4014-1441;
   Kayhko, Janina/0000-0003-0904-5857; Neset,
   Tina-Simone/0000-0003-1151-9943; Navarra, Carlo/0000-0001-9892-8875
FU Swedish Research Council FORMAS [2013-1557]; Linkoping University as
   part of the Swedish Bibsam consortium
FX The authors disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the
   research, authorship and/or publication of this article: This study was
   funded by the Swedish Research Council FORMAS (under Grant No.
   2013-1557). Open access funding was provided by Linkoping University as
   part of the Swedish Bibsam consortium.
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NR 35
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 4
U2 15
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 1046-8781
EI 1552-826X
J9 SIMULAT GAMING
JI Simul. Gaming
PD JUN
PY 2020
VL 51
IS 3
BP 378
EP 399
AR 1046878120904393
DI 10.1177/1046878120904393
EA FEB 2020
PG 22
WC Education & Educational Research; Psychology, Social; Social Sciences,
   Interdisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Education & Educational Research; Psychology; Social Sciences - Other
   Topics
GA LM6BE
UT WOS:000516896800001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Berke, PR
   Stevens, MR
AF Berke, Philip R.
   Stevens, Mark R.
TI Land Use Planning for Climate Adaptation: Theory and Practice
SO JOURNAL OF PLANNING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
ID PLANS
C1 [Berke, Philip R.] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Landscape Architecture & Urban Planning, College Stn, TX 77843 USA.
   [Stevens, Mark R.] Univ British Columbia, Sch Community & Reg Planning, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
C3 Texas A&M University System; Texas A&M University College Station;
   University of British Columbia
RP Berke, PR (corresponding author), Texas A&M Univ, Dept Landscape Architecture & Urban Planning, College Stn, TX 77843 USA.
EM pberke@arch.tamu.edu
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NR 27
TC 25
Z9 29
U1 0
U2 8
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0739-456X
EI 1552-6577
J9 J PLAN EDUC RES
JI J. Plan. Educ. Res.
PD SEP
PY 2016
VL 36
IS 3
BP 283
EP 289
DI 10.1177/0739456X16660714
PG 7
WC Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA DV5JC
UT WOS:000382962200002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ilies, DC
   Safarov, B
   Caciora, T
   Ilies, A
   Grama, V
   Ilies, G
   Huniadi, A
   Zharas, B
   Hodor, N
   Sandor, M
   Zsarnóczky, MB
   Pantea, E
   Herman, GV
   Dejeu, P
   Szabo-Alexi, M
   David, LD
AF Ilies, Dorina Camelia
   Safarov, Bahodirhon
   Caciora, Tudor
   Ilies, Alexandru
   Grama, Vasile
   Ilies, Gabriela
   Huniadi, Anca
   Zharas, Berdenov
   Hodor, Nicolaie
   Sandor, Mircea
   Zsarnoczky, Martin Balazs
   Pantea, Emilia
   Herman, Grigore Vasile
   Dejeu, Paula
   Szabo-Alexi, Mariana
   Denes David, Lorant
TI Museal Indoor Air Quality and Public Health: An Integrated Approach for
   Exhibits Preservation and Ensuring Human Health
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE cultural heritage; museum environment; microaeroflora; fungi; essential
   oils; antifungal; cleaning; public health; human pathology
ID CULTURAL-HERITAGE; ESSENTIAL OILS; CONSERVATION; ENVIRONMENT; AIRBORNE;
   SUSCEPTIBILITY; BUILDINGS; ARCHIVES; EXPOSURE; TEXTILES
AB The quality of the indoor microclimate in museums is a problem of great interest to the contemporary society, given that it is in close connection with the health and comfort of visitors and employees, as well as with the integrity of the exhibits. Taking into account the fact that museums are places that have a special role in the community's life and therefore attract a very large number of visitors of all ages, a very important issue is to determine the degree of safety that the indoor microclimate presents. Thus, the quality of the indoor microclimate was investigated inside an iconic museum in Romania, dating back to the 19th century, because pollutants from external or internal sources of the building, generated secondary, often anthropogenic, as a tendency to defend/adapt to climate change (CC), contribute to both local and regional pollution, but also lead to challenges in identifying links between air quality (AQ) and and climate change (CC). The methodology used was based on monitoring the main parameters of the microclimate (temperature, relative humidity and CO2) over a period of between October 2020 and March 2021, 21 weeks, as well as on determining the microbiological contamination of the air and some indoor exhibits located in three different areas of the museum. At the same time, the study aims to identify cheap, easy to implement and non-invasive solutions for removing fungi identified on exhibits for long-term preservation and reducing the risk of various pathologies in humans following prolonged exposure. The results obtained show that the indoor microclimate in the old heritage building favours the development of fungi, which have a high degree of contamination of the air (over 800 CFU/m(3)) and of the exhibits, representing a potential risk for the health of the visitors and museum workers. Thus, six species of yeast and five different fungi genera were identified in the air, while on the exhibits were individualised six fungi genera, a species of yeast and a bacterium. The most viable solution for cleaning materials, prolonging their lifespan and reducing the risk of disease in humans was represented by the use of essential oils (EO). Three essential oils (lavender, mint and lemon) were applied on an exhibit with five different microorganism genera, and it was observed that they have the ability to inhibit the spores from moulds and bacteria, being a very good alternative to the usual chemical treatments that are used in the cultural heritage field.
C1 [Ilies, Dorina Camelia; Caciora, Tudor; Ilies, Alexandru; Grama, Vasile; Herman, Grigore Vasile] Univ Oradea, Fac Geog Tourism & Sport, Dept Geog Tourism & Terr Planning, Oradea 410087, Romania.
   [Safarov, Bahodirhon] Samarkand State Univ, Dept Digital Econ, Samarkand 140105, Uzbekistan.
   [Ilies, Gabriela] Babes Bolyai Univ, Fac Geog, Sighetul Marmatiei Extens, Sighetul Marmatiei 435500, Romania.
   [Huniadi, Anca; Sandor, Mircea] Univ Oradea, Fac Med & Pharm, Oradea 410073, Romania.
   [Zharas, Berdenov] LN Gumilyov Eurasian Natl Univ, Fac Sci, Dept Phys & Econ Geog, Nur Sultan 010008, Kazakhstan.
   [Hodor, Nicolaie] Babes Bolyai Univ, Fac Geog, Cluj Napoca 400090, Romania.
   [Zsarnoczky, Martin Balazs] Kodolanyi Janos Univ, Inst Sustainable Econ, H-1139 Budapest, Hungary.
   [Pantea, Emilia] Univ Oradea, Fac Environm Protect, Oradea 410087, Romania.
   [Dejeu, Paula] Bethany Med Clin Oradea, Med Lab Serv MD, Oradea 410004, Romania.
   [Szabo-Alexi, Mariana] Univ Oradea, Dept Phys Educ Sport & Phys Therapy, Oradea 410087, Romania.
   [Denes David, Lorant] Hungarian Univ Agr & Life Sci MATE, Inst Rural Dev & Sustainable Econ, H-2100 Godollo, Hungary.
C3 University of Oradea; Samarkand State University; Babes Bolyai
   University from Cluj; University of Oradea; L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian
   National University; Babes Bolyai University from Cluj; Kodolanyi Janos
   University; University of Oradea; University of Oradea; Hungarian
   University of Agriculture & Life Sciences
RP Caciora, T (corresponding author), Univ Oradea, Fac Geog Tourism & Sport, Dept Geog Tourism & Terr Planning, Oradea 410087, Romania.
EM dilies@uoradea.ro; safa-rovb@rambler.ru;
   caciora.tudoriulian@student.uoradea.ro; ailies@uoradea.ro;
   vgrama@uoradea.ro; gabriela.ilies@ubbcluj.ro; ahuniadi@uoradea.ro;
   berdenov-z@mail.ru; nicolaie.hodor@ubbcluj.ro; msandor@uoradea.ro;
   martin@kodolanyi.hu; epantea@uoradea.ro; grigoreherman@yahoo.com;
   office@betania-centrumedical.ro; mariszabo@yahoo.com;
   dr.david.lorant@gmail.com
RI Berdenov, Zharas/S-7374-2017; EMILIA, PANTEA/AAH-1550-2019; Ilies,
   Gabriela/N-3055-2019; Safarov, Bahodirhon/GLU-1073-2022; ALEXANDRU,
   ILIES/T-2254-2019; David, Lorant Denes/AAN-4640-2020; Hodor,
   Nicolaie/AAX-5549-2021; SZABO-ALEXI, Mariana/ACK-8678-2022; Herman,
   Grigore Vasile/A-8371-2019; Caciora, Tudor/JCE-0837-2023; Huniadi,
   Anca/JPY-2218-2023; Dorina Camelia, Ilies/AAQ-8904-2020; GRAMA,
   VASILE/AAB-5592-2021
OI Zsarnoczky, Martin Balazs/0000-0002-2905-2168; Ilies,
   Gabriela/0000-0001-7362-0364; Safarov, Bahodirhon/0000-0002-2736-7000;
   Dr. David, Lorant Denes/0000-0001-7880-9860; Tudor,
   Caciora/0000-0002-1046-3776; Alexandru, Ilies/0000-0002-5920-5858;
   Dorina Camelia, Ilies/0000-0002-1381-7146; GRAMA,
   VASILE/0000-0003-0600-1138; GRIGORE VASILE, HERMAN/0000-0002-7586-6226;
   Berdenov, Zharas/0000-0002-2898-8212
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NR 99
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 2
U2 35
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD FEB
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 4
AR 2462
DI 10.3390/su14042462
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZR4UJ
UT WOS:000767779700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zagaria, C
   Schulp, CJE
   Zavalloni, M
   Viaggi, D
   Verburg, PH
AF Zagaria, Cecilia
   Schulp, Catharina J. E.
   Zavalloni, Matteo
   Viaggi, Davide
   Verburg, Peter H.
TI Modelling transformational adaptation to climate change among crop
   farming systems in Romagna, Italy
SO AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Agent-based modelling; Land use change; Adaptation scenarios; Drought
   Socio-ecological system modelling; Decision-making
ID LAND-USE; WATER MANAGEMENT; EMILIA-ROMAGNA; AGRICULTURE; STRATEGIES;
   LEVEL; DIMENSIONS; SCENARIOS; DECISIONS; PATHWAYS
AB As the impact of climate change on the agricultural sector has begun to manifest itself in its severity, adaptation planning has come under scrutiny for favoring the preservation of status-quo conditions over more substantial changes. The uptake of transformational adaptations, involving a significant re-structuring of the agricultural system, is however hindered by a lack of assessment tools capable of quantifying the effects of these often more complex, far-reaching, and unprecedented changes. Agent-based models can simulate decision processes and multi-level feedbacks between system components and may therefore illustrate how transformational adaptations emerge and help identify cases where their implementation is necessary and desirable. We explore this modelling potential and aim to quantify (1) how climate change, farmer behavior and water policies may influence strategic adaptation decision-making at the farm-level, (2) the extent to which implemented adaptations represent transformations, and (3) their impact on farm structure and wider socio-ecological change. We investigate these aims through a case study of crop farming systems in the drought-prone historical region of Romagna (NE Italy), integrating insight from stakeholder interviews, local reports, spatially-explicit biophysical data and behavioral theory in the construction of an agent-based model. Results show that, on average, more than half of all implemented adaptations are transformations, thereby requiring important social and financial investments from farmers. The number of implemented transformations is highest in scenarios where drought risk perception among farmers is more widespread, notably in scenarios simulating drier climates, more adaptive behaviors and policies promoting greater water use efficiency. Under higher drought risk perception, farmers are motivated to explore a broader set of adaptations, including those outside of the trajectory determined by their farming strategy. This process particularly favors the implementation of transformational increases in farm size and irrigated area, eventually stimulating farmers to adopt an expansionist strategy. Regionally, these adaptations lead to the smallest decline in agricultural extent with fewest, yet highest profit-earning farmers, largely exacerbating presently occurring trends. Under policy scenarios simulating increased irrigation availability, fewer farmers initially experience drought and therefore perceive a drought risk. Consequently, fewer farmers undertake transformational adaptations and switch from a contractive to an expansive strategy, culminating in a relatively smaller and less profitable agricultural extent despite a larger farmer population. As transformative changes to farming strategy trigger farmers to engage in new path-dependencies, aims of water policies may therefore rebound into unintended effects, emphasizing the importance of accounting for transformational perspectives.
C1 [Zagaria, Cecilia; Schulp, Catharina J. E.; Verburg, Peter H.] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies, Dept Environm Geog, Boelelaan 1085, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Zavalloni, Matteo; Viaggi, Davide] Univ Bologna, Dept Agr & Food Sci, Viale Fanin 50, I-40127 Bologna, Italy.
   [Verburg, Peter H.] Swiss Fed Res Inst WSL, Res Unit Land Change Sci, Zurcherstr 111, CH-8903 Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; University of Bologna; Swiss Federal
   Institutes of Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute for Forest,
   Snow & Landscape Research
RP Zagaria, C (corresponding author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies, Dept Environm Geog, Boelelaan 1085, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
EM c.zagaria@vu.nl; nynke.schulp@vu.nl; matteo.zavalloni@unibo.it;
   davide.viaggi@unibo.it; peter.verburg@vu.nl
RI Viaggi, Davide/A-3223-2009; Verburg, Peter/Z-1582-2019; Zavalloni,
   Matteo/M-4023-2016; Verburg, Peter/A-8469-2010
OI Zavalloni, Matteo/0000-0002-6291-7653; Verburg,
   Peter/0000-0002-6977-7104; Zagaria, Cecilia/0000-0003-0203-4370; Schulp,
   Nynke/0000-0002-5068-8566
FU European Research Council (ERC) through the European Union [603542,
   311819]; Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program's [633838,
   817949]; H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [633838, 817949] Funding
   Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme
FX This research was supported by the European Research Council (ERC)
   through the European Union's Seventh Framework Program's LUC4C (Grant
   No. 603542) and GLOLAND (Grant No. 311819) projects,as well as the
   Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program's PROVIDE (Grant No.
   633838) and CONSOLE (Grant No. 817949) projects. The authors would like
   to thank all interview participants, the Land Reclamation and Irrigation
   Consortium of Romagna and Western Romagna for facilitating the
   interviews, and M. Wens for helpful discussions on climate and
   agent-based modelling. They are additionally grateful to three anonymous
   reviewers for their insightful feedback on earlier versions of this
   manuscript.
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NR 77
TC 26
Z9 28
U1 7
U2 31
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0308-521X
EI 1873-2267
J9 AGR SYST
JI Agric. Syst.
PD MAR
PY 2021
VL 188
AR 103024
DI 10.1016/j.agsy.2020.103024
EA JAN 2021
PG 15
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture
GA SA6SM
UT WOS:000649431800003
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mori, AS
   Johnson, EA
AF Mori, Akira S.
   Johnson, Edward A.
TI Assessing possible shifts in wildfire regimes under a changing climate
   in mountainous landscapes
SO FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Ecosystem-based management; Extreme drought; Future climate and fire
   scenarios; Natural disturbance; Wildfire
ID BRITISH-COLUMBIA; ECOSYSTEM MANAGEMENT; DISTURBANCE REGIMES;
   RESOURCE-MANAGEMENT; FIRE OCCURRENCE; BOREAL FOREST; FUTURE; VEGETATION;
   IMPACTS; BIODIVERSITY
AB Climate change may affect the probability of extreme events such as wildfires. Although wildfires are some of the most important ecological processes in forest ecosystems, large-scale wildfires are often perceived as an environmental disaster. Since failure to include the dynamic nature of ecosystems in planning will inevitably lead to unexpected outcomes, we need to enhance our ability to cope with future extreme events coupled with climate change. This study presents several future scenarios in three different time periods for Canada's Columbia Montane Cordillera Ecoprovince, which is prone to wildfires. These scenarios predict the probability of occurrence of widespread wildfires based on the hierarchical Bayesian model. The model was based on the relationships between wildfires and the Monthly Drought Code (MDC). The MDC is a generalized monthly version of the Daily Drought Code widely used across Canada by forest fire management agencies for monitoring of wildfire risk. To calculate future MDC values, we relied on different possible future conditions of climate, given by the Global Circulation Models. We found a regime shift in drought intensity with abrupt decreases in lightning-caused wildfire activity around 1940, suggesting that future wildfire risks can be inferred primarily from the summer drought code. For future periods, we found increasing trends in the probabilities of large-scale fires with time in most areas. It should be notable that, by the 2080s, there is a probability of some areas having more than 50% of large-scale wildfires under the "average" climatic conditions in the future, indicating that, even without "extreme" weather conditions, some ecosystems will have a fundamental probability of experiencing catastrophic fires under the condition of average summer. However, the rate of progression toward a fire-prone condition is quite different among the three climate change scenarios and among the region analyzed. Given such scenario-sensitive, spatially-heterogeneous patterns of wildfire probability in response to climate variability, management strategy should be flexible and more localized. By drawing on this knowledge, it may be possible to mitigate climate change impacts both before they arise and once they have occurred. These considerations are critical for maintaining the integrity of systems shaped by large-scale natural disturbances to increase their resilience to the changing climate while protecting human society and infrastructures. Working with alternative scenarios will facilitate our adaptation to climate change in managing fire-prone forest ecosystems. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Mori, Akira S.] Yokohama Natl Univ, Grad Sch Environm & Informat Sci, Yokohama, Kanagawa 2408501, Japan.
   [Mori, Akira S.; Johnson, Edward A.] Univ Calgary, Dept Biol Sci, Biogeosci Inst, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada.
C3 Yokohama National University; University of Calgary
RP Mori, AS (corresponding author), Yokohama Natl Univ, Grad Sch Environm & Informat Sci, 79-7 Tokiwadai, Yokohama, Kanagawa 2408501, Japan.
EM akkym@kb3.so-net.ne.jp
RI Mori, Akira/A-6570-2013
OI Mori, Akira/0000-0002-8422-1198
FU Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS); Mitsui & Co., Ltd.
   Environment Fund; JSPS Global COE Program [E03]
FX This study was funded by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
   (JSPS) and by the Mitsui & Co., Ltd. Environment Fund. ASM's implication
   for fire risk analyses is from the project at the Yokohama National
   University under the support of the JSPS Global COE Program (E03). This
   paper was written during ASM's stay at the University of Calgary under
   the researcher exchange program between the Natural Sciences and
   Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) and the JSPS. We
   acknowledge Simon Fukada and Naoko Mori in helping with this research.
   We thank editors and anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments in
   improving our manuscript.
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NR 80
TC 22
Z9 26
U1 3
U2 106
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-1127
EI 1872-7042
J9 FOREST ECOL MANAG
JI For. Ecol. Manage.
PD DEC 15
PY 2013
VL 310
BP 875
EP 886
DI 10.1016/j.foreco.2013.09.036
PG 12
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 302JO
UT WOS:000330601000091
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Ghorbani, R
   Koocheki, A
   Brandt, K
   Wilcockson, S
   Leifert, C
AF Ghorbani, Reza
   Koocheki, Alireza
   Brandt, Kirsten
   Wilcockson, Stephen
   Leifert, Carlo
BE Lichtfouse, E
TI Organic Agriculture and Food Production: Ecological, Environmental, Food
   Safety and Nutritional Quality Issues
SO SOCIOLOGY, ORGANIC FARMING, CLIMATE CHANGE AND SOIL SCIENCE
SE Sustainable Agriculture Reviews
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Organic farming; Biodiversity; Climate change; CO2; Soil carbon; N2O;
   Methane; Soil microbial biomass; Erosion; Food quality
ID GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS; CONVENTIONAL FARMING SYSTEMS; ARBUSCULAR
   MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI; SOIL MICROBIAL BIOMASS; BIOLOGICAL-CONTROL; CARBON
   SEQUESTRATION; NUTRIENT BALANCES; COMPOST EXTRACTS; DISEASE SEVERITY;
   PLANT-PATHOGENS
AB Conventional agricultural systems should not only produce much greater amounts of food, feed, fibre and energy to meet the global needs, but also challenge problems to improve health and social well-being of man, reduce dependence on fossil fuels, adapt to climate change and extreme weather, reduce environmental degradation and decline in the quality of soil, water, air and land resources throughout the world as well. The present one-dimensional physical and chemical production systems should be replaced by an agricultural paradigm that rely more on biology, ecology and sociology, and meet global food needs based on the soil, water, land and fertility resources without compromising the capacity of future generations in meeting their environmental, food and resource needs. Organic agriculture as an alternative to conventional systems of food production should contain features of agricultural systems that promote the environmentally, socially and economically sound production of food and fibre, and aim to optimize quality at all levels. The underlying principles are to minimize the use of external inputs as far as possible and use of resources and practices that enhance the balance of ecosystems and integrate components of farming systems into an ecological system. Organic agriculture is developing rapidly and the organic land area is increased by almost 1.8 million hectares compared to the consolidated data from 2005. Worldwide, in 2006, over 30.4 million hectares were managed organically by more than 700000 farms, constituting 0.65 percent of the agricultural land of the countries surveyed. Recognizing the ecological principles, self-regulating ability and system stability, agro-biodiversity, climate change and global warming soil nutrients and soil biology, erosion, nonchemical crop protection and generally agroecosystem health are the most significant ecological and environmental issues regarding production systems. Organic agriculture in farming, processing distribution or consumption is to sustain and enhance the process of food safety and health at all stages and levels of the agroecosystem in order to prevent serious food safety hazards such as pathogens like prions (BSE), allergens, mycotoxins, dioxins, GMOs, pesticide residues, growth hormones, food additives like colorants, preservatives, flavours, process aids, nitrite added to processed meat, salt, added sugar and saturated fat. There are growing evidences suggesting that organic agricultural systems produce enough quantity and quality foods and have a number of ecological, environmental and health advantages for consumers over food from conventional systems.
C1 [Ghorbani, Reza; Koocheki, Alireza] Ferdowsi Univ Mashhad, Dept Agron, Fac Agr, Mashhad, Iran.
   [Brandt, Kirsten; Wilcockson, Stephen] Univ Newcastle, Sch Agr Food & Rural Dev, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 7RU, Tyne & Wear, England.
   [Leifert, Carlo] Univ Newcastle, Sch Agr Food & Rural Dev, Nafferton Ecol Farming Grp, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE43 7XD, Tyne & Wear, England.
C3 Ferdowsi University Mashhad; Newcastle University - UK; Newcastle
   University - UK
RP Ghorbani, R (corresponding author), Ferdowsi Univ Mashhad, Dept Agron, Fac Agr, POB 91775-1163, Mashhad, Iran.
EM ghorbani43@gmail.com
RI Brandt, Kirsten/B-4707-2008; Koocheki, Alireza/G-2620-2017
OI Koocheki, Alireza/0000-0002-4820-8906
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NR 163
TC 4
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 67
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10013, UNITED STATES
SN 2210-4410
EI 2210-4429
BN 978-90-481-3332-1
J9 SUSTAIN AGR REV
JI Sustain. Agric. Rev.
PY 2010
VL 3
BP 77
EP 107
DI 10.1007/978-90-481-3333-8_4
D2 10.1007/978-90-481-3333-8
PG 31
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Environmental Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BMR95
UT WOS:000273430200004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yang, SZ
   Fang, QH
   Zhang, D
   Meilana, L
   Ikhumhen, HO
   Zhang, X
   Jiang, XY
   Lin, BD
AF Yang, Suzhen
   Fang, Qinhua
   Zhang, Dian
   Meilana, Lusita
   Ikhumhen, Harrison Odion
   Zhang, Xue
   Jiang, Xiaoyan
   Lin, Boding
TI Nature-Based Solution for Climate Change Adaptation: Coastal Habitats
   Restoration in Xiamen Bay, China
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE nature-based solutions; sea-level rise; mangrove restoration; habitat
   quality; sea use
ID LEVEL; BIODIVERSITY; OCEAN
AB Nature-based solutions (NbSs) of biodiversity conservation and ecosystem restoration have been paid increasing attention as an essential approach to slow down climate change. However, to what degree an NbS approach will contribute to the combined effects of human intervention and climate change has not been well studied. From a habitat quality perspective, we set four NbS scenarios to analyze whether the NbS-mangrove restoration in particular-will be enough for climate change in Xiamen Bay of Fujian Province, China. The habitat quality module of the InVEST model (InVEST-HQ) and the Sea Level Affecting Marshes Model (SLAMM) were used to simulate the spatial-temporal changes in habitat types and habitat quality. Results show that (1) rising sea levels will cause coastal squeeze effects, impacting habitat quality due to erosion and inundation in the study area; (2) mangrove restoration is an effective way to mitigate climate change effects and to increase habitat quality; and (3) further analysis of the effectiveness of mangrove restoration shows that the consideration of mangrove fragmentation effects and sea-use impacts are necessary. The findings in this study will enrich the international discussion of NbSs to climate change in coastal areas.
C1 [Yang, Suzhen] Minist Nat Resources, Inst Oceanog 4, Beihai 536000, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Suzhen] Minist Nat Resources, Inst Oceanog 4, Guangxi Key Lab Beibu Gulf Marine Resources Enviro, Beihai 536000, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Suzhen; Fang, Qinhua; Zhang, Dian; Ikhumhen, Harrison Odion; Zhang, Xue; Jiang, Xiaoyan; Lin, Boding] Xiamen Univ, Coll Environm & Ecol, Key Lab, Minist Educ Coastal Wetland Ecosyst, Xiamen 361102, Peoples R China.
   [Fang, Qinhua; Zhang, Dian; Ikhumhen, Harrison Odion; Zhang, Xue; Jiang, Xiaoyan; Lin, Boding] Xiamen Univ, Fujian Prov Key Lab Coastal Ecol & Environm Studie, Xiamen 361102, Peoples R China.
   [Fang, Qinhua; Ikhumhen, Harrison Odion; Lin, Boding] Xiamen Univ, Coastal & Ocean Management Inst COMI, Xiamen 361102, Peoples R China.
   [Meilana, Lusita] IPB Univ Bogor, Int Res Inst Maritime Ocean & Fisheries i MAR, Ctr Coastal & Marine Resources Studies CCRMS, Bogor 16680, West Java, Indonesia.
C3 Fourth Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources;
   Ministry of Natural Resources of the People's Republic of China; Fourth
   Institute of Oceanography, Ministry of Natural Resources; Ministry of
   Natural Resources of the People's Republic of China; Xiamen University;
   Xiamen University; Xiamen University; Bogor Agricultural University
RP Fang, QH (corresponding author), Xiamen Univ, Coll Environm & Ecol, Key Lab, Minist Educ Coastal Wetland Ecosyst, Xiamen 361102, Peoples R China.; Fang, QH (corresponding author), Xiamen Univ, Fujian Prov Key Lab Coastal Ecol & Environm Studie, Xiamen 361102, Peoples R China.; Fang, QH (corresponding author), Xiamen Univ, Coastal & Ocean Management Inst COMI, Xiamen 361102, Peoples R China.
EM yangsuzhen@4io.org.cn; qhfang@xmu.edu.cn; 33120210156492@stu.xmu.edu.cn;
   lusitameilana@xmu.edu.cn; hikhumhen@xmu.edu.cn;
   zhangxue1@stu.xmu.edu.cn; 30420200156210@stu.xmu.edu.cn;
   bdlin@stu.xmu.edu.cn
RI Ikhumhen, Harrison/AHA-1348-2022; Fang, Qinhua/G-3950-2010
OI Fang, Qinhua/0000-0003-0163-4980
FU National Key Research and Development Program of China; Scientific
   Research Fund of the Fourth Institute of Oceanography, MNR, China
   [JKF202304]; National Natural Science Foundation of China [41877515]; 
   [2022YFF0802203]
FX This research was funded by the National Key Research and Development
   Program of China (Grant No. 2022YFF0802203), the Scientific Research
   Fund of the Fourth Institute of Oceanography, MNR, China (Grant No.
   JKF202304) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant
   No. 41877515).
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NR 65
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD NOV
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 11
AR 1844
DI 10.3390/f15111844
PG 16
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA N8N4J
UT WOS:001366833300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sifuentes-Muñoz, BC
   Salazar, SA
   Golobart, YG
   Arellano-Ramos, B
AF Sifuentes-Munoz, Blanca Carolina
   Salazar, Santiago Acosta
   Golobart, Yasmina Gil
   Arellano-Ramos, Blanca
TI Climate Change Adaptation Through Urban Design: Microclimate Assessment
   in l'Eixample and La Mina, Barcelona
SO ACE-ARCHITECTURE CITY AND ENVIRONMENT
LA Spanish
DT Article
DE urban microclimate; climate change; urban resilience; ENVI-met
ID THERMAL COMFORT
AB Urban areas face increasing challenges due to climate change, such as risingtemperatures and reduced thermal comfort in public spaces. This study examines how urban design affects the microclimate and contributes to climate resilience. The research focuses on two contrasting neighborhoods in Barcelona: l'Antiga Esquerra de l'Eixample, characterized by a dense urban fabric with few public spaces and limited vegetation, and La Mina, characterized by open spaces, abundant vegetation, and dispersed buildings. In both cases, urban and climatic indicators were analyzed using remote sensing data (Landsat 8 and Sentinel 2) to calculate Land Surface Temperature (LST) and Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI). A microclimatic simulation was carried out using the ENVI-met software to evaluate parameters such as albedo, soil permeability, and vegetation type. The results show that La Mina performs better climatically due to its lower density, greater vegetation cover, and more permeable surfaces, resulting in lower temperatures and better thermal comfort. These findings highlight the importance of urban morphology, vegetation, and permeability in shaping microclimates, and underline the potential of urban design as a tool to enhance climate resilience. The conclusions of this study provide a basis for future urban design initiatives aimed at creating more sustainable and resilient cities.
C1 [Sifuentes-Munoz, Blanca Carolina] CPSV UPC, FPU, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Salazar, Santiago Acosta; Golobart, Yasmina Gil] UPC, Gest Valorac Urbana & Arquitecton, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Arellano-Ramos, Blanca] TA UPC, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Arellano-Ramos, Blanca] CPSV UPC, Barcelona, Spain.
RP Arellano-Ramos, B (corresponding author), TA UPC, Barcelona, Spain.; Arellano-Ramos, B (corresponding author), CPSV UPC, Barcelona, Spain.
EM blanca.carolina.sifuentes@upc.edu
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NR 17
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU UNIV POLITECNICA CATALUNYA
PI BARCELONA
PA AVDA DIAGONAL 649, BARCELONA, 08028, SPAIN
SN 1886-4805
J9 ACE-ARCHIT CITY ENVI
JI ACE-Archit. City Environ.
PD OCT
PY 2024
VL 19
IS 56
AR 12530
DI 10.5821/ace.19.56.12530
PG 13
WC Architecture; Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Architecture; Urban Studies
GA P9D7L
UT WOS:001380830300011
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Abishev, R
   Satyanaga, A
   Pernebekova, G
   Rahardjo, H
   Zhai, Q
   Shon, CS
   Moon, SW
   Kim, J
AF Abishev, Rezat
   Satyanaga, Alfrendo
   Pernebekova, Gulnur
   Rahardjo, Harianto
   Zhai, Qian
   Shon, Chang-Seon
   Moon, Sung-Woo
   Kim, Jong
TI Stability of soil slope in Almaty covered with steel slag under the
   effect of rainfall
SO SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
LA English
DT Article
DE Rainfall; Unsaturated soil; Slope stability; Steel slag
ID WATER CHARACTERISTIC CURVE; SHEAR-STRENGTH; CAPILLARY BARRIER;
   INFILTRATION; HYSTERESIS; EROSION; SYSTEM
AB The issue of rainfall-induced slope failure has attracted more attention from geotechnical engineers as a consequence of global warming. Current cumulative waste disposal has generated scientific interest in the utilization of waste materials in geotechnical design for climate change adaptation measures. Taking into consideration the effect of slope height and angle, steel slag-a waste product derived from the production of steel-was investigated as a slope cover against rainfall. To assess the stability of the slope and the infiltration of water into the soil, numerical analyses were conducted using both SEEP/W and SLOPE/W software in conjunction with rainfall conditions. Based on the findings, it can be concluded that increasing the slope's elevation and inclination will have an adverse effect on its safety factor. Steel slag can nevertheless be utilized for minimizing rainwater infiltration into the slope, as indicated by the pore-water pressure variations and graphs of the safety factor versus time. For a 20-m slope height, steel slag slopes have demonstrated a lower factor of safety difference in comparison to the initial slope without remediation. Regardless of slope angle and slope height, the safety factor reduces marginally during rainfall.
C1 [Abishev, Rezat; Satyanaga, Alfrendo; Pernebekova, Gulnur; Shon, Chang-Seon; Moon, Sung-Woo; Kim, Jong] Nazarbayev Univ, Sch Engn & Digital Sci, Dept Civil & Environm Enginering, 53 Kabanbay Batyr Ave, Astana 010000, Kazakhstan.
   [Rahardjo, Harianto] Nanyang Technol Univ, Sch Civil & Environm Engn, 50 Nanyang Ave, Singapore, Singapore.
   [Zhai, Qian] Southeast Univ, Sch Civil Engn, Key Lab Concrete & Prestressed Concrete Struct, Minist Educ, Nanjing 210096, Peoples R China.
C3 Nazarbayev University; Nanyang Technological University; Southeast
   University - China
RP Satyanaga, A (corresponding author), Nazarbayev Univ, Sch Engn & Digital Sci, Dept Civil & Environm Enginering, 53 Kabanbay Batyr Ave, Astana 010000, Kazakhstan.
EM alfrendo.satyanaga@nu.edu.kz
RI Satyanaga, Alfrendo/Q-9968-2018; Shon, Chang-Seon/AGG-1029-2022; Zhai,
   Qian/J-5799-2019
FU Nazarbayev University [11022021CRP1512, 11022021CRP1508]; Nazarbayev
   University, Collaborative Research Programs (CRPs)
FX This research was funded by Nazarbayev University, Collaborative
   Research Programs (CRPs) Grant No. 11022021CRP1512 and 11022021CRP1508.
   Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in
   this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect
   the views of Nazarbayev University.
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NR 82
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 4
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2045-2322
J9 SCI REP-UK
JI Sci Rep
PD APR 2
PY 2024
VL 14
IS 1
AR 7711
DI 10.1038/s41598-024-58364-5
PG 17
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA ZC4U7
UT WOS:001273086800068
PM 38565925
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Duijndam, SJ
   Botzen, WJW
   Endendijk, T
   de Moel, H
   Slager, K
   Aerts, JCJH
AF Duijndam, Sem J.
   Botzen, W. J. Wouter
   Endendijk, Thijs
   de Moel, Hans
   Slager, Kymo
   Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.
TI A look into our future under climate change? Adaptation and migration
   intentions following extreme flooding in the Netherlands
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Migration; Adaptation; Climate change; Flooding; Protection motivation
   theory; Household survey
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; DECISION-MAKING; MITIGATION BEHAVIOR; PERCEPTION;
   EXPERIENCE; INSURANCE; EMOTIONS; MODELS; THREAT
AB Worldwide, increased flood risk from climate change prompts adaptive behavior of households in situ or through migration. Both can be sensible adaptation responses involving tradeoffs, and understanding their drivers is important for effective climate policy. However, in-situ adaptation and migration are rarely studied in combination and research on how extreme events trigger adaptive behavior in originally low-risk areas is lacking. We analyze survey data from residents affected by the extreme summer floods of 2021 in the Netherlands to contribute to fill this research gap. Our results indicate that current low levels of flood-related migration are likely to increase under higher flood risk. Undertaken in-situ adaptation may act as a barrier for further insitu adaptation or migration behavior. Where in-situ adaptation is mostly related to cognitive factors including risk perceptions, response efficacy and self-efficacy, migration seems to be driven by flood-related emotions. Personal flood experience, mediated by worry, is strongly associated with both types of adaptive behavior. We discuss how policymakers can use these insights to guide and anticipate household adaptation behavior.
C1 [Duijndam, Sem J.; Botzen, W. J. Wouter; Endendijk, Thijs; de Moel, Hans; Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies IVM, De Boelelaan 1085, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, W. J. Wouter] Univ Utrecht, Sch Econ USE, Kriekenpitpl 21-22, NL-3584 EC Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Slager, Kymo; Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.] Deltares, Boussinesqweg 1, NL-2629 HV Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Utrecht University; Deltares
RP Duijndam, SJ (corresponding author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies IVM, De Boelelaan 1085, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
EM sem.duijndam@vu.nl
RI Duijndam, Sem/AAM-5554-2021; Aerts, Jeroen/M-8431-2013; de Moel,
   Hans/L-1311-2013; Botzen, Wouter/L-3123-2013
OI Endendijk, Thijs/0000-0002-6761-4707; Aerts, Jeroen/0000-0002-2162-5814;
   de Moel, Hans/0000-0002-6826-1974; Botzen, Wouter/0000-0002-8563-4963;
   Duijndam, Sem/0000-0001-6826-1563
FU European Research Council [884442]
FX This research received funding from the European Research Council
   through the ERC Advanced Grant project COASTMOVE (grant number 884442) .
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NR 81
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 5
U2 23
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 95
AR 103840
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.103840
EA JUL 2023
PG 12
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA P1XK6
UT WOS:001048639300001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tavenner, K
   Crane, TA
   Bullock, R
   Galiè, A
AF Tavenner, Katie
   Crane, Todd A.
   Bullock, Renee
   Galie, Alessandra
TI Intersectionality in gender and agriculture: toward an applied research
   design
SO GENDER TECHNOLOGY & DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Intersectionality; gender; agriculture; research design; AR4D
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; PERSPECTIVE; WOMEN; POWER
AB Applied to agricultural research for development (AR4D), intersectionality can illuminate how gender's interactions with other axes of social differentiation, such as age, assets base, marital status, race/ethnic community, and caste/class, shape the social dynamics of agricultural systems and technological change to affect gender and development outcomes. However, operationalizing an intersectional approach at both the intervention and research analysis stages of AR4D is very complex and evidence on effective approaches is currently limited. This paper advances intersectionality in AR4D by briefly providing a conceptual framework and delving into a methodological approach that illustrates how practical, applied intersectional research design can be done and how the findings can be used to improve agricultural interventions. An analysis of empirical examples of gender and intersectional approaches in AR4D demonstrates how intersectionality allows us to look beyond homogenous, binary categories of women and men to examine differences and nuances in gender analysis. We demonstrate that while gender is a useful entry point into understanding inequalities relevant to agriculture, using a holistic intersectional approach that assesses which axes of social differentiation are key, and their linkages, is necessary to deepen understanding of how diverse social factors interact and mediate people's ability to participate, benefit, and be empowered through AR4D.
C1 [Crane, Todd A.; Bullock, Renee; Galie, Alessandra] Int Livestock Inst, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 CGIAR; International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
EM tavenka05@gmail.com
RI Tavenner, Katie/L-1268-2019
OI Galie, Alessandra/0000-0001-9868-7733
FU CGIAR Fund; CGIAR Trust Fund
FX This work was implemented as part of the CGIAR Research Program on
   Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), which is carried
   out with support from CGIAR Fund Donors and through bilateral funding
   agreements. For details, please visit https://ccafs.cgiar.org/donors.
   The views expressed in this document cannot be taken to reflect the
   official opinions of these organizations. This work was conducted as
   part of the CGIAR Initiatives Livestock, Climate and System Resilience,
   and SAPLING (Sustainable Animal Productivity for Livelihoods, Nutrition,
   and Gender Inclusion), both of which are supported by contributors to
   the CGIAR Trust Fund.
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NR 62
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 13
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0971-8524
EI 0973-0656
J9 GEND TECHNOL DEV
JI Gend. Technol. Dev.
PD DEC 1
PY 2022
VL 26
IS 3
SI SI
BP 385
EP 403
DI 10.1080/09718524.2022.2140383
PG 19
WC Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA 7F0PA
UT WOS:000901558400007
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Almar, R
   Stieglitz, T
   Addo, KA
   Ba, K
   Ondoa, GA
   Bergsma, EWJ
   Bonou, F
   Dada, O
   Angnuureng, D
   Arino, O
AF Almar, Rafael
   Stieglitz, Thomas
   Addo, Kwasi Appeaning
   Ba, Kader
   Ondoa, Gregoire Abessolo
   Bergsma, Erwin W. J.
   Bonou, Frederic
   Dada, Olusegun
   Angnuureng, Donatus
   Arino, Olivier
TI Coastal Zone Changes in West Africa: Challenges and Opportunities for
   Satellite Earth Observations
SO SURVEYS IN GEOPHYSICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Satellite Earth observations; Coastal hazards; Vulnerability;
   Monitoring; Coastal zone management
ID DIGITAL ELEVATION MODEL; NIGER DELTA; SEA-LEVEL; BATHYMETRY;
   VARIABILITY; EROSION; SENEGAL; SCALE; TOPOGRAPHY; COASTLINE
AB The West African coastal population and ecosystems are increasingly exposed to a multitude of hazards. These are likely to be exacerbated by global climate change and direct impacts from local human activities. Our ability to understand coastal changes has been limited by an incomplete understanding of the processes and the difficulty of obtaining detailed data. Recent advances in satellite techniques have made it possible to obtain rich coastal data sets that provide a solid foundation for improving climate change adaptation strategies for humanity and increasing the resilience of ecosystems for sustainable development. In this article, we review West African coastal layout and current socio-environmental challenges together with key parameters that can be monitored and several coastal management programs that rely on satellite techniques to monitor indicators at the regional level. The social, technical and scientific problems and difficulties that hinder the interest of coastal practitioners and decision-makers to use the satellite data are identified. We provide a roadmap to precisely respond to these difficulties and on how an improved satellite earth observation strategy can better support future coastal zone management in West Africa.
C1 [Almar, Rafael] Univ Toulouse, CNRS, CNES, LEGOS IRD, 14 Av Edouard Belin, F-31401 Toulouse 9, France.
   [Stieglitz, Thomas] CEREGE Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS, Coll France, IRD,INRAE, Batiment Pasteur Europole Mediterraneen Arbois BP, F-13545 Aix En Provence 4, France.
   [Addo, Kwasi Appeaning] Univ Ghana, POB LG209, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
   [Ba, Kader] Univ Cheikh Anta Diop, Ch A Diop Corniche Ouest,BP 206, Dakar, Senegal.
   [Ondoa, Gregoire Abessolo] Univ Douala, Inst Fisheries & Aquat Sci, Ecosyst & Fishery Resources Lab, BP 2701, Douala, Cameroon.
   [Bergsma, Erwin W. J.] CNES, 18 Av Edouard Belin, F-31401 Toulouse 9, France.
   [Bonou, Frederic] Univ Natl Sci Technol Ingn & Math UNSTIM, Chaire Int Phys Math & Applicat CIPMA Chaire UNES, POB 50, Benin, Benin.
   [Bonou, Frederic] Inst Rech Halieut & Oceanol Benin IRHOB, 03 BP 1665, Cotonou, Benin.
   [Dada, Olusegun] Fed Univ Technol Akure, Dept Marine Sci & Tech, Akure 340110, Nigeria.
   [Angnuureng, Donatus] Univ Cape Coast, Africa Ctr Excellence Coastal Resilience, Ctr Coastal Management, Univ PO, Cape Coast, Ghana.
   [Arino, Olivier] ESA, Via Galileo Galilei 1, I-00044 Frascati, RM, Italy.
C3 Universite de Toulouse; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
   (CNRS); Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Centre
   National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Universite PSL; College de
   France; INRAE; University of Ghana; University Cheikh Anta Diop Dakar;
   University of Cape Coast
RP Almar, R (corresponding author), Univ Toulouse, CNRS, CNES, LEGOS IRD, 14 Av Edouard Belin, F-31401 Toulouse 9, France.; Arino, O (corresponding author), ESA, Via Galileo Galilei 1, I-00044 Frascati, RM, Italy.
EM rafael.almar@ird.fr; Olivier.Arino@esa.int
RI Addo, Kwasi/AAP-9556-2020; Angnuureng, Donatus/AAL-1235-2020; Almar,
   Rafael/G-7470-2018
OI Almar, Rafael/0000-0001-5842-658X; ANGNUURENG, Bapentire
   Donatus/0000-0002-7160-5811
FU JEAI IRD COASTS-UNDER-CONTROL
FX The authors are grateful to the conveners of the International Space
   Science Institute (ISSI) workshop on "Global Change in Africa," held
   from January 11 to 15, 2021, in Bern, Switzerland. The authors
   particularly thank Anny Cazenave for the early stage contributions and
   orientations of this contribution. R.A and D.A received funding from
   JEAI IRD COASTS-UNDER-CONTROL.
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NR 110
TC 31
Z9 31
U1 3
U2 17
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0169-3298
EI 1573-0956
J9 SURV GEOPHYS
JI Surv. Geophys.
PD FEB
PY 2023
VL 44
IS 1
SI SI
BP 249
EP 275
DI 10.1007/s10712-022-09721-4
EA JUL 2022
PG 27
WC Geochemistry & Geophysics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geochemistry & Geophysics
GA 9B8JU
UT WOS:000826822000001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wu, JS
   Li, XC
   Li, S
   Liu, C
   Yi, TY
   Zhao, YH
AF Wu, Jiansheng
   Li, Xuechen
   Li, Si
   Liu, Chang
   Yi, Tengyun
   Zhao, Yuhao
TI Spatial Heterogeneity and Attribution Analysis of Urban Thermal Comfort
   in China from 2000 to 2020
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE thermal environment; urban thermal comfort; spatial heterogeneity;
   geographic detector; China
ID LAND-SURFACE TEMPERATURE; HEAT-ISLAND; HOT SUMMER; ECOLOGICAL
   ENVIRONMENT; SEASONAL-VARIATIONS; GREEN SPACE; CLIMATE; IMPACT; REGION;
   LANDSCAPE
AB Research on urban thermal environments based on thermal comfort can help formulate effective measures to improve urban thermal and human settlement environments, which is of great significance for improving urban quality, urban climate change adaptation, and sustainable development. Taking 344 municipal administrative districts in China as study areas, the Universal Thermal Climate Index (UTCI) of each city in the last 20 years was calculated to evaluate thermal comfort. We then analyzed the thermal comfort and spatiotemporal heterogeneity of each city during a typical heat wave. Finally, the driving forces of the potential socioeconomic, natural, and landscape factors influencing thermal comfort were analyzed using geographic detectors. The results show that the thermal comfort index had similar spatial patterns and differentiation characteristics in different years, and the interannual variation was not obvious. Cities in the typical heat wave period were mainly distributed in East and Northwest China. The driving factor in the contribution rate of the same index in different years was basically the same and was not affected by the change in years, and the highest contribution rate was the natural factor.
C1 [Wu, Jiansheng; Li, Xuechen; Li, Si; Liu, Chang; Yi, Tengyun; Zhao, Yuhao] Peking Univ, Sch Urban Planning & Design, Key Lab Urban Habitat Environm Sci & Technol, Shenzhen 518055, Peoples R China.
   [Wu, Jiansheng; Zhao, Yuhao] Peking Univ, Coll Urban & Environm Sci, Minist Educ, Lab Earth Surface Proc, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China.
C3 Peking University; Peking University
RP Wu, JS (corresponding author), Peking Univ, Sch Urban Planning & Design, Key Lab Urban Habitat Environm Sci & Technol, Shenzhen 518055, Peoples R China.; Wu, JS (corresponding author), Peking Univ, Coll Urban & Environm Sci, Minist Educ, Lab Earth Surface Proc, Beijing 100871, Peoples R China.
EM wujs@pkusz.edu.cn; 2001212695@stu.pku.edu.cn; 1801213212@pku.edu.cn;
   clara-liu@pku.edu.cn; tengyun_yi@stu.pku.edu.cn; zhaoyh2017@pku.edu.cn
RI chang, Liu/GXN-3986-2022; Zhao, Yuhao/ABC-7605-2021
OI Zhao, Yuhao/0000-0002-9014-5259
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [42130505]
FX This study was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (No. 42130505).
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NR 78
TC 10
Z9 11
U1 15
U2 68
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD MAY
PY 2022
VL 19
IS 9
AR 5683
DI 10.3390/ijerph19095683
PG 20
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA 1G9CZ
UT WOS:000796147000001
PM 35565078
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chemke, R
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AF Chemke, Rei
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TI The Future Intensification of the North Atlantic Winter Storm Track: The
   Key Role of Dynamic Ocean Coupling
SO JOURNAL OF CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Atmosphere-ocean interaction; Dynamics; Eddies; Large-scale motions;
   General circulation models
ID ATMOSPHERIC CIRCULATION RESPONSE; EARTH SYSTEM MODEL; VARIABILITY;
   SENSITIVITY; SCENARIO; CMIP5; SST
AB Climate models project an intensification of the wintertime North Atlantic Ocean storm track, over its downstream region, by the end of this century. Previous studies have suggested that ocean-atmosphere coupling plays a key role in this intensification, but the precise role of the different components of the coupling has not been explored and quantified. In this paper, using a hierarchy of ocean coupling experiments, we isolate and quantify the respective roles of thermodynamic (changes in surface heat fluxes) and dynamic (changes in ocean heat flux convergence) ocean coupling in the projected intensification of North Atlantic transient eddy kinetic energy (TEKE). We show that dynamic coupling accounts for nearly all of the future TEKE strengthening as it overcomes the much smaller effect of surface heat flux changes to weaken the TEKE. We further show that by reducing the Arctic amplification in the North Atlantic, ocean heat flux convergence increases the meridional temperature gradient aloft, causing a larger eddy growth rate and resulting in the strengthening of North Atlantic TEKE. Our results stress the importance of better monitoring and investigating the changes in ocean heat transport, for improving climate change adaptation strategies.
C1 [Chemke, Rei] Weizmann Inst Sci, Dept Earth & Planetary Sci, Rehovot, Israel.
   [Zanna, Laure] NYU, Courant Inst Math Sci, New York, NY USA.
   [Orbe, Clara] NASA, Goddard Inst Space Studies, New York, NY 10025 USA.
   [Sentman, Lori T.] NOAA, Geophys Fluid Dynam Lab, Princeton, NJ USA.
   [Polvani, Lorenzo M.] Columbia Univ, Dept Appl Phys & Appl Math, New York, NY USA.
   [Polvani, Lorenzo M.] Columbia Univ, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, New York, NY USA.
   [Polvani, Lorenzo M.] Columbia Univ, Lamont Doherty Earth Observ, New York, NY USA.
C3 Weizmann Institute of Science; New York University; National Aeronautics
   & Space Administration (NASA); NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; Goddard
   Institute for Space Studies; National Oceanic Atmospheric Admin (NOAA) -
   USA; Columbia University; Columbia University; Columbia University
RP Chemke, R (corresponding author), Weizmann Inst Sci, Dept Earth & Planetary Sci, Rehovot, Israel.
EM rei.chemke@weizmann.ac.il; clara.orbe@nasa.gov; lori.sentman@noaa.gov
RI Zanna, Laure/L-3169-2019; Sentman, Lori/D-4402-2014
OI Zanna, Laure/0000-0002-8472-4828
FU Israeli Science Foundation [906/21]
FX We are grateful to Ivan Mitevski for analyzing the GISS ModelE data.
   Author Chemke is supported by the Israeli Science Foundation Grant
   906/21.
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NR 40
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 5
PU AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
PI BOSTON
PA 45 BEACON ST, BOSTON, MA 02108-3693 USA
SN 0894-8755
EI 1520-0442
J9 J CLIMATE
JI J. Clim.
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 35
IS 8
BP 2407
EP 2421
DI 10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0407.1
PG 15
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 1Z0KZ
UT WOS:000808524500006
OA Bronze, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Garibay-Chávez, MG
   Curiel-Ballesteros, A
AF Garibay-Chavez, M. G.
   Curiel-Ballesteros, A.
TI Demands to the health sector front the manifestations of climate change
   in Jalisco
SO REVISTA BIO CIENCIAS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; vulnerability; temperature extremes;
   mortality; morbidity
ID HEAT; TEMPERATURE; WEATHER; ILLNESS; CITY
AB Climate change has triggered health hazards that need to be identified and recognized in Jalisco state. A confirmed threat is the extreme maximum temperatures that lead to a necessary diagnosis of vulnerability and risk as a basis for the design and implementation of adaptation measures to current and future manifestations. The demands of attention of the health sector have increased since the period of time where there is the probability of presenting extreme temperatures and heat waves has increased from two months considered as normal to four months at present with an increase in mortality due to cardiovascular diseases and morbidity due to gastrointestinal infections, likewise, the temperature has increased by two months which promotes the increase of the population of mosquitoes that transmit dengue fever. The above requires a response from the health sector, not only in hospital care, but also in the prevention of exposure through an early warning system in the presence of danger with an evaluation of such communication strategies to break and reverse the increase in damage to the health of the Jalisco state inhabitants, particularly the Tlaquepaque, Zapopan, Tonala, Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta urban areas which turned out to be the most vulnerable to climate change in Jalisco.
C1 [Garibay-Chavez, M. G.; Curiel-Ballesteros, A.] Univ Guadalajara, Inst Medio Ambiente & Comunidades Humanas, Programa Salud Ambiental, Camino Ramon Padilla Sanchez 2100, Zapopan 45200, Jalisco, Mexico.
C3 Universidad de Guadalajara
RP Curiel-Ballesteros, A (corresponding author), Univ Guadalajara, Cuerpo Acad Salud Ambiental & Desarrollo Sustenta, Camino Ramon Padilla Sanchez 2100, Zapopan 45200, Jalisco, Mexico.
EM arturoc@redudg.udg.mx
OI GARIBAY CHAVEZ, MARIA GUADALUPE/0000-0001-7918-3900
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NR 48
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 5
PU UNIV AUTONOMA NAYARIT
PI NAYARIT
PA UNIV AUTONOMA NAYARIT, NAYARIT, 00000, MEXICO
SN 2007-3380
J9 REV BIO CIENC
JI Rev. Bio Cienc.
PY 2021
VL 8
AR e884
DI 10.15741/revbio.08.e884
PG 21
WC Biology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
GA SZ5EU
UT WOS:000666589300004
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lane, D
   Beigzadeh, S
   Moll, R
AF Lane, Daniel
   Beigzadeh, Shima
   Moll, Richard
TI Adaptation Decision Support: An Application of System Dynamics Modeling
   in Coastal Communities
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Canada; Charlottetown; Climate change adaptation; Coastal community
   resilience; Coastal community vulnerability; System dynamics model
AB This research develops and applies a system dynamics (SD) model for the strategic evaluation of environmental adaptation options for coastal communities. The article defines and estimates asset-based measures for community vulnerability, resilience, and adaptive capacity with respect to the environmental, economic, social, and cultural pillars of the coastal community under threat. The SD model simulates the annual multidimensional dynamic impacts of severe coastal storms and storm surges on the community pillars under alternative adaptation strategies. The calculation of the quantitative measures provides valuable information for decision makers for evaluating the alternative strategies. The adaptation strategies are designed model results illustrated for the specific context of the coastal community of Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada. The dynamic trend of the measures and model sensitivity analyses for Charlottetown-facing increased frequency of severe storms, storm surges, and sea-level rise-provide impetus for enhanced community strategic planning for the changing coastal environment. This research is presented as part of the International Community-University Research Alliance C-Change project "Managing Adaptation to Environmental Change in Coastal Communities: Canada and the Caribbean" sponsored by the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada and the International Development Resource Centre.
C1 [Lane, Daniel; Beigzadeh, Shima] ICURA, C Change, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada.
   [Lane, Daniel; Moll, Richard] Univ Ottawa, Telfer Sch Management, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada.
C3 University of Ottawa
RP Lane, D (corresponding author), ICURA, C Change, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada.; Lane, D (corresponding author), Univ Ottawa, Telfer Sch Management, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada.
EM dlane@uOttawa.ca
FU Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada;
   International Development Research Centre (IDRC)
FX The authors acknowledge with thanks their involvement in the
   community-based University of Ottawa EnRiCH project
   (http://www.enrichproject.ca/), led by Dr. Tracey O'Sullivan of the
   Interdisciplinary Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, and
   the "C-Change'' International Community-University Research Alliance
   (ICURA) (http://www.coastalchange.ca) funded by the Social Sciences and
   Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada, and the International
   Development Research Centre (IDRC). Particular thanks to research
   administrators, students, and community partners. Special thanks to
   EnRiCH International for stimulating the work, and to the C-Change
   Community Partners at the City of Charlottetown. The details of the
   STELLA system dynamics model are available on request to the authors.
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NR 39
TC 10
Z9 11
U1 0
U2 33
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 2095-0055
EI 2192-6395
J9 INT J DISAST RISK SC
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Sci.
PD DEC
PY 2017
VL 8
IS 4
BP 374
EP 389
DI 10.1007/s13753-017-0154-5
PG 16
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA FQ6GG
UT WOS:000418461200004
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dzebo, A
   Stripple, J
AF Dzebo, Adis
   Stripple, Johannes
TI Transnational adaptation governance: An emerging fourth era of
   adaptation
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation governance; Climate change; Transnational governance; Climate
   finance; Global Environment Facility
ID CLIMATE GOVERNANCE; PRIVATE-SECTOR; COUNTRIES; CITIES
AB Climate change adaptation, which has previously been seen as a national and local matter, is today systematically addressed by international institutions such as the UNFCCC, the FAO and the WTO. Research has focused on the overarching institutional architecture of global adaptation, particularly how it relates to development, political economy, efficiency and equity. In contrast to the transnational dimension of climate mitigation, the transnationalization of adaptation governance has received scant attention. By creating a dataset of adaptation projects, we examine transnational adaptation governance in terms of its scope, institutionalization and main functions. We find transnational adaptation governance to be firmly anchored within the UNFCCC, but a recent change towards adaptation governed by a transnational constituency can be identified. When non-state actors become integral to the project of governing adaptation, a 'fourth era' of adaption seems to be emerging. This new era is not replacing other forms of governing, but is emerging alongside and in a complementary fashion. In the 'fourth era', adaptation is increasingly governed globally and transnationally, and the attention is turned toward 'softer' forms of governance such as agenda setting, information sharing and capacity building. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Dzebo, Adis] Stockholm Environm Inst, Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Stripple, Johannes] Lund Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Lund, Sweden.
C3 Stockholm Environment Institute; Lund University
RP Dzebo, A (corresponding author), Stockholm Environm Inst, Stockholm, Sweden.
EM adis.dzebo@sei-international.org; johannes.stripple@svet.lu.se
FU Swedish Research Council Formas; Swedish Research Council
   Vetenskapsradet
FX This research is funded by the Swedish Research Council Formas and the
   Swedish Research Council Vetenskapsradet.
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NR 67
TC 32
Z9 42
U1 2
U2 34
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD NOV
PY 2015
VL 35
BP 423
EP 435
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.10.006
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA CZ0AI
UT WOS:000366767100038
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Linnerooth-Bayer, J
   Dubel, A
   Sendzimir, J
   Hochrainer-Stigler, S
AF Linnerooth-Bayer, Joanne
   Dubel, Anna
   Sendzimir, Jan
   Hochrainer-Stigler, Stefan
TI Challenges for mainstreaming climate change into EU flood and drought
   policy: Water retention measures in the Warta River Basin, Poland
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Water resource management; Water framework
   directive; Flood directive; Common agricultural policy; Reservoirs;
   Ponds; Conservation tillage; Climate attribution; Robust policy
ID PROJECTIONS; FUTURE; EUROPE
AB This paper discusses four challenges for mainstreaming climate change into European flood and drought risk management policies within the water and agriculture sectors: the climate change impact challenge; the robust policy challenge; the EU policy maze challenge; and the implementation challenge. We illustrate with examples from the Warta River Basin in Poland. The challenge of reliably estimating the impact of climate change on flood and drought risk at the local and regional scales has led to the pursuit of robust policy solutions. Robust policy solutions, as we demonstrate by comparing reservoirs and small ponds, can be equally intractable given the lack of information on their costs, benefits, and co-benefits, particularly if climate change is taken into account. The mainstreaming challenge is further complicated by the myriad of EU policies targeting flood and drought risks. While the European Commission is working towards a coherent policy picture, we demonstrate contradictions regarding reservoir and other water retention policies. Finally, mainstreaming climate change in flood and drought policy is further challenged by the web of responsible institutions at local, regional, and national scales.
C1 [Linnerooth-Bayer, Joanne; Sendzimir, Jan; Hochrainer-Stigler, Stefan] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
   [Dubel, Anna] AGH Univ Sci & Technol, PL-30059 Krakow, Poland.
C3 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); AGH
   University of Krakow
RP Linnerooth-Bayer, J (corresponding author), Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Schlosspl 1, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
EM bayer@iiasa.ac.at; adubel@zarz.agh.edu.pl; sendzim@iiasa.ac.at;
   hochrain@iiasa.ac.at
OI Bayer, Joanne/0000-0003-3084-2471; Hochrainer-Stigler,
   Stefan/0000-0002-9929-8171
FU European Commission [224092]
FX The work described in this paper was supported by the project RESPONSES
   "European Responses to Climate Change" under Grant Agreement No. 224092
   in the 7th Framework Programme of the European Commission. This support
   is gratefully acknowledged.
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NR 22
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 3
U2 38
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD AUG
PY 2015
VL 15
IS 6
SI SI
BP 1011
EP 1023
DI 10.1007/s10113-014-0643-7
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CN2ZY
UT WOS:000358294000006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chong, J
AF Chong, Joanne
TI Climate-readiness, competition and sustainability: an analysis of the
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SO WATER POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Competition; Economics; Planning;
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ID URBAN WATER; REFORM
AB This paper examines whether key legislative and regulatory frameworks for the provision of water services in Sydney, Australia, successfully support the complex task of planning and managing urban water systems to balance water security, cost and sustainability considerations. The challenges of managing urban water systems under a changing and uncertain climate became starkly apparent during Australia's 'Millennium Drought', a decade-long period of extremely dry conditions throughout the 2000s. As the drought progressed, several state and territory governments assumed control of planning and approvals processes in order to implement large water-supply infrastructure projects with great urgency. However, at the end of the decade La Nina rains saturated catchments, spilled over dam walls and devastated several communities with flooding. Analysis of the frameworks for third-party access, private-sector participation, planning, and water-conservation initiatives reveals that the rules, roles and responsibilities of the many actors are interlinked but not always effectively integrated. The introduction and expansion of competition in the urban water industry are an ongoing experiment with great influence on the governance of the sector and the ways in which water services are planned for and provided.
C1 Univ Technol Sydney, Inst Sustainable Futures, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia.
C3 University of Technology Sydney
RP Chong, J (corresponding author), Univ Technol Sydney, Inst Sustainable Futures, POB 123,Broadway, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia.
EM joanne.chong@uts.edu.au
OI Chong, Joanne/0000-0001-9035-2277
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NR 57
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 33
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 1366-7017
EI 1996-9759
J9 WATER POLICY
JI Water Policy
PY 2014
VL 16
IS 1
BP 1
EP 18
DI 10.2166/wp.2013.058
PG 18
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA AF1WU
UT WOS:000334505400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kienberger, S
   Blaschke, T
   Zaidi, RZ
AF Kienberger, Stefan
   Blaschke, Thomas
   Zaidi, Rukhe Zehra
TI A framework for spatio-temporal scales and concepts from different
   disciplines: the 'vulnerability cube'
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Scale; Risk; Vulnerability assessment; GIScience; Integrated methods
ID SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; REFLECTIONS; HAZARDS
AB The concept of vulnerability is increasingly used in the fields of disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation, as well as socioeconomic studies. This paper reviews research inputs into the concept of vulnerability and highlights the challenges of resolving its spatial and temporal variability with building resilience and adaptation. We hypothesise that a clear understanding of scale is key to integrating these related issues, by differentiating three dimensions of scale when analysing relationships between the observed and the intrinsic scale of a given phenomenon, namely space, time and dimensional level. The paper analyses 20 vulnerability assessment approaches, ranging from the global down to the local scale, and positions them with regard to their integration of the spatial component. We then develop a vulnerability cube as a framework to position existing approaches and to map them in a three-dimensional space. The three axes represent space, time and dimension and provide a structure for the different notions of scales and ultimately for a spatial analysis workflow. The vulnerability cube framework helps us to position different vulnerability assessments and to identify overlaps, differences and specific characteristics. Additionally, this three-dimensional conceptualisation allows the identification and discussion of appropriate scaling issues.
C1 [Kienberger, Stefan; Blaschke, Thomas] Salzburg Univ, Interfac Dept Geoinformat, Z GIS, A-5020 Salzburg, Austria.
   [Zaidi, Rukhe Zehra] Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, Hazards & Risk Res Grp, London WC2R 2LS, England.
C3 Salzburg University; University of London; King's College London
RP Kienberger, S (corresponding author), Salzburg Univ, Interfac Dept Geoinformat, Z GIS, Schillerstr 30, A-5020 Salzburg, Austria.
EM stefan.kienberger@sbg.ac.at; thomas.blaschke@sbg.ac.at;
   zehra.zaidi@kcl.ac.uk
RI Blaschke, Thomas/F-3342-2011
OI Kienberger, Stefan/0000-0002-4800-4516; Zaidi, R
   Zehra/0000-0002-3852-3080; Blaschke, Thomas/0000-0002-1860-8458
FU Munich Re Foundation; European Community [FP7-211590]
FX This research leading to this paper has received funding through the
   Munich Re Foundation and the European Community's Seventh Framework
   Programme under Grant Agreement Number FP7-211590 (MOVE-Methods for the
   Improvement of Vulnerability Assessment in Europe;
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NR 95
TC 36
Z9 42
U1 0
U2 77
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD SEP
PY 2013
VL 68
IS 3
BP 1343
EP 1369
DI 10.1007/s11069-012-0513-x
PG 27
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA 221JI
UT WOS:000324653900008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ji, YL
   Xu, YZ
   Sun, XY
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AF Ji, Yalan
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   Li, Zhong
TI Optimization of sowing dates for enhanced rice yield: insights from
   field experiments in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River,
   China
SO BMC PLANT BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Indica rice; Temperature use efficiency; Solar radiation use efficiency;
   Grain yield; China
ID GRAIN-YIELD; SOLAR-RADIATION; TEMPERATURE; STAGE; DURATION; QUALITY;
   STRESS
AB An efficacious strategy to adapt to climate change involves optimizing the planting season, a technique that has been extensively utilized to enhance the use of solar radiation and temperature resources in rice cultivation. Field experiments were executed in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, China, employing three distinct rice cultivars and seven disparate sowing periods spanning 2019 to 2021. The objective of assessing the impact of sowing date on apparent radiation use efficiency (RUEA), accumulated temperature use efficiencies (TUE), and overall rice yield. Subsequent to the delay of sowing dates, the duration of the comprehensive growth period initially exhibited a declining trajectory before subsequently escalating, with the reduction predominantly ascribed to a decrease in the number of days preceding heading. Furthermore, there was a tendency for both the mean daily and effective cumulative solar radiation to decline over the course of the growing period. The yield of the three rice varieties demonstrated an initial surge, which was then followed by a subsequent decline in reaction to the delay of sowing dates. A correlation analysis disclosed that solar radiation and effective cumulative temperature (EAT) were the predominant elements impacting grain yield. The outcomes of the path analysis indicate that EAT exerts the most substantial influence on yield, succeeded by cumulative total solar radiation (TSR), while photothermal quotient (PTQ) demonstrates the least impact on yield. There was a significant positive correlation between EAT and cumulative TSR with spikelets per panicle (0.237** and 0.218**), grain filling (0.753** and 0.576**), and grain weight (0.339** and 0.359**), respectively. The findings of this study indicate that an increase in yield is facilitated when the EAT after heading exceeds 594.9 degrees C, the EAT surpasses 2016.7 degrees C, the cumulative TSR before heading is above 1548.7 MJ m- 2, the cumulative TSR after heading is over 603.0 MJ m- 2, and the cumulative total radiation throughout the entire growth period is more than 2151.8 MJ m- 2. Furthermore, the most optimal sowing date, as identified by this study, is June 6. This study provides key insights into boosting rice productivity in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, China by analyzing the impact of temperature and solar radiation on yield and identifying optimal growth conditions.Clinical trial number Not applicable.
C1 [Ji, Yalan; Zou, Huawen] Yangtze Univ, Coll Agr, Jingzhou 434000, Hubei, Peoples R China.
   [Ji, Yalan; Xu, Youzun; Sun, Xueyuan; Hassan, Muhammad Ahmad; Zhou, Yongjin; Li, Zhong] Anhui Acad Agr Sci, Rice Res Inst, Hefei 230031, Anhui, Peoples R China.
C3 Yangtze University; Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences
RP Zou, HW (corresponding author), Yangtze Univ, Coll Agr, Jingzhou 434000, Hubei, Peoples R China.; Li, Z (corresponding author), Anhui Acad Agr Sci, Rice Res Inst, Hefei 230031, Anhui, Peoples R China.
EM zouhuawen@yangtzeu.edu.cn; lizhong021@126.com
RI Yongjin, Zhou/IVU-7565-2023
FU the Young Talents Program of the Anhui Academy of Agricultural Sciences
   [QNYC-201904]; Young Talents Program of the Anhui Academy of
   Agricultural Sciences [2022YFD2301402]; National Key Research and
   Development Program of China
FX This work was supported by the Young Talents Program of the Anhui
   Academy of Agricultural Sciences (QNYC-201904), the National Key
   Research and Development Program of China (2022YFD2301402).
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NR 42
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 6
U2 6
PU BMC
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1471-2229
J9 BMC PLANT BIOL
JI BMC Plant Biol.
PD OCT 28
PY 2024
VL 24
IS 1
AR 1011
DI 10.1186/s12870-024-05729-7
PG 14
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA K4O3Y
UT WOS:001343681900002
PM 39465379
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gao, B
   Huang, W
   Xue, XB
   Hu, YC
   Huang, YF
   Wang, L
   Ding, SP
   Cui, SH
AF Gao, Bing
   Huang, Wei
   Xue, Xiaobo
   Hu, Yuanchao
   Huang, Yunfeng
   Wang, Lan
   Ding, Shengping
   Cui, Shenghui
TI Comprehensive Environmental Assessment of Potato as Staple Food Policy
   in China
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE substitution ratio; chemical fertilizer inputs; irrigation-water use;
   total GHG emission; nutrient reference values
ID ALTERNATIVE CROPPING SYSTEMS; GREENHOUSE-GAS; USE EFFICIENCY; NITROGEN;
   WATER; YIELD; PRODUCTIVITY; IMPACTS; BALANCE; MAIZE
AB The Chinese government projected 30% of total consumed potatoes as a staple food (PSF) by 2020. We comprehensively assessed the potential impacts of PSF on rice and flour consumption, rice and wheat planting, energy and nutrient supply, irrigation-water, chemical nitrogen (N), phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5) and potassium oxide (K2O) fertilizer inputs and total greenhouse gases (GHG) emission for potatoes, rice and wheat, by assuming different proportions of potato substitutes for rice and flour. The results showed that per capita, 2.9 +/- 0.3 and 4.7 +/- 0.5 kg more potatoes per year would enter the Chinese staple-food diet, under the government's target. PSF consumed are expected to reach 5.2 +/- 0.7 Tg yr(-1), equivalent to substituting potatoes for 4.2 +/- 0.8-8.5 +/- 0.8 Tg yr(-1) wheat and 5.1 +/- 0.9-10.1 +/- 1.8 Tg yr(-1) rice under different scenarios. While this substitution can increase the nutrient supply index by 63% towards nutrient reference values, it may induce no significant effect on staple-food energy supply with lower chemical fertilizer (except for K2O) and irrigation-water inputs and GHG emissions in different substitution scenarios than the business as usual scenario. The reduction in rice and wheat demands lead to wheat in the North China Plain and early rice decrease by 6.1-11.4% and 12.1-24.1%, respectively. The total GHG reduction is equal to 1.1-9.0% of CO2 equivalent associated with CH4 and N2O emitted from the Chinese agroecosystem in 2005. The saved irrigation water for three crops compared to 2012 reaches the total water use of 17.9 +/- 4.9-21.8 +/- 5.9 million people in 2015. More N fertilizer, irrigation-water, and GHG can be reduced, if the PSF ratio is increased to 50% together with potato yield improves to the optimal level. Our results implied that the PSF policy is worth doing not only because of the healthier diets, but also to mitigate resource inputs and GHG emissions and it also supports agricultural structure adjustments in the areas of irrigated wheat on the North China Plain and early rice across China, designed to increase the adaptability to climate change.
C1 [Gao, Bing; Huang, Wei; Hu, Yuanchao; Wang, Lan; Ding, Shengping; Cui, Shenghui] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Urban Environm, Key Lab Urban Environm & Hlth, Xiamen 361021, Fujian, Peoples R China.
   [Gao, Bing; Hu, Yuanchao; Cui, Shenghui] Xiamen Key Lab Urban Metab, Xiamen 361021, Fujian, Peoples R China.
   [Huang, Wei; Wang, Lan; Ding, Shengping] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.
   [Xue, Xiaobo] SUNY Albany, Dept Environm Hlth Sci, Albany, NY 12144 USA.
   [Huang, Yunfeng] Jimei Univ, Sch Biotechnol Engn, Xiamen 361021, Fujian, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Urban Environment, CAS;
   Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,
   CAS; State University of New York (SUNY) System; University at Albany,
   SUNY; Jimei University
RP Cui, SH (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Urban Environm, Key Lab Urban Environm & Hlth, Xiamen 361021, Fujian, Peoples R China.; Cui, SH (corresponding author), Xiamen Key Lab Urban Metab, Xiamen 361021, Fujian, Peoples R China.
EM shcui@iue.ac.cn
RI Huang, Wei/L-7090-2019; Gao, Bing/AAV-1324-2021; Ding,
   Shengping/GZK-2694-2022; Cui, shenghui/B-3926-2008
OI Huang, Wei/0000-0003-0639-9887; Hu, Yuanchao/0000-0002-1965-5395
FU Young Talents Projects of the Institute of Urban Environment, Chinese
   Academy of Sciences [IUEMS201402]; National Natural Science Foundation
   of China [71704171]; National Basic Research Program of China
   [2014CB953801]; International (regional) cooperation and exchange
   programs; National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC-JPI_UE)
   [7181101187]
FX This research was funded by the Young Talents Projects of the Institute
   of Urban Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences (IUEMS201402), the
   International (regional) cooperation and exchange programs, the National
   Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC-JPI_UE, 7181101187), the
   National Natural Science Foundation of China (71704171), and the
   National Basic Research Program of China (2014CB953801).
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NR 56
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 5
U2 52
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD AUG 1
PY 2019
VL 16
IS 15
AR 2700
DI 10.3390/ijerph16152700
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA IS4MU
UT WOS:000482128400069
PM 31362347
OA Green Submitted, gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Henderson, B
   Cacho, O
   Thornton, P
   van Wijk, M
   Herrero, M
AF Henderson, Benjamin
   Cacho, Oscar
   Thornton, Philip
   van Wijk, Mark
   Herrero, Mario
TI The economic potential of residue management and fertilizer use to
   address climate change impacts on mixed smallholder farmers in Burkina
   Faso
SO AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
ID FOOD SECURITY; LAND-USE; CROP; SYSTEMS; VULNERABILITY
AB There are large yield gaps in the mixed smallholder farming systems of Africa, with limited opportunities to sustainably increase productivity and adapt to climate change. In this study, the ex-ante potential of residue retention and fertilization measures to meet this challenge is assessed using a positive mathematical programming (PMP) model. This micro-economic model captures decision making at the farm level for a sample population in Northern Burkina Faso for the 2010 to 2045 simulation period. In contrast to previous studies of mixed farms in this area, we model each individual farm in the sample population, instead of one or a small number of representative farms. We are therefore able identify groups of farms for which each measure is profitable, applied either individually or as a combined package. This approach also enables simulation of the economic impacts from indiscriminate applications of the measures or "smart" applications which are restricted to the farms that profit from the measures. Our findings are aligned with other studies showing that residue retention causes trade-offs between crop and livestock production, while fertilization can synergistically raise returns to both production activities. The annual profit losses from the "middle of the road" RCP6 trajectory of climate change assumed in this study were estimated to reach 15% by 2045. The smart package of measures increased aggregate profit the most, although not by nearly enough to claw back the losses from climate change. The fertilizer measures were the next most profitable, with indiscriminately applied residue retention being the only measure to reduce aggregate profit relative to this climate change baseline. Importantly, the measures that are the most profitable at the aggregate level are not necessarily those that would be the most widely adopted. For example, residue retention is profitable for a larger share of the sample population than fertilization. The advantage of the population scale analysis used in this study is that it prevents measures such as residue retention, which can benefit a significant share of farms, from being disregarded by practitioners because they appear to be unprofitable at the aggregate level or when viewed through the lens of an average representative farm. Finally, amidst the growing emphasis of studies on the benefits of packages compared to individual measures, the findings from this study are more equivocal about this choice, suggesting that extension programs should have the flexibility to apply measures individually or as a package.
C1 [Henderson, Benjamin; Herrero, Mario] CSIRO, Queensland Biosci Precinct, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
   [Henderson, Benjamin; Cacho, Oscar] Univ New England, Business Sch, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
   [van Wijk, Mark] ILRI, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Thornton, Philip] ILRI, CGIAR Res Program Climate Change Agr & Food Secur, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   University of New England; CGIAR; International Livestock Research
   Institute (ILRI); CGIAR; International Livestock Research Institute
   (ILRI)
RP Henderson, B (corresponding author), CSIRO, Queensland Biosci Precinct, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
EM bhender8@myune.edu.au; ocacho@une.edu.au; p.thornton@cgiar.org;
   m.vanwijk@cgiar.org; mario.herrero@csiro.au
RI Thornton, Philip/AAB-8806-2020; Cacho, Oscar/F-3012-2011; Herrero,
   Mario/A-6678-2015
OI Cacho, Oscar/0000-0002-1542-4442; Herrero, Mario/0000-0002-7741-5090;
   Thornton, Philip/0000-0002-1854-0182
FU CGIAR Trust Fund
FX Philip Thornton's input was implemented as part of the CGIAR Research
   Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), which
   is carried out with support from the CGIAR Trust Fund and through
   bilateral funding agreements. For details please visit
   https://ccafs.cgiar.org/donors.The views expressed here cannot be taken
   to reflect the official opinions of these organizations.
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NR 40
TC 14
Z9 16
U1 1
U2 9
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0308-521X
EI 1873-2267
J9 AGR SYST
JI Agric. Syst.
PD NOV
PY 2018
VL 167
BP 195
EP 205
DI 10.1016/j.agsy.2018.09.012
PG 11
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture
GA GZ1MO
UT WOS:000449132400018
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Wellens, P
   van Schijndel, S
   Breteler, MK
AF Wellens, Peter
   van Schijndel, Simone
   Breteler, Mark Klein
CA HYDRALAB Consortium
BE Zhaoyin, W
   Lee, JHW
   Jizhang, G
   Shuyou, C
TI Water in a Living Environment; Experimental Hydraulic Research to
   Support Adaptation to a Changing Climate
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 35TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, VOLS III AND IV
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 35th World Congress of the
   International-Association-for-Hydro-Environment-Engineering-and-Research
   (IAHR)
CY SEP 08-13, 2013
CL Int Assoc Hydro Environm Engn & Res, Chengdu, PEOPLES R CHINA
SP Minist Water Resources, China Inst Water Resources & Hydropower Res, Sichuan Univ, Tsinghua Univ, Univ Hong Kong, Chengdu Municipal Peoples Govt
HO Int Assoc Hydro Environm Engn & Res
DE Hydraulic Experiment; European Coordination; Hydraulic Experimental
   Facilities
AB Sea level rise and increasing storminess will likely result in the intensification of coastal zone erosion, which will, in turn, affect the safety against floods and produce changes in coastal ecology. Furthermore, increases in summer rainfall intensities over northern Europe will also increase the likelihood of pluvial flooding and result in changes to river and estuarine ecology, influencing food security and sustainable agriculture. The observed changes in sea ice on the Arctic Ocean and in the mass of the Greenland Ice Sheet, Arctic ice caps and glaciers over the past ten years are dramatic. The impact of renewable energy devices on our environment can also not be ignored and needs investigation, since society needs these innovative devices for clean and effective energy when adapting to climate change. It is evident that an informed management and use of our water resources and environment is essential to human well-being, and a pre-requisite to the development of advanced innovative technologies. To find solutions for these problems research in our hydraulic research infrastructures needs to go beyond just hydraulics and needs to focus more and more on complex questions regarding the interaction of water with other elements. These topics require more than just numerical modelling and really need research in special purpose, and therefore, often unique and costly research infrastructures. The use of research infrastructures and the development of instrumentation and tools within the field of environmental hydraulics are an essential part of the tools available to study these issues. This paper describes how we coordinate research in Europe in the field of experimental hydraulics by means of the HYDRALAB network. HYDRALAB supports the integrated provision of infrastructure related services to the environmental hydraulic research community at a European level, and harmonizes and optimizes the coherent use and development of the best infrastructures. It ensures that Europe keeps its position at the forefront of experimental hydraulic research and has a strong focus on combining the knowledge of experienced researchers with new ideas from the next generation of researchers and innovative market players all around the world. This coordination allows us to deal with the future infrastructure requirements of the next generation of engineers and scientists working within the broad field of environmental hydraulics in order to solve the above mentioned issues. Anticipation of those requirements is essential if we are to respond in a timely fashion to the challenges that society faces as freshwater and marine systems respond to climate change.
C1 [Wellens, Peter; van Schijndel, Simone; Breteler, Mark Klein] Deltares, POB 177, NL-2600 MH Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Deltares
RP Wellens, P (corresponding author), Deltares, POB 177, NL-2600 MH Delft, Netherlands.
EM hydralab@deltares.nl
RI Wellens, Peter/H-6380-2018
CR Ramachandran K, 2013, PROCEEDINGS OF THE 35TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, VOLS III AND IV
   Sanchez Arcilla A., 2013, P IAHR 2013
   Sutherland J., 2013, P IAHR 2013
   Thomas R., 2013, P IAHR 2013
   Van Os A, 2004, J HYDRAUL RES, V42, P341, DOI 10.1080/00221686.2004.9641203
NR 5
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 7
PU TSINGHUA UNIV
PI BEIJING
PA DEPT BUILDING SCI, SCH ARCHITECTURE, SECRETARIAT ISHVAC07, BEIJING,
   100084, PEOPLES R CHINA
BN 978-7-302-33544-3
PY 2013
PG 10
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA BE3AJ
UT WOS:000370410303004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Hamlet, AF
AF Hamlet, AF
BE Diaz, HF
   Morehouse, BJ
TI The role of transboundary agreements in the Columbia River Basin - An
   integrated assessment in the context of historic development, climate,
   and evolving water policy
SO CLIMATE AND WATER: TRANSBOUNDARY CHALLENGES IN THE AMERICAS
SE ADVANCES IN GLOBAL CHANGE RESEARCH
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Symposium on Climate and Water
CY JUL 16-20, 2000
CL SANTA BARBARA, CA
SP Natl Ocean & Atmospher Adm Off Global Programs
ID PACIFIC-NORTHWEST; MANAGEMENT; RESOURCES; SALMON; ENSO; IMPACTS
AB The historical development of the Columbia River Basin and its current reservoir operating policies has been strongly influenced by transboundary agreements between Canada and the United States, and particularly by the Columbia River Treaty (CRT) (1964) and adjunct agreements. Following this agreement, a number of major storage dams were built in Canada and the US, and an emphasis on flood control and winter hydropower production became the dominant water resources objectives in the main stem of the Columbia. The development of the basin for these purposes (and extensive irrigation in some sub-basins) has resulted in pronounced changes in the natural flow regime in the river, and corresponding ecological problems associated with degraded instream habitat that have yet to be resolved. The basin's operating policies are shown to more fully isolate human systems from climate variability than they do other uses of water in the basin, despite federal legislation calling for equal priority between hydropower and fish, and recent efforts to change the operating policies in the face of Endangered Species Act (ESA) listings of salmon and other endangered fish. Vulnerability of the current management system to low-flow conditions, inability to meet all objectives simultaneously in low-flow conditions, and the conflicting constraints of many existing agreements (among them the CRT), make changes to the basin's operating policies problematic.
   Climate change, which is likely to reduce summer water availability due to changes in snowpack and the seasonality of natural streamflows, may exacerbate the existing weaknesses in the Columbia's operating policies and management framework, and is likely to create tensions between Canada and the United States in the context of maintaining Summer instream flows. The Canadian snowfields in the basin are largely insulated from temperature-related changes in snowpack for the scenarios examined, whereas some areas of the United States are much more strongly affected, particularly in the southern part of the basin. The CRT may be both an obstacle and a means to effective adaptation to climate change in the basin. For example, the CRT may add to the United States's vulnerability to summer low-flow conditions by inhibiting what was once natural flow across the border; however, the CRT could also potentially facilitate the transfer of water from Canadian storage in summer via changes in the existing seasonality of hydropower production.
C1 Univ Washington, Joint Inst Study Atmosphere & Oceans, Climate Impacts Grp, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
C3 University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle
RP Hamlet, AF (corresponding author), Univ Washington, Joint Inst Study Atmosphere & Oceans, Climate Impacts Grp, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
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NR 28
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 12
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
BN 1-4020-1529-1
J9 ADV GLOB CHANGE RES
PY 2003
VL 16
BP 263
EP 289
PG 27
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA BX89Y
UT WOS:000186761600012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Howkins, J
   Schmidt, DN
   Thomas, J
   Hayward, R
   Lo, YTE
   Neal, J
   Lewis, J
   Carruthers, E
   Coleborn, S
   Murray, V
   Oliver, I
AF Howkins, J.
   Schmidt, Daniela N.
   Thomas, James
   Hayward, Robert
   Lo, Y. T. Eunice
   Neal, Jeffrey
   Lewis, James
   Carruthers, Elspeth
   Coleborn, Samuel
   Murray, Virginia
   Oliver, Isabel
TI Mapping vulnerability to climate-related hazards to inform local
   authority action in adaptation: A feasibility study
SO PUBLIC HEALTH IN PRACTICE
LA English
DT Article
ID PUBLIC-HEALTH
AB Background: Local authorities have a crucial role in building community resilience to the health effects of a changing climate. Support in achieving local action can be provided through improving available public health intelligence to inform decision making. We aimed to co-develop with a local authority a tool mapping vulnerability to climate related hazards. Methods: We conducted a feasibility study, exploring through stakeholder engagement local priorities and levers for action in adaptation that could be informed by provision of increased intelligence. This informed co-development of a proof-of-concept tool. Results: Stakeholders reported needs in better understanding the intersection between vulnerability and hazard to facilitate partnership working, decision making, and targeting of interventions. We developed a mapping tool, using nationally available data, overlaying a vulnerability index with hazard (heat and flooding) exposure. Conclusions: Mapping tools are feasible methods by which public health intelligence to support climate change adaptation planning can be shared. Barriers to action may result from the complexity of vulnerability, concerns of unintended consequences, and resource constraints. Co-development with local expertise is necessary to ensure that outputs add value to local response. This tool will now be piloted to gather feedback on useability, usefulness, and potential improvements.
C1 [Howkins, J.; Carruthers, Elspeth; Murray, Virginia; Oliver, Isabel] UK Hlth Secur Agcy, London, England.
   [Howkins, J.] Univ Bristol, Bristol Med Sch, Bristol, England.
   [Schmidt, Daniela N.] Univ Bristol, Sch Earth Sci, Bristol, England.
   [Thomas, James; Coleborn, Samuel] Univ Bristol, Jean Golding Inst, Bristol, England.
   [Hayward, Robert] South Gloucestershire Council, Dept People, Yate, England.
   [Lo, Y. T. Eunice] Univ Bristol, Cabot Inst Environm, Bristol, England.
   [Lo, Y. T. Eunice] Univ Bristol, Elizabeth Blackwell Inst Hlth Res, Bristol, England.
   [Neal, Jeffrey] Univ Bristol, Sch Geog Sci, Bristol, England.
   [Neal, Jeffrey] Fathom, Bristol, England.
   [Lewis, James] UK Hlth Secur Agcy, Data Analyt & Surveillance, London, England.
   [Carruthers, Elspeth] Whittington Hosp, London, England.
   [Oliver, Isabel] Univ Bristol, Sch Populat Hlth Sci, NIHR Hlth Protect Res Unit Evaluat Intervent, Med Sch, Bristol, England.
C3 UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA); University of Bristol; University of
   Bristol; University of Bristol; University of Bristol; University of
   Bristol; University of Bristol; UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA);
   University of London; University College London; University of Bristol
RP Howkins, J (corresponding author), UK Hlth Secur Agcy, London, England.
EM josh.howkins.2021@bristol.ac.uk
RI Neal, Jeffrey/C-8723-2009; Lo, Eunice/C-7133-2016
OI Neal, Jeffrey/0000-0001-5793-9594; Thomas, James/0000-0002-2115-7723;
   Howkins, Joshua/0000-0002-4289-2946; Lo, Eunice/0000-0002-7389-7272;
   Schmidt, Daniela/0000-0001-8419-2721
FU University of Bristol Climate Change and Health Fellowship; NIHR
   Academic Clinical Fellowship [ACF-2022-13-013]
FX Y.T.E.L. was funded by the University of Bristol Climate Change and
   Health Fellowship. JH holds an NIHR Academic Clinical Fellowship
   (ACF-2022-13-013) .
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NR 32
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2666-5352
J9 PUBLIC HEALTH PRACT
JI Public Health Pract.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 8
AR 100549
DI 10.1016/j.puhip.2024.100549
EA SEP 2024
PG 8
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA I3F9U
UT WOS:001329160700001
PM 39403294
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Das, S
   Mishra, AJ
AF Das, Suraj
   Mishra, Anindya Jayanta
TI Climate change, dietary shift, and traditional norms in the western
   Himalayan region, India
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; food choices; socio-ecological approach; the Himalayan
   communities; grounded theory
ID FOOD SECURITY; VULNERABILITY; PERCEPTIONS; UTTARAKHAND; CHOICES
AB Climate change is the new normal of modern times, complicating the assurance of food security to the vulnerable peoples, especially the local communities with deep-rooted customary beliefs associated with the dietary habits of the Himalayan region. Nevertheless, the magnitude of the climate-induced impacts on traditional communities is not yet fully understood for evidence-based policy formation. Hence, this study aims (i) to analyze the perception of local people towards climate change, (ii) to investigate the perception of local communities toward traditional dietary habits, and (iii) to explore the changes observed in socio-cultural beliefs system due to dietary shift. A cross-sectional study was conducted with 75 in-depth qualitative interviews. The results of the grounded theory approach show that climate change has a localized meaning. Further, environmental change has significantly affected local food choices, which have an implication on the customary belief system attached to the local communities, irrespective of the socio-demography of the communities. The current study concludes that traditional knowledge is significant in addressing the issue of climate change. Therefore, the local society's socio-ecological beliefs must be integrated for effective food security and climate change adaptation strategies.
C1 [Das, Suraj; Mishra, Anindya Jayanta] Indian Inst Technol IIT Roorkee, Dept Humanities & Social Sci, Roorkee 247667, Uttar Pradesh, India.
C3 Indian Institute of Technology System (IIT System); Indian Institute of
   Technology (IIT) - Roorkee
RP Das, S (corresponding author), Indian Inst Technol IIT Roorkee, Dept Humanities & Social Sci, Roorkee 247667, Uttar Pradesh, India.
EM sdas@hs.iitr.ac.in
RI Das, Suraj/GQB-2460-2022
FU University Grants Commission, India
FX This work was supported by University Grants Commission, India.
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NR 52
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 8
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD JUL 3
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 6
BP 509
EP 517
DI 10.1080/17565529.2022.2116927
EA AUG 2022
PG 9
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA L9NQ2
UT WOS:000848300300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McNaught, R
   McGregor, K
   Kensen, M
   Hales, R
   Nalau, J
AF McNaught, Rebecca
   McGregor, Kalara
   Kensen, Matthew
   Hales, Rob
   Nalau, Johanna
TI Visualising the invisible: collaborative approaches to local-level
   resilient development in the Pacific Islands region
SO COMMONWEALTH JOURNAL OF LOCAL GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Collaborative governance; Pacific; disaster; climate change; local
   governance; resilient development
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; DISASTER RISK; GOVERNANCE;
   FRAMEWORK; VULNERABILITY
AB The Pacific Islands region has made strong progress on the integration of climate change, disaster management and development frameworks, particularly via the Pacific Urban Agenda and the Framework for Resilient Development in the Pacific. These frameworks highlight the need for local-level collaboration in achieving ambitious pathways for climate- and disaster-resilient development. However, to date little research has investigated the role that local-level collaboration plays in implementation. Additionally, there is a lack of guidance on how to design and implement local-level collaboration that is informed by in-country practitioner experiences. This study addresses those gaps. Its findings indicate that in the Pacific collaborative attributes span individuals, institutions, collaborative arrangements, and broader governance systems. They also suggest that the skills needed to undertake collaboration well at the local level are, in part, already manifest in Pacific cultures as invisible skill sets. More can be done to make the invisible visible by documenting and developing the `soft skills' that are necessary to achieve climate- and disaster-resilient development. This action could contribute to bridging the gap between ambition and reality.
C1 [McNaught, Rebecca; Nalau, Johanna] Griffith Univ, Cities Res Inst, Brisbane, Qld 4222, Australia.
   [McGregor, Kalara] Griffith Univ, Ctr Planetary Hlth & Food Secur, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Kensen, Matthew] Univ South Pacific, Pacific Ctr Environm & Sustainable Dev, Suva, Fiji.
   [Hales, Rob] Griffith Univ, Griffith Business Sch, Southport, Qld 4215, Australia.
C3 Griffith University; Griffith University; University of the South
   Pacific; Griffith University; Griffith University - Gold Coast Campus
RP McNaught, R (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Cities Res Inst, Brisbane, Qld 4222, Australia.
EM rebecca.mcnaught2@griffithuni.edu.au;
   kalara.mcgregor@griffithuni.edu.au; kensen60@gmail.com;
   r.hales@griffith.edu.au; j.nalau@griffith.edu.au
RI McNaught, Rebecca/AAF-2668-2020; Nalau, Johanna/V-5692-2018
OI Nalau, Johanna/0000-0001-6581-3967; McNaught,
   Rebecca/0000-0002-9393-6398; McGregor, Kalara/0000-0003-2521-2109
FU Griffith University scholarships fund via the Australian Government;
   Discovery Early Career Research Award
FX The first two authors are financially supported by the Griffith
   University scholarships fund via the Australian Government's
   Post-graduate Awards programme. The fifth author is supported by the
   Discovery Early Career Research Award.
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NR 86
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 7
PU UNIV TECHNOLOGY, SYDNEY-UTS EPRESS
PI SYDNEY
PA BROADWAY, PO BOX 123, SYDNEY, NSW 2007, AUSTRALIA
SN 1836-0394
J9 COMMONW J LOCAL GOV
JI Commonw. J. Local Gov.
PD MAY
PY 2022
IS 26
BP 28
EP 52
DI 10.5130/cjlg.vi26.8189
PG 25
WC Public Administration
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Public Administration
GA 1W4QB
UT WOS:000806758600001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Best, R
   Nepal, R
   Saba, N
AF Best, Rohan
   Nepal, Rabindra
   Saba, Noura
TI Wealth effects on household solar uptake: Quantifying multiple channels
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Solar; Household; Wealth; Asset; Liability; COVID-19
ID PHOTOVOLTAIC SYSTEMS; ENERGY; IMPACTS; POLICY
AB Increased clean energy production from household solar panels is a potentially vital component of a sustainable energy transition and decarbonisation that can reduce carbon dioxide emissions from many countries. This paper investigates multiple channels of wealth effects on household solar-panel uptake. There is evidence of impacts of both financial and non-financial assets on solar-panel uptake, but the evidence for financial assets is much more robust. Compared to the highest-asset quartile, proportional solar-panel uptake is three percentage points lower for the second-highest quartile of households based on financial assets, all else equal. This gap grows to six percentage points for households in the lowest quartile for financial assets. The results are robust across many models using probit, logit and linear probability formats. Knowledge of the relative magnitudes of impacts of wealth channels is important for policymakers who are considering supporting solar-panel uptake, particularly following the COVID-19 pandemic, when efficiency of public spending will be crucial. Our results reveal that means testing for solar policy support should be based on financial-asset thresholds, rather than non-financial assets or income. These are globally important policy lessons in creating a viable climate change adaptation strategy through solar electrification. (c) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Best, Rohan; Saba, Noura] Macquarie Univ, Dept Econ, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
   [Nepal, Rabindra] Univ Wollongong, Fac Business & Law, Sch Business, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.
C3 Macquarie University; University of Wollongong
RP Best, R (corresponding author), Macquarie Univ, Dept Econ, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
EM rohan.best@mq.edu.au; rnepal@uow.edu.au; noura.saba@mq.edu.au
RI Nepal, Rabindra/J-2027-2019
OI Nepal, Rabindra/0000-0001-9378-6206; Best, Rohan/0000-0002-9333-6149
CR Akinsipe OC, 2021, J CLEAN PROD, V287, DOI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.125055
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NR 50
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 3
U2 10
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD MAY 15
PY 2021
VL 297
AR 126618
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.126618
EA MAR 2021
PG 8
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA RP0WZ
UT WOS:000641458600012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Madureira, H
   Monteiro, A
   Cruz, S
AF Madureira, Helena
   Monteiro, Ana
   Cruz, Sara
TI Where to Go or Where Not to Go-A Method for Advising Communities during
   Extreme Temperatures
SO CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; climate risk awareness; warning systems;
   extreme events; climate comfort; human health; citizen sensing; remote
   sensing
ID URBAN HEAT-ISLAND; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PUBLIC-HEALTH; ADAPTATION; RISK
AB Climate change is producing more extremes and increasing the number and magnitude of risks that impact people's lives, so identifying and understanding local climate risks is a long but essential process for defining adaptation strategies. The availability of technologies to sensitize and educate people about risks, and to assist people with becoming active observers and monitors of climatic elements has helped to promote permanent surveillance and proactive attitudes towards climatic phenomena that lead to undesirable risks. This paper proposes a methodological approach to guide citizens moving around the city when extreme temperatures occur, minimizing climatic risks and negative health comes, using a very simple method based on Landsat 8 temperature data images at a subsection spatial scale level. The results obtained indicate the places of higher extreme temperatures risks, as well as some of the potential places that people can use to protect themselves. This work demonstrates the value of mapping climatic factors at a local scale and deliver tailored and accurate maps with the places suitable for alleviating bioclimatic stresses and the places that should be avoided.
C1 [Madureira, Helena; Monteiro, Ana] Univ Porto, Fac Arts & Humanities, CEGOT, Via Panoram Edgar Cardoso, P-4150564 Porto, Portugal.
   [Cruz, Sara] Univ Porto, Fac Engn, CITTA, P-4200465 Porto, Portugal.
C3 Universidade do Porto; Universidade do Porto
RP Monteiro, A (corresponding author), Univ Porto, Fac Arts & Humanities, CEGOT, Via Panoram Edgar Cardoso, P-4150564 Porto, Portugal.
EM hmadureira@letras.up.pt; anamt@letras.up.pt; scruz@fe.up.pt
RI Madureira, Helena/KBF-7452-2024; Cruz, Sara/AAN-2203-2021; Madureira,
   Helena/C-4688-2018
OI Santos Cruz, Sara/0000-0002-1776-4985; Madureira,
   Helena/0000-0002-0047-6450
FU Citizen Sensing-Urban Climate Resilience through a Participatory Risk
   Management System - FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia I.P
   [ERA4CS/0001/2016]; Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
   [ERA4CS/0001/2016] Funding Source: FCT
FX This work was financially supported by ERA4CS/0001/2016-Citizen
   Sensing-Urban Climate Resilience through a Participatory Risk Management
   System, funded by FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia I.P.
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NR 48
TC 4
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 3
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2225-1154
J9 CLIMATE
JI Climate
PD MAR
PY 2021
VL 9
IS 3
AR 49
DI 10.3390/cli9030049
PG 12
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA RD4LO
UT WOS:000633451900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pathak, S
AF Pathak, Santosh
TI Determinants of flood adaptation: Parametric and semiparametric
   assessment
SO JOURNAL OF FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; farmers; flood; semi&#8208; nonparametric estimator;
   semiparametric maximum likelihood
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; CONSERVATION TECHNOLOGY; FARMERS ADOPTION;
   RIVER FLOODS; STRATEGIES; CHOICE; LEVEL; YIELD; SOIL; AGRICULTURE
AB Flood adaptation measures are indispensable to offset agricultural losses emanating from the increasing frequency and intensity of floods. Therefore, it is necessary to identify key precursors of adaptation for the success of flood-related adaptation programs. Using cross-sectional household survey data from rice farmers of eastern Nepal, this study explores existing adaptation practices along with the factors influencing farmers' adaptation strategies. Both parametric and semiparametric forms of the binary choice model are employed to assess key determinants of flood adaptation. The results reveal that existing adaptation practices are limited to conventional seed storage and few (bio)engineering techniques. Both household and farm characteristics, including flood impact indicators, significantly influence farmers' adaptation to flooding hazards. Thus, consideration of these multiple factors in adaptation-related programs is anticipated to cope with future floods. Prioritising crop insurance over disaster relief programs and revitalization of existing adaptation measures are suggested. Furthermore, this study demonstrates that the semiparametric approach offers a better alternative by lifting the basic assumptions of parametric models. Findings from this article could aid in developing localised adaptation strategies that would ultimately contribute to the resiliency of farming households and the flood-prone communities as a whole.
C1 [Pathak, Santosh] Louisiana State Univ, Dept Agr Econ & Agribusiness, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA.
   [Pathak, Santosh] Tribhuvan Univ, Dept Agr Econ, Kathmandu, Nepal.
C3 Louisiana State University System; Louisiana State University; Tribhuvan
   University
RP Pathak, S (corresponding author), Louisiana State Univ, Dept Agr Econ & Agribusiness, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA.; Pathak, S (corresponding author), Tribhuvan Univ, Dept Agr Econ, Kathmandu, Nepal.
EM spath11@lsu.edu
RI Pathak, Santosh/AHC-6387-2022
OI Pathak, Santosh/0000-0002-4689-4711
FU National Agricultural Research and Development Fund, Nepal [TGA-2018]
FX National Agricultural Research and Development Fund, Nepal, Grant/Award
   Number: TGA-2018
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NR 95
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 24
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1753-318X
J9 J FLOOD RISK MANAG
JI J. Flood Risk Manag.
PD JUN
PY 2021
VL 14
IS 2
AR e12699
DI 10.1111/jfr3.12699
EA FEB 2021
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA RZ3ZW
UT WOS:000617856400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Stoilova, T
   van Zonneveld, M
   Roothaert, R
   Schreinemachers, P
AF Stoilova, Tsvetelina
   van Zonneveld, Maarten
   Roothaert, Ralph
   Schreinemachers, Pepijn
TI Connecting genebanks to farmers in East Africa through the distribution
   of vegetable seed kits
SO PLANT GENETIC RESOURCES-CHARACTERIZATION AND UTILIZATION
LA English
DT Article
DE ex situ conservation; germplasm distribution; home gardens; neglected
   and underutilized species; seed supply; seed systems; traditional
   African vegetables
ID NUTRITION
AB Genebanks explore new partnerships with farmers and other user groups to provide smallholder farmers in Africa better access to crop diversity for improved nutrition, climate change adaptation and agricultural diversification. This paper shows how the World Vegetable Center (WorldVeg) genebank of traditional African vegetables and its partners distributed over 42,000 seed kits containing over 183,000 vegetable seed samples from 2013 to 2017 to smallholder farmers in Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda. The seed kits contained seed samples of promising accessions and open-pollinated breeding lines of traditional African vegetables, and to a lower degree of tomato, Capsicum pepper and soybean, usually enough to plant in a home garden. We identified four research questions to better understand the role of vegetable seed kits in strengthening local seed systems, impact on local vegetable diversity, improving human nutrition and supporting climate-resilient agriculture. As formal seed systems expand their reach, the genebank's role to supply vegetable diversity to public and private breeding programmes becomes more important. To optimize supply of vegetable diversity, the WorldVeg genebank of traditional African vegetables continues working with partners in both formal and local seed systems.
C1 [Stoilova, Tsvetelina; Roothaert, Ralph] World Vegetable Ctr, POB 10, Arusha, Tanzania.
   [van Zonneveld, Maarten] World Vegetable Ctr, Genet Resources & Seed Unit, POB 42, Tainan 74199, Taiwan.
   [Schreinemachers, Pepijn] World Vegetable Ctr, POB 1010, Bangkok 10903, Thailand.
RP van Zonneveld, M (corresponding author), World Vegetable Ctr, Genet Resources & Seed Unit, POB 42, Tainan 74199, Taiwan.
EM maarten.vanzonneveld@worldveg.org
RI Roothaert, Ralph/AAJ-1012-2020
FU European Union; GBIF; BID [BID-AF2017-0310-SMA]; Republic of China
   (Taiwan); UK aid from UK government; United States Agency for
   International Development (USAID); Australian Centre for International
   Agricultural Research (ACIAR); Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation
   and Development of Germany
FX We thank Australian AID, Helen Keller International, HORTCRISP
   (Innovation Lab), USAID, OIKOS, CABI, CGIAR Humidtropics programme,
   Southwood Lutheran church, Project Concern International and the
   Sustainable Forum Alliance Francais for their support in seed kit
   distribution. Publication of this paper and development of the
   corresponding dataset was funded by the European Union, and supported by
   GBIF and the BID project: BID-AF2017-0310-SMA. Funding for WorldVeg's
   general research activities is provided by core donors: Republic of
   China (Taiwan), UK aid from UK government, United States Agency for
   International Development (USAID), Australian Centre for International
   Agricultural Research (ACIAR), the Federal Ministry for Economic
   Cooperation and Development of Germany, Thailand, Philippines, Korea and
   Japan. Special thanks to Walter de Boef for his valuable comments on an
   early draft of the paper.
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NR 8
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 4
U2 13
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 1479-2621
EI 1479-263X
J9 PLANT GENET RESOUR-C
JI Plant Genet. Resour.-Charact. Util.
PD JUN
PY 2019
VL 17
IS 3
BP 306
EP 309
AR PII S1479262119000017
DI 10.1017/S1479262119000017
PG 4
WC Plant Sciences; Genetics & Heredity
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences; Genetics & Heredity
GA HU6TR
UT WOS:000465414300014
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Portman, ME
AF Portman, Michelle E.
TI Detached islands: Artificial islands as adaptation challenges in the
   making
SO ERDE
LA English
DT Article
DE ocean sprawl; artificial islands; Mediterranean Sea; sea reclamation;
   offshore islands
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; OCEAN SPRAWL; COASTAL; ENVIRONMENT;
   MANAGEMENT; EROSION; ISSUES
AB There is surprisingly little information and concern within academic literature in the field of coastal or marine planning and management related to the issue of artificial islands. This is particularly noteworthy considering the climate change phenomenon, vis a vis sea-level rise, the urgent need for adaptation, efforts aiming for sustainable use of coastal areas, and the recent focus in academic circles on marine spatial planning. Most literature (including grey literature) on artificial islands appears in the engineering and geology disciplines and is focused on energy extraction, i.e., oil and gas. Yet some coastal nations are intent on solving problems of lack of space and other resource shortages through construction of near-shore artificial islands for myriad uses, including commercial, residential and transportation infrastructure. This paper presents a limited review of the policy literature about planning and construction of artificial islands. It reflects what repercussions artificial islands portend for marine conservation, sustainability and, most importantly, how climate change adaptation is highlighted or neglected in spatial solutions addressed by the building of nearshore artificial islands. The Israeli situation, where tenders have been recently published calling for planning and building of islands in the Mediterranean Sea, serves as an example.
C1 [Portman, Michelle E.] Technion Israel Inst Technol, Fac Architecture & Town Planning, Kiryat HaTechn, IL-32000 Haifa, Israel.
C3 Technion Israel Institute of Technology
RP Portman, ME (corresponding author), Technion Israel Inst Technol, Fac Architecture & Town Planning, Kiryat HaTechn, IL-32000 Haifa, Israel.
EM mep@technion.ac.il
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U1 4
U2 23
PU GESELLSCHAFT ERDKUNDE BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA ARNO-HOLZ-STR 14, BERLIN, 12165, GERMANY
SN 0013-9998
J9 ERDE
JI ERDE
PY 2019
VL 150
IS 3
SI SI
BP 158
EP 168
DI 10.12854/erde-2019-430
PG 11
WC Geography; Geography, Physical; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Physical Geography; Geology
GA JL6RF
UT WOS:000495656700005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Warren, RF
   Wilby, RL
   Brown, K
   Watkiss, P
   Betts, RA
   Murphy, JM
   Lowe, JA
AF Warren, R. F.
   Wilby, R. L.
   Brown, K.
   Watkiss, P.
   Betts, Richard A.
   Murphy, James M.
   Lowe, Jason A.
TI Advancing national climate change risk assessment to deliver national
   adaptation plans
SO PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL
   AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE risk assessment; climate change; adaptation; vulnerability
ID WINTER; UK
AB A wide range of climate vulnerability and risk assessments have been implemented using different approaches at different scales, some with a broad multi-sectoral scope and others focused on single risks or sectors. This paper describes the novel approach to vulnerability and risk assessment which was designed and put into practice in the United Kingdom's Second Climate Change Risk Assessment (CCRA2) so as to build upon its earlier assessment (CCRA1). First, we summarize and critique the CCRA1 approach, and second describe the steps taken in the CCRA2 approach in detail, providing examples of how each was applied in practice. Novel elements of the approach include assessment of both present day and future vulnerability, a focus on the urgency of adaptation action, and a structure focused around systems of receptors rather than conventional sectors. Both stakeholders and reviewers generally regarded the approach as successful in providing advice on current risks and future opportunities to the UK from climate change, and the fulfilment of statutory duty. The need for a well-supported and open suite of impact indicators going forward is highlighted.
   This article is part of the theme issue 'Advances in risk assessment for climate change adaptation policy'.
C1 [Warren, R. F.] Univ East Anglia, Tyndall Ctr, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   [Warren, R. F.] Univ East Anglia, Sch Environm Sci, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   [Wilby, R. L.] Loughborough Univ, Dept Geog, Loughborough LE11 3TU, Leics, England.
   [Brown, K.] Comm Climate Change, 7 Holbein Pl, London SW1 W8NR, England.
   [Watkiss, P.] Paul Watkiss Associates, Oxford, England.
   [Betts, Richard A.] Univ Exeter, Coll Life & Environm Sci, Hatherly Labs, Prince Wales Rd, Exeter EX4 4PS, Devon, England.
   [Betts, Richard A.; Murphy, James M.; Lowe, Jason A.] Met Off Hadley Ctr, FitzRoy Rd, Exeter EX1 3PB, Devon, England.
   [Lowe, Jason A.] Univ Leeds, Priestley Int Ctr Climate, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
C3 University of East Anglia; University of East Anglia; Loughborough
   University; University of Exeter; Met Office - UK; Hadley Centre;
   University of Leeds
RP Warren, RF (corresponding author), Univ East Anglia, Tyndall Ctr, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.; Warren, RF (corresponding author), Univ East Anglia, Sch Environm Sci, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
EM r.warren@uea.ac.uk
RI Betts, Richard/P-8976-2015; Lowe, Jason/GQI-4036-2022; Warren,
   Rachel/G-9997-2011
OI Wilby, Robert/0000-0002-4662-9344; Watkiss, Paul/0000-0001-9940-976X;
   Brown, Kathryn/0000-0002-2099-0801; Warren, Rachel/0000-0002-0122-1599;
   Lowe, Jason/0000-0002-8201-3926
FU UK Climate Change Committee; European Union Seventh Framework Programme
   FP7 [603864]; BEIS/Defra Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme
   [GA01101]; NERC [NE/F016107/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX K.H. and R.F.W. were funded by the UK Climate Change Committee. R.F.W.
   and R.A.B. were funded by the European Union Seventh Framework Programme
   FP7/2007-2013 (grant number: 603864, HELIX). R.A.B., J.M.M. and J.A.L.
   were funded by the BEIS/Defra Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme
   GA01101
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NR 61
TC 28
Z9 30
U1 1
U2 75
PU ROYAL SOC
PI LONDON
PA 6-9 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE, LONDON SW1Y 5AG, ENGLAND
SN 1364-503X
EI 1471-2962
J9 PHILOS T R SOC A
JI Philos. Trans. R. Soc. A-Math. Phys. Eng. Sci.
PD JUN 13
PY 2018
VL 376
IS 2121
AR 20170295
DI 10.1098/rsta.2017.0295
PG 19
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA GE3YM
UT WOS:000431148800001
PM 29712791
OA Green Published, Bronze, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Awadh, O
AF Awadh, Omair
TI Sustainability and green building rating systems: LEED, BREEAM, GSAS and
   Estidama critical analysis
SO JOURNAL OF BUILDING ENGINEERING
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainability; Green building rating system
AB In the built environment, a green building rating system provides the project team a framework and a tool to help achieving a better sustainable development. The research presents how Green Building Rating Systems (GBRSs) are environmental-oriented tools and should not be confused with Sustainability Assessment Systems; the latter is defined by the sustainability three pillars; environmental, social and economic. Achieving a green building certification does not necessarily mean that the building succeeded in achieving its environmental targets. The financial-driven and prescriptive implementation of GBRS are reasons behind a masked sustainability outcome.
   This paper presents an objective analysis between two internationally applied GBRSs; LEED and BREEAM, and two particularly developed for the gulf region; Estidama and GSAS. Those four systems are analyzed with respects to them addressing and prioritizing the sustainability pillars. The study also quantitatively discusses the credit weighting given by these systems, focusing on energy and water criteria.
   Limitations: of GBRSs' application and possible areas of improvement have been highlighted, such as climate change adaptability and the importance of sustainable communities and cities trend. The aim is to help designers and construction stakeholders in defining the development sustainability targets and objectives, without compromising on the local context and regional agenda.
C1 [Awadh, Omair] Cayan Business Ctr, Off 604, Dubai, U Arab Emirates.
RP Awadh, O (corresponding author), Cayan Business Ctr, Off 604, Dubai, U Arab Emirates.
EM omairawadh@gmail.com
OI Awadh, Omair/0000-0003-3529-7265
FU AESG Green Building Consultant
FX This research was supported by AESG Green Building Consultant.
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NR 23
TC 186
Z9 196
U1 29
U2 204
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2352-7102
J9 J BUILD ENG
JI J. Build. Eng.
PD MAY
PY 2017
VL 11
BP 25
EP 29
DI 10.1016/j.jobe.2017.03.010
PG 5
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA FC4BA
UT WOS:000406782200004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Truelove, HB
   Carrico, AR
   Thabrew, L
AF Truelove, Heather Barnes
   Carrico, Amanda R.
   Thabrew, Lanka
TI A socio-psychological model for analyzing climate change adaptation: A
   case study of Sri Lankan paddy farmers
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Agricultural adaptation; Efficacy;
   Protection motivation theory; Adaptive capacity
ID SELF-EFFICACY INTERVENTION; IMPACT; VARIABILITY; BEHAVIOR; AGRICULTURE;
   MANAGEMENT; IDENTITY; PEOPLE; RISK
AB Farmers in developing countries are among the most vulnerable to climate change effects, particularly drought. However, little research has focused on the psychological mechanisms that facilitate or constrain agricultural adaptation behavior. Drawing on the protection motivation theory from health promotion research, we propose a risk, coping, and social appraisal (RCSA) model of adaptation decisions. To test the model, we assessed drought risk perceptions, efficacy beliefs, village identification, and perceived descriptive norms among a sample of 192 paddy farmers from five villages in the dry zone of Sri Lanka. Results revealed that the RCSA model was a better predictor of agricultural adaptaticin intention than a strictly demographic model. Efficacy beliefs were the strongest predictor of behavioral intentions, with descriptive norms also consistently relating to intentions. Drought risk perceptions related only to intention to adopt one of the behaviors, while village identification related only to a very communal behavior. The results have implications for agricultural extension officers, irrigation officers, and water management officials in their efforts to assist farmers in adapting to limited water resources. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Truelove, Heather Barnes] Univ N Florida, Dept Psychol, Jacksonville, FL 32224 USA.
   [Carrico, Amanda R.] Univ Colorado, Environm Studies Program, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Thabrew, Lanka] Western Power, Perth, WA 6000, Australia.
C3 State University System of Florida; University of North Florida;
   University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder
RP Truelove, HB (corresponding author), Univ N Florida, Dept Psychol, 1 UNF Dr, Jacksonville, FL 32224 USA.
EM h.truelove@unf.edu; amanda.carrico@colorado.edu
RI Carrico, Amanda/KII-2806-2024
OI Carrico, Amanda/0000-0001-8571-8238
FU NSF [EAR-1204685]; Discovery Grant from Vanderbilt University
FX Support for this project was provided by a grant from NSF (EAR-1204685)
   and a Discovery Grant from Vanderbilt University. The data were
   collected while the authors were affiliated with the Vanderbilt
   Institute for Energy Environment. We would like to thank the National
   Building and Research Organization (NBRO), Sri Lanka for collaborating
   on this project.
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NR 69
TC 146
Z9 162
U1 2
U2 83
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD MAR
PY 2015
VL 31
BP 85
EP 97
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.12.010
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA CJ3BU
UT WOS:000355359200009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Birkenholtz, T
AF Birkenholtz, Trevor
TI Knowing Climate Change: Local Social Institutions and Adaptation in
   Indian Groundwater Irrigation
SO PROFESSIONAL GEOGRAPHER
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; groundwater; India; irrigation; local knowledge
ID TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE; ENVIRONMENTAL KNOWLEDGE; IMPACT
   ASSESSMENT; VULNERABILITY; POLITICS; STATE; UNCERTAINTY; STRESSORS;
   RAJASTHAN
AB How do farmers understand and predict weather variability; in what ways are local weather prediction techniques institutionalized (e.g., in new agricultural practices or cropping decisions) to meet the agricultural challenges of climate change-induced socioecological variability; and how do these vary across space, according to socioecological difference? This article examines these questions through a case study examination of local weather prediction methods and adaptive strategies to ongoing weather-related variability by groundwater-dependent, irrigating farmers in Rajasthan, India. Conducted in 2009 and 2011, the work finds, first, that farmers rely on multiple local methods of weather prediction, which, along with multiple and often conflicting social and ecological factors, inform their cropping decisions. Second, these prediction methods and associated cropping strategies interact with a number of strategies to mitigate weather and agrarian variability more generally, such as new cropping strategies, seasonal migration, and market articulations. The article advances our thinking about what climate change, as yet another (but perhaps unique) agrarian perturbation, means for farmers' livelihoods. It concludes with a discussion of the implications of the analysis for formal climate change adaptation strategies and related ongoing groundwater policy.
C1 Rutgers State Univ, Piscataway, NJ 08854 USA.
C3 Rutgers University System; Rutgers University New Brunswick
RP Birkenholtz, T (corresponding author), Rutgers State Univ, Piscataway, NJ 08854 USA.
EM trevbirk@rci.rutgers.edu
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NR 68
TC 18
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 35
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0033-0124
EI 1467-9272
J9 PROF GEOGR
JI Prof. Geogr.
PD AUG
PY 2014
VL 66
IS 3
BP 354
EP 362
DI 10.1080/00330124.2013.821721
PG 9
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA AJ4XV
UT WOS:000337684100002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Li, XL
   Wang, Z
   Hou, XY
   Liu, ZY
   Sarula
   Yin, YT
   Ding, Y
   Hu, J
AF Li, Xiliang
   Wang, Zhen
   Hou, Xiangyang
   Liu, Zhiying
   Sarula
   Yin, Yanting
   Ding, Yong
   Hu, Jing
TI Herders' perception of climate change does not always fit with actual
   climate change
SO RANGELAND JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; climate perception; Inner Mongolia;
   rangelands
ID INNER-MONGOLIA; ADAPTATION; CHINA; NONEQUILIBRIUM; DEGRADATION;
   RANGELANDS
AB Herders' perceptions are important in relation to adopting adaptive behavioural approaches to climate change. A survey of 1080 herder households was conducted in six rangeland regions of Inner Mongolia in northern China to investigate relationships between herder's perceptions and actual climate change. Across all six regions, more than 90% of herders perceived a decline in precipitation in the past 30 years, whereas actual data showed no significant change. Many herders also perceived an increase in temperature, which was in agreement with the temperature data, although the proportion of herders who perceived a change in temperature differed among regions. A further survey of 58 households was conducted to better understand the reasons for these differences, by simultaneously surveying their perceptions of the changes in both rainfall and rangeland condition. The results showed that the herders' perceptions of a decrease in rainfall could be influenced by their perceptions of the changes in the condition of their rangeland (reductions in production). An alternative explanation could relate to rainfall being interpreted in terms of the frequency and pattern rather than the absolute amounts. These findings have important implications for understanding how herders' perceptions can improve their adaptive behavioural responses to climate change.
C1 [Li, Xiliang; Wang, Zhen; Hou, Xiangyang; Liu, Zhiying; Sarula; Yin, Yanting; Ding, Yong; Hu, Jing] Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Grassland Res, Hohhot 010010, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences; Institute of Grassland
   Research, CAAS
RP Hou, XY (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Grassland Res, Hohhot 010010, Peoples R China.
EM houxy16@126.com
FU National Key Basic Research Program of China [2014CB138802]; Natural
   Science Foundation of China [70933004]
FX We are grateful to two anonymous reviewers for their constructive
   reviews of the submitted manuscript; Dr Frank Yonghong Li for comments,
   suggestions and editing on this manuscript. This study was financially
   supported by National Key Basic Research Program of China
   (2014CB138802), Natural Science Foundation of China (70933004).
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NR 18
TC 11
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 13
PU CSIRO PUBLISHING
PI COLLINGWOOD
PA 150 OXFORD ST, PO BOX 1139, COLLINGWOOD, VICTORIA 3066, AUSTRALIA
SN 1036-9872
EI 1834-7541
J9 RANGELAND J
JI Rangeland J.
PY 2014
VL 36
IS 6
SI SI
BP 557
EP 564
DI 10.1071/RJ14048
PG 8
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AW1WN
UT WOS:000346079300006
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Su, YP
   Hall, CM
   Ozanne, L
AF Su, Yi-Ping
   Hall, C. Michael
   Ozanne, Lucie
TI Hospitality Industry Responses to Climate Change: A Benchmark Study of
   Taiwanese Tourist Hotels
SO ASIA PACIFIC JOURNAL OF TOURISM RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE environmental change; environmental programmes; accommodation sector;
   implementation
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-MANAGEMENT; MITIGATION; ATTITUDES
AB Hotels are one of the tourism businesses most vulnerable to climate change because of their fixed assets. Results are presented of a baseline study that explores the awareness, attitudes, and behaviours of Taiwanese tourist hotels with respect to climate change and its potential impacts as well as their overall environmental practices. Tourist hotels are defined by the Taiwanese government as hotel establishments of over 80 rooms in rural areas and 50 rooms in city areas. Although the 104 tourist hotels represent only 3.7% of the total number of hotels in Taiwan, they account for over half of international guest nights and had a combined revenue of over TWD$43 billion in 2010. Questionnaires were distributed via email to all tourist hotels in Taiwan and 45 valid returns were received, representing an effective response rate of 43.3%. The results of research illustrate the level of understanding of climate change within Taiwanese tourist hotels and identify the specific climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies that tourist hotels have initiated. Access to such baseline data provides a potentially significant contribution to evaluating the response of the Taiwanese accommodation sector to environment change as well as providing a basis for further comparative studies and benchmarking.
C1 [Su, Yi-Ping; Hall, C. Michael; Ozanne, Lucie] Univ Canterbury, Dept Management, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand.
   [Hall, C. Michael] Univ Oulu, Dept Geog, Oulu, Finland.
   [Hall, C. Michael] So Cross Univ, Sch Hospitality & Tourism, Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia.
   [Hall, C. Michael] Linnaeus Univ, Sch Business & Econ, Kalmar, Sweden.
C3 University of Canterbury; University of Oulu; Southern Cross University;
   Linnaeus University
RP Su, YP (corresponding author), Univ Canterbury, Dept Management, Christchurch 8140, New Zealand.
EM michael.hall@canterbury.ac.nz
RI Hall, Colin Michael/C-1439-2010
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NR 66
TC 43
Z9 46
U1 1
U2 47
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1094-1665
EI 1741-6507
J9 ASIA PAC J TOUR RES
JI Asia Pac. J. Tour. Res.
PD MAR 1
PY 2013
VL 18
IS 1-2
SI SI
BP 92
EP 107
DI 10.1080/10941665.2012.688513
PG 16
WC Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA 099WU
UT WOS:000315655700007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vogel, C
   Koch, I
   Van Zyl, K
AF Vogel, Coleen
   Koch, Ingrid
   Van Zyl, Koos
TI "A Persistent Truth"-Reflections on Drought Risk Management in Southern
   Africa
SO WEATHER CLIMATE AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
ID ADAPTATION; LESSONS; CLIMATE; POLICY; GOVERNANCE; RESILIENCE; SCIENCE
AB Severe droughts in southern Africa are associated with livelihood impacts, a strain on local economies, and other hardships. Extensive effort has been spent in the past trying to improve responses to periods of extensive drought. There have also been renewed calls for improvements to climate change adaptation by adopting more proactive governance and disaster risk reduction approaches. Few efforts, however, have been made to assess how to learn more from past drought efforts so as to enhance overall resilience to future drought risks. Few have examined the role and contributions of institutions and drought governance, either across spatial scales [from regional (i.e., Southern African Development Community) to national scales (e. g., South Africa) to the very local scale (e. g., Limpopo Province, South Africa)] or across temporal scales (over at least 100 yr). Despite calls for better risk management approaches at all levels, this paper illustrates two points. First, a failure to fully understand, integrate, and learn from past efforts may undermine current and future drought response. Second, state-led drought risk reduction, which remains focused on a financial "bail-out" mentality, with little follow-through on proactive rather than reactive drought responses, is also seriously contributing to the vulnerability of the region to future drought impacts.
C1 [Vogel, Coleen; Koch, Ingrid; Van Zyl, Koos] Univ Witwatersrand, ReVAMP Res Grp, GAES, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of Witwatersrand
RP Vogel, C (corresponding author), Univ Witwatersrand, ReVAMP Res Grp, GAES, P Bag 3, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
EM coleen.vogel@wits.ac.za
FU National Research Foundation, South Africa
FX Research in this paper was supported through a grant by the South
   African Cooperation Fund for Scientific Research and Technological
   Development of the National Research Foundation, South Africa. The
   inputs of several respondents at both the regional and very local levels
   are gratefully acknowledged, as is the assistance of various librarians.
   The discussions with researchers from Zimbabwe and others of the South
   African team greatly enhanced the thoughts of this paper, including
   those received from Sithabiso Gandure, Leonard Unganai, Bella Nyamukere,
   Steven Matema, Naomi.Chibete, Petronella Shoko, and the South African
   team, including Sylvester Mpandeli, Alison Misselhorn, and Scott Drimie.
   Finally, thanks to two anonymous reviewers, whose comments greatly
   improved this paper.
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NR 87
TC 33
Z9 36
U1 0
U2 19
PU AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
PI BOSTON
PA 45 BEACON ST, BOSTON, MA 02108-3693 USA
SN 1948-8327
EI 1948-8335
J9 WEATHER CLIM SOC
JI Weather Clim. Soc.
PD JAN
PY 2010
VL 2
IS 1
BP 9
EP 22
DI 10.1175/2009WCAS1017.1
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA V22HQ
UT WOS:000208266700002
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yang, M
   Li, XZ
   Hu, YM
   He, XY
AF Yang, Meng
   Li, Xiuzhen
   Hu, Yuanman
   He, Xingyuan
TI Assessing effects of landscape pattern on sediment yield using sediment
   delivery distributed model and a landscape indicator
SO ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
LA English
DT Article
DE Soil erosion; Sediment delivery ratio; Landscape composition; Landscape
   configuration; Precipitation; The Upper Yangtze River
ID LAND-USE CHANGES; SOIL-EROSION; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ECOLOGICAL PROCESSES;
   WATER EROSION; RIVER-BASIN; IMPACT; RATES; SCENARIOS; RUSLE
AB The rationale behind this research concerns the need to better understand relationships between landscape pattern and soil loss processes. Landscape indicators are commonly used to delineate these relationships. However, most indicators were not developed on the basis of soil loss progresses, and therefore their specific relationships with soil loss are difficult to construct. We improved the Location-weighted landscape Contrast Index which was developed based on sediment source-sink theory. This indicator encompasses three factors of landscape pattern: contribution of land cover types to soil erosion: composition and configuration of land covers. To analyze correlations between the landscape indicator and soil loss processes, variables expressing soil loss status should be first quantified.Therefore we applied the sediment delivery distributed model which incorporates revised universal soil loss equation (RUSLE) and sediment delivery ratio. The methods were applied in the Heishui and Zhenjiangguan subwatershed in the Upper Min River. Modeling results showed that 90% of the study area experienced soil erosion larger than 10 t/(ha yr). While its sediment yield rate was smaller than most tributaries in the Upper Yangtze River. Results of Pearson correlation analysis indicated that the rainfall factor in RUSLE was the dominant control and explained 93% of variance in sediment yield rate. We suggested preserving and increasing percentage cover of forests to adapt to climate change for soil conservation. Besides precipitation, landscape pattern was a principle factor correlated with sediment yield rate. The landscape indicator was significantly correlated to sediment delivery ratio, and explained 98% variation in sediment yield rate not considering precipitation by dropping the rainfall factor. The landscape indicator indicated that the landscape pattern was generally favorable for soil conservation in the two subwatersheds. This advantage was mainly ascribed to superior sediment sink-source compositions. In the Heishui subwatershed, however, sediment source contributed more to soil erosion processes than sink. Spatial configuration of sediment source and sink related to flow length were the most unfavorable factor, mainly due to the crops located in river vallyes. We gave suggestion to further optimize the landscape pattern: reducing percentage cover of grasslands with high soil erosion rate; decreasing soil erosion rate of sediment source in the Heishui subwatershed; increasing lengths of flow path from crops to river channels. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Li, Xiuzhen] E China Normal Univ, State Key Lab Estuarine & Coastal Res, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Meng; Li, Xiuzhen; Hu, Yuanman; He, Xingyuan] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Appl Ecol, Shenyang 110016, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Meng] Nanjing Univ, State Key Lab Pollut Control & Resource Reuse, Nanjing 210046, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
C3 East China Normal University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Shenyang
   Institute of Applied Ecology, CAS; Nanjing University
RP Li, XZ (corresponding author), E China Normal Univ, State Key Lab Estuarine & Coastal Res, Shanghai 200062, Peoples R China.
EM Landscape2001@sina.com
RI Liu, Miao/AAH-9655-2021
OI Yang, Meng/0000-0002-8060-401X
FU "National 973 project" [2002CB111506]
FX This paper was sponsored by the "National 973 project" (2002CB111506).
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NR 75
TC 44
Z9 53
U1 8
U2 116
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1470-160X
EI 1872-7034
J9 ECOL INDIC
JI Ecol. Indic.
PD NOV
PY 2012
VL 22
BP 38
EP 52
DI 10.1016/j.ecolind.2011.08.023
PG 15
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 953UC
UT WOS:000304897700005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, W
AF Zhang, Wei
TI Smart Building Skin Design with Dynamic Climate Adaptability of Smart
   Cities Based on Artificial Intelligence
SO ADVANCES IN MULTIMEDIA
LA English
DT Article
AB As the separation and carrier of indoor and outdoor energy and climate conditions, building skin plays an important role in indoor environment regulation and effective utilization of outdoor environmental resources. The traditional fixed skin of residential buildings in cold regions lacks the ability to respond to the external climate, so it is difficult to meet the dual requirements of building energy efficiency and indoor comfort. In the long river of architectural development, the most important thing of architectural design is how to meet the climate adaptability. Traditional architectural forms have long been unable to meet the current social development, climate conditions, and user needs. Based on the basic theory, this paper establishes a systematic understanding of inlay, studies the design method of complex skin with geometric algorithm as the operating tool, discusses the application of this method in architectural design in combination with practice, more systematically and comprehensively studies the building skin with dynamic climate adaptability, and makes a physical model of building skin with dynamic climate adaptability. The contrast experiments under different control modes were carried out using the climate chamber experimental system. This research focuses on taking geometric principles as the prototype, trying to break the common design idea of generating skin by overlapping cells, and providing a systematic skin design method with strong operability and modular structure, hoping to help expand creative thinking.
C1 [Zhang, Wei] Anhui Jianzhu Univ, Sch Architecture & Urban Planning, Hefei 230022, Anhui, Peoples R China.
C3 Anhui Jianzhu University
RP Zhang, W (corresponding author), Anhui Jianzhu Univ, Sch Architecture & Urban Planning, Hefei 230022, Anhui, Peoples R China.
EM ericzhang@ahjzu.edu.cn
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NR 22
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 12
PU HINDAWI LTD
PI LONDON
PA ADAM HOUSE, 3RD FLR, 1 FITZROY SQ, LONDON, W1T 5HF, ENGLAND
SN 1687-5680
EI 1687-5699
J9 ADV MULTIMED
JI Adv. Multimed.
PD JUN 20
PY 2023
VL 2023
AR 2859195
DI 10.1155/2023/2859195
PG 12
WC Engineering, Electrical & Electronic
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Engineering
GA K6PY1
UT WOS:001017652100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Berihun, ML
   Tsunekawa, A
   Haregeweyn, N
   Tsubo, M
   Yasuda, H
   Fenta, AA
   Dile, YT
   Bayabil, HK
   Tilahun, SA
AF Berihun, Mulatu Liyew
   Tsunekawa, Atsushi
   Haregeweyn, Nigussie
   Tsubo, Mitsuru
   Yasuda, Hiroshi
   Fenta, Ayele Almaw
   Dile, Yihun Taddele
   Bayabil, Haimanote Kebede
   Tilahun, Seifu Admassu
TI Examining the past 120 years' climate dynamics of Ethiopia
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Drought-prone; CRU; Climate change; Climate variability; Rainfall
   seasonality; East Africa
ID RAINFALL VARIABILITY; SPATIAL-DISTRIBUTION; TRENDS; TEMPERATURE;
   PRECIPITATION; AFRICA; EVENTS; TELECONNECTIONS; DROUGHT; BASIN
AB Climate change is one of the environmental threats around the globe. However, this change is not uniform throughout the world, both spatially and temporally. This study, therefore, examined the spatiotemporal (annual and seasonal) variability and trends of rainfall and temperature over Ethiopia from 1901 to 2020. Monthly rainfall and temperature (maximum, minimum, and mean) data were extracted from the latest version of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU 4.05) dataset. Using long-term seasonal rainfall patterns and pixel-based correlation techniques, five homogeneous rainfall zones were identified. The rainfall and temperature from CRU were validated using observed data from 235 and 145 meteorological stations, respectively. The results revealed that inter-seasonal rainfall and temperature variabilities are more pronounced than interannual variabilities in all rainfall zones. Only 19% (215,700 km(2)) and 3% (33, 900 km(2)) of the country's total area experienced statistically significant (& alpha; = 0.05) decreasing and increasing trends of rainfall, respectively from 1901 to 2020. A statistically significant decreasing trend in rainfall with time was observed during the summer in only one zone that received rainfall in all months. A precipitation concentration index analysis revealed that the country exhibited a moderate to strongly irregular annual and seasonal rainfall distribution, except during the summer when the rainfall distribution was uniform. There was hence a high degree of rainfall seasonality throughout the study period. In addition to the devastating 1984 nationwide drought, Ethiopia also experienced local droughts for a number of 10 to 20 years. Unlike rainfall, there was a significant (& alpha; = 0.05) spatiotemporal increasing trend of temperature over the country. The spatial and temporal increasing trend of mean temperature over 120 years ranged from 0.24(o)C to 1.92(o)C and 0.72(o)C to 1.08(o)C, respectively. This increasing trend was higher in two zones located in the western and northwest parts of Ethiopia and the inflection points occurred after the 1970s in all zones. It is noteworthy that the maximum temperature increased at a lower rate than the minimum temperature. The warming trends and changes in rainfall patterns are likely to increase the frequency of climate extreme events and impact ecosystem services. This study suggests that climate change-sensitive zones require more attention and further study to enhance awareness of climate change in Ethiopia and facilitate adaptation to climate change and inform actions to mitigate adverse effects.
C1 [Berihun, Mulatu Liyew; Bayabil, Haimanote Kebede] Univ Florida, Inst Food & Agr Sci, Trop Res & Educ Ctr, Dept Agr & Biol Engn, Homestead, FL 33031 USA.
   [Berihun, Mulatu Liyew; Tsunekawa, Atsushi; Tsubo, Mitsuru; Fenta, Ayele Almaw] Tottori Univ, Arid Land Res Ctr, 1390 Hamasaka, Tottori 6800001, Japan.
   [Berihun, Mulatu Liyew; Tilahun, Seifu Admassu] Bahir Dar Univ, Bahir Dar Inst Technol, Fac Civil & Water Resources Engn, POB 26, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
   [Haregeweyn, Nigussie] Tottori Univ, Int Platform Dryland Res & Educ, 1390 Hamasaka, Tottori 6800001, Japan.
   [Yasuda, Hiroshi] Tottori Univ, Org Educ Support & Int Affairs, Koyama Minami 4-101, Tottori 6808550, Japan.
   [Dile, Yihun Taddele] NextEra Energy, Okeechobee Blvd Unit 1205, W Palm Beach, FL 33411 USA.
   [Tilahun, Seifu Admassu] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Ecosyst Serv & Management, College Stn, TX USA.
C3 State University System of Florida; University of Florida; Tottori
   University; Bahir Dar University; Tottori University; Tottori
   University; Texas A&M University System; Texas A&M University College
   Station
RP Berihun, ML (corresponding author), Univ Florida, Inst Food & Agr Sci, Trop Res & Educ Ctr, Dept Agr & Biol Engn, Homestead, FL 33031 USA.; Berihun, ML (corresponding author), Tottori Univ, Arid Land Res Ctr, 1390 Hamasaka, Tottori 6800001, Japan.; Berihun, ML (corresponding author), Bahir Dar Univ, Bahir Dar Inst Technol, Fac Civil & Water Resources Engn, POB 26, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
EM mulatuliyew@yahoo.com
RI Berihun, Mulatu/AAC-9461-2019; Tilahun, Seifu/ABE-2501-2020; Bayabil,
   Haimanote/L-1824-2019; Tsubo, Mitsuru/C-4027-2016; Fenta, Ayele
   A./P-1639-2016; Haregeweyn, Nigussie/J-5616-2015; Tsunekawa,
   Atsushi/L-8526-2013
OI Fenta, Ayele A./0000-0002-8228-4048; Haregeweyn,
   Nigussie/0000-0003-2920-8094; Tsunekawa, Atsushi/0000-0002-7690-0633;
   Liyew Berihun, Mulatu/0000-0003-4101-1518; Tsubo,
   Mitsuru/0000-0002-8729-2215
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NR 70
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 7
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI Vienna
PA Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 8-10, A-1040 Vienna, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD OCT
PY 2023
VL 154
IS 1-2
BP 535
EP 566
DI 10.1007/s00704-023-04572-4
EA AUG 2023
PG 32
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA T6ZR6
UT WOS:001049815900002
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dubois, H
   Verkasalo, E
   Claessens, H
AF Dubois, Heloise
   Verkasalo, Erkki
   Claessens, Hugues
TI Potential of Birch (<i>Betula pendula</i> Roth and <i>B. pubescens</i>
   Ehrh.) for Forestry and Forest-Based Industry Sector within the Changing
   Climatic and Socio-Economic Context of Western Europe
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE birch; global change; forestry; valuation market
ID MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE; YOUNG SILVER BIRCH; SCOTS PINE; NORWAY
   SPRUCE; STEM QUALITY; MARSSONINA-BETULAE; AGRICULTURAL LANDS; SOIL
   PROPERTIES; CHANGE IMPACTS; WOOD QUALITY
AB Five commercial tree species comprise nearly 80% of the forest standing stock volume in Western Europe. Nowadays, there is a strong need to consider a wider diversity of tree species, as evidenced by the impact of climate change and the forest health crises over the past decades. In this context, this study focuses on the potential of birch (Betula pendula Roth and Betula pubescens Ehrh.), a neglected indigenous species, for forestry and the forest-based industry sector. We have therefore compiled, analyzed, and discussed literature regarding the strengths and weaknesses of the species and the opportunities and threats of its use for this purpose. Among the strengths, birch tolerates various climates and sites, and high genetic variability promotes its adaptability. Birch improves forest resilience by colonizing forest gaps and quickly increasing soil functioning and biodiversity. Birch is also remarkably resistant to game overpopulation-associated damage. Large-sized logs are produced within relatively short periods with proper silvicultural treatment, and the wood characteristics allow versatile and valuable uses, as shown in Northern Europe. However, its weaknesses include high sensitivity to crown competition and to wood rot as challenges for silviculture. Among the opportunities, birch is well-suited to the global changes with its adaptability to climate change and its possible integration in diverse productive mixed tree stands. In the context of societal evolutions and customer perceptions, birch wood could play an increasing role in the building and furniture sectors, and among non-wood forest products. In Western Europe, the main obstacle to birch development is the lack of information on the wood uses and, consequently, the lack of interest among forest managers and wood processing professionals, which have led to a poor quality of the resource and to insufficient demand for its wood. Moreover, its fast height growth can affect the vitality of other species in mixed stands. Our analysis highlighted the potential of birch in the Western European forestry considering societal, ecological, and economic purposes in a changing climatic and socio-economic context and the need to (i) develop opportunities for industrial uses of birch wood, (ii) inform forest owners, managers, and industrial professionals about the potential value of birch, and (iii) define silvicultural guidelines.
C1 [Dubois, Heloise; Claessens, Hugues] Univ Liege, Gembloux Agrobio Tech, Gembloux 5030, BELARUS.
   [Verkasalo, Erkki] Nat Resources Inst Finland Luke, Joensuu 80100, Finland.
C3 Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke)
RP Claessens, H (corresponding author), Univ Liege, Gembloux Agrobio Tech, Gembloux 5030, BELARUS.
EM heloise.dubois@uliege.be; erkki.verkasalo@luke.fi;
   hugues.claessens@uliege.be
FU Walloon Region of Belgium (Service Public de Wallonie) through the
   "Accord-Cadre de Recherche et Vulgarisation Forestieres" project
FX This research was funded by the Walloon Region of Belgium (Service
   Public de Wallonie) through the "Accord-Cadre de Recherche et
   Vulgarisation Forestieres" project.
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NR 184
TC 86
Z9 88
U1 1
U2 22
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 11
IS 3
AR 336
DI 10.3390/f11030336
PG 26
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA LJ5RC
UT WOS:000530221500086
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yu, L
AF Yu, Lu
TI Agro-pastoralism under climate change: Institutions and local climate
   adaptations in northern China
SO LAND USE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate risk; Pastureland; Agro-pastoral communities; Institutions;
   Climate adaptations
ID INNER-MONGOLIA; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; VULNERABILITY; POLICY; RISK;
   DEGRADATION; UNCERTAINTY; RESILIENCE; RESPONSES; IMPACTS
AB The livelihoods of resource-dependent peoples are vulnerable to climate variability. This study focuses on how local climate adaptations, which have been sustained through long-term interactions with local ecologies, have changed in the face of the challenges caused by climate change and policy interventions. Case studies were conducted in two agro-pastoral counties of northern China, a region that confronts frequent drought and that has experienced extensive institutional changes over recent decades. Based on the exploration of four adaptation strategies, the field results show that both counties have experienced an acceleration of livelihood diversification, an increase in storage and market exchanges, and a dramatic reduction in previously common pooling. The findings reveal that these adaptations are not a direct result of coping with climate risks but rather are indicative of livelihood strategies that result from the combined impacts of institutional, socioeconomic and climatic changes. Current institutional arrangements have negative impacts on local climate adaptations. This is particularly true for those with limited livelihood options, and such arrangements may therefore foster an increase in inequality with regard to household adaptive capacities over the long term. Therefore, this study recommends flexible policies that facilitate local arrangements rather than the current one-for-all policy. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Yu, Lu] Humboldt Univ, Div Resource Econ, Berlin, Germany.
C3 Humboldt University of Berlin
RP Yu, L (corresponding author), Unter Linden 6, D-10099 Berlin, Germany.
EM lu.yu@agrar.hu-berlin.de
OI Yu, Lu/0000-0003-4098-1205
FU project, "Insurance instruments for adaptation to climate change"
FX This research was partially funded by the project, "Insurance
   instruments for adaptation to climate change," which was implemented by
   GIZ and commissioned by the German Federal Ministry for Environment,
   Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB). I gratefully
   acknowledge the project director, Jan Kerer, for his valuable support
   and suggestions. The author sincerely appreciates the insightful review
   and critical comments received from the editor and anonymous reviewers
   of the journal. These comments have led to significant improvements to
   the early version of the manuscript. The authors also extend great
   gratitude to the participants at the IASC Bern conference, who provided
   valuable comments for the revision of this manuscript. I would also like
   to thank the local people who fed and housed me during the fieldwork and
   provided much valuable information and advice.
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NR 60
TC 16
Z9 19
U1 1
U2 85
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-8377
EI 1873-5754
J9 LAND USE POLICY
JI Land Use Pol.
PD DEC 15
PY 2016
VL 58
BP 173
EP 182
DI 10.1016/j.landusepol.2016.07.022
PG 10
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DY1JJ
UT WOS:000384851000017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Wu, JJ
   Wei, HY
AF Wu, Jingjing
   Wei, Hongyang
GP IOP
TI Study on Climate Adaptation in Architectural Technology in Rural Areas
SO 6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND CIVIL
   ENGINEERING
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 6th International Conference on Environmental Science and Civil
   Engineering (ESCE)
CY JAN 04-05, 2020
CL Nanchang, PEOPLES R CHINA
SP Nanchang Inst Technol, Civil Engn Acad Jiangxi Province, Hubei Zhongke Inst Geol & Environm Technol, Journal Rock & Soil Mech, Key Lab Safety Water Conservancy, Civil Engn Infrastructure Jiangxi Province, Jiangxi Provincial Engn Res Ctr Special Reinforcement & Safety Monitoring Technol Hydraul & Civil Engn
DE Rural areas; architectural technology; climate adaptation; operating
   mechanism; technical roadmap
AB Climate adaptation in architectural technology, as a communication medium between nature and human beings, has become a new development trend in response to climate change and to encourage energy conservation and environmental protection. This paper aims to deal with the problems from the perspective of architectural technology in modern new rural construction. Based on the theory of climate adaptation, this paper expounds the definition of climate adaptation in architectural technology, and presents two operating mechanisms to guide and to defend. A suitable technical roadmap is thus offered for the development of architectural technology in rural areas, which can be summarized as the better design of fundamental schemes, preferential selection of passive architectural technology, reasonable implementation of low-energy active architectural technology, and efficient use of active architectural technology with high energy consumption, in order to provide reference for sustainable development of new rural construction. The results show that the response of architectural technology to climate change needs not only to focus on the material level, but also to pay attention to the activities of users.
C1 [Wu, Jingjing; Wei, Hongyang] Chongqing Univ, Sch Architecture & Urban Planning, 174 Shazheng St, Chongqing, Peoples R China.
C3 Chongqing University
RP Wu, JJ (corresponding author), Chongqing Univ, Sch Architecture & Urban Planning, 174 Shazheng St, Chongqing, Peoples R China.
EM jingjing.2004_9@163.com
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NR 28
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 4
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2020
VL 455
AR 012207
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/455/1/012207
PG 7
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil; Engineering,
   Geological
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA BR5EM
UT WOS:000654633200207
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Butt, F
   Yasinzai, M
   Malik, SI
   Munir, A
AF Butt, Firdous
   Yasinzai, Masoom
   Malik, Shaukat Iqbal
   Munir, Anum
TI Isolation and Characterization of Leishmanial Adenine Aminohydrolase as
   a Drug Target
SO CURRENT COMPUTER-AIDED DRUG DESIGN
LA English
DT Article
DE Km= Michaelis Menten constant; M-M= Michaelis Menten; IC50=Inhibitor
   Concentration; inhibition; enzyme activity; biochemical analysis
ID PURINE NUCLEOSIDE PHOSPHORYLASES; PHOSPHORIBOSYLTRANSFERASE; ENZYMES
AB Background: Search for new drug targets is becoming imperative these days, given that marketed chemotherapeutic drugs have lost their efficacy against harmful agents because of adaptability to climatic changes and co-evolving vectors to new hosts. In the wake of such a challenge, the prominence of biochemical studies is increasing by way of exploring selective enzymes and investigating their structural and functional properties through biochemical kinetic parameter Km for the application of IC50 using designed drugs. Recently, discovered Adenine Aminohydrolase (EC 3.5.4.2) in Leishmania has been found to be absent in mammalian purine salvage pathway and thus considered as a promising drug target against infectious agents. Objectives: The objective of this study is to isolate and characterize AAH by learning its kinetic mode of action using preferred substrate Adenine and additives estimated through expected product formation Hypoxanthine. Bioassays designed to measure exact Enzyme kinetic parameter Km value through establishing hyperbolic curve of an enzyme reaction with the use of exact values of cellular quantities for IC50 application under experimental conditions devised by presteady state approach for SSA validity. Methods: Following saturation kinetic, the plot of hyperbolic equilibrium curve developed using initial rates of product formation as a function of (Si) through forward shift under circumstance dG0 the system allows product and reactant favored reactions in relation to (Ef) approximate to [E0 = KM] until complete saturation and estimates Km and Vmax of enzyme system under applied conditions. M-M equation used to assess experimental initial rate data for estimation of Km on excel using Solver and nonlinear least square coefficient correlation "R2" using logarithmic equation for nonlinear curve assessment. teristic reaction constant Km equal toi15. 0 +/- 2 mu mol acquired from the Hyperbolic curve developed through the use of exact (Si) ranges at selected parameter Km and Vmax. The curve assessed by Michaelis Menten equation provides Km value=14.99 mu mol and non-linear least square coefficient correlation "R2" value equal to 0.9895, along with that optimized lysis buffer formulation. In the docked complexes, the interactive amino acids identified were MSE441, ALA 364, GLN363, MSE518, VAL362, GLY517, ASP538, ALA445, TYR521, and TYR444. 2D interactions revealed hydrophobic and alkyl interactions at the noncompetitive binding site of the enzyme and therefore recommended as potential inhibitors against 3ICS protein. Conclusion: This study encourages biochemical analysis of the novel enzymes with the use of presteady state rationale in association with the computational tools as an effective way of designing drugs in a short time against selective enzymes to meet the current challenge efficiently.
C1 [Butt, Firdous] Quaid I Azam Univ, Dept Biotechnol, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Yasinzai, Masoom] Int Islamic Univ, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Malik, Shaukat Iqbal; Munir, Anum] Capital Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Bioinformat & Biosci, Islamabad, Pakistan.
C3 Quaid I Azam University; International Islamic University, Pakistan;
   Capital University of Science & Technology
RP Munir, A (corresponding author), Capital Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Bioinformat & Biosci, Islamabad, Pakistan.
EM anummunir786@yahoo.com
RI Malik, Shaukat/AAM-6398-2020; Munir, Anum/L-6254-2015
OI Malik, shaukat/0000-0002-9537-558X
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NR 25
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 6
PU BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
PI SHARJAH
PA EXECUTIVE STE Y-2, PO BOX 7917, SAIF ZONE, 1200 BR SHARJAH, U ARAB
   EMIRATES
SN 1573-4099
EI 1875-6697
J9 CURR COMPUT-AID DRUG
JI Curr. Comput.-Aided Drug Des.
PY 2021
VL 17
IS 7
BP 905
EP 915
DI 10.2174/1573409916666201207194815
PG 11
WC Chemistry, Medicinal; Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Pharmacology & Pharmacy; Computer Science
GA YN1EB
UT WOS:000747007600006
PM 33290201
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Shaibu, MT
   Akufo, NM
   Munkaila, L
   Guuroh, RT
   Avornyo, FK
AF Shaibu, Mohammed Tiyumtaba
   Akufo, Naana Mintaah
   Munkaila, Lantana
   Guuroh, Reginald Tang
   Avornyo, Franklin Kodzo
TI Assessing climate change effects on fodder species: implications for
   goat production in Northern Ghana
SO ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Fodder; Livestock feed; Upper west
ID FOOD SECURITY; VARIABILITY; ADAPTATION; POVERTY
AB In low- and middle-income countries, agriculture is the major source of livelihood mainly through the simultaneous production of crops and rearing of animals. The main objective of the study was to investigate the implications of climate change and variability on fodder production and its implication on goat production in the Upper West Region. For livestock production, the major problem that continues to build up is the -year-round constraint of feed for livestock. As biodiversity continues to be threatened, there has been a paradigm inclusion from grass-based and crop residue-based feeds to tree-based feeds. Access to the tree-based feeds for livestock keepers especially livestock traders is associated with costs, bringing income to rural youth and women. The study used participatory approaches mainly Focus Group Discussions on separate groups of women and men in four districts of the guinea savanna agro-climatic zone of the Upper West Region to solicit in-depth information on fodder production and trade and climate change adaptation of goat production. The study revealed that different tree-based fodder species are being produced and traded in the study districts to improve goat production. Long time investment in the propagation of the tree-based fodder species is being recommended for two main reasons, first it takes many years to grow, and secondly, they are being competed for, for fuelwood.
C1 [Shaibu, Mohammed Tiyumtaba; Akufo, Naana Mintaah; Avornyo, Franklin Kodzo] Anim Res Inst, Council Sci & Ind Res, POB 52, Nyankpala, Tamale, Ghana.
   [Munkaila, Lantana] Anim Res Inst, Council Sci & Ind Res, Accra, Ghana.
   [Guuroh, Reginald Tang] Forestry Res Inst Ghana, Council Sci & Ind Res, Ejisu, Ghana.
   [Shaibu, Mohammed Tiyumtaba] Univ Ghana, Dept Agr Econ Agribusiness, Accra, Ghana.
RP Shaibu, MT (corresponding author), Anim Res Inst, Council Sci & Ind Res, POB 52, Nyankpala, Tamale, Ghana.; Shaibu, MT (corresponding author), Univ Ghana, Dept Agr Econ Agribusiness, Accra, Ghana.
EM mohammedtiyumtabas@gmail.com; naana.akufo92@outlook.com;
   osaalant@yahoo.com; rguuroh@googlemail.com; favornyo@yahoo.com
FU International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics; CGIAR
   Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security
   (CCAFS); CGIAR Trust Fund, Australia (ACIAR), Ireland (Irish Aid),
   Netherlands (Ministry of Foreign Affairs); UK Government (UK Aid), USA
   (USAID); European Union (EU)
FX This work was implemented as part of the CGIAR Research Program on
   Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), led by the
   International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT). We acknowledge the
   CGIAR Trust Fund, Australia (ACIAR), Ireland (Irish Aid), Netherlands
   (Ministry of Foreign Affairs), New Zealand, Switzerland (SDC), The UK
   Government (UK Aid), USA (USAID), The European Union (EU) for funding
   the program and the International Fund for Agricultural Development
   (IFAD) for its technical support to CCAFS. It is important to state
   however, that the funders had no influence in the development and
   submission of this manuscript to this journal.
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NR 72
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1387-585X
EI 1573-2975
J9 ENVIRON DEV SUSTAIN
JI Environ. Dev. Sustain.
PD 2024 DEC 30
PY 2024
DI 10.1007/s10668-024-05911-9
EA DEC 2024
PG 28
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA Q8Q2D
UT WOS:001387246000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lo, AY
   Liu, SW
   Cheung, LTO
AF Lo, Alex Y.
   Liu, Shuwen
   Cheung, Lewis T. O.
TI Political-economic transformation and the reproduction of climate change
   vulnerability of a high-income city
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Transformation; Climate change adaptation; Vulnerability reduction;
   Political economy; China
ID ADAPTATION; MACAO; GOVERNANCE; SUSTAINABILITY; RESPONSES
AB System transformation is important for low-lying coastal cities to adapt to natural disasters related to climate change, but not all forms of transformation enable adaptation. An important question is how an enduring system change undermines the enabling conditions for reducing vulnerability. This paper addresses the relationship between society-wide transformation and vulnerability reduction. A case study of Macao is used to explain structural vulnerabilities to storm surges in the context of a historic social change process marked by the end of colonial rule. The post-colonial regime seeks political legitimacy from extraordinary economic performance. The capitalist growth model has created new and resilient urban spaces, but reproduced the vulnerabilities of the older ones. The transformation has resulted in a perverse social contract and increased dependence on a shadow regime, undermining the social agency for change. We deconstruct the perceived legitimacy of transformation and examine the social and political consequences of performance legitimization. A society-wide transformation that seeks legitimacy from an unsustainable practice is a recipe for maladaptation. Socio-political realities mediate the effects of transformative social change. Our conclusions highlight the importance of analyzing transformation as an enduring system change. This requires framing the disruptive processes and impacts of transformation as a determinant and explicitly accounting for their socio-temporal dimensions in conceptualizing the non-linear relationship between transformation and vulnerability reduction.
C1 [Lo, Alex Y.; Cheung, Lewis T. O.] York St John Univ, York Business Sch, York, England.
   [Liu, Shuwen] Educ Univ Hong Kong, Dept Social Sci, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Cheung, Lewis T. O.] York St John Univ, York Business Sch, York St, York YO31 7EX, England.
C3 York Saint John University; Education University of Hong Kong (EdUHK);
   York Saint John University
RP Cheung, LTO (corresponding author), York St John Univ, York Business Sch, York St, York YO31 7EX, England.
EM t.cheung@yorksj.ac.uk
RI Liu, Shuwen/AAU-2090-2020; Cheung, Ting/I-2007-2013; Lo,
   Alex/B-7948-2008
OI LIU, SHUWEN/0000-0002-1188-1152; Lo, Alex/0000-0002-5953-4176
FU Hui Oi Chow Trust Fund
FX Funding This work was supported by the Hui Oi Chow Trust Fund.
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NR 69
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 7
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD FEB 1
PY 2024
VL 101
AR 104234
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.104234
EA JAN 2024
PG 13
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA GT4X2
UT WOS:001154919900001
OA hybrid, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Masten, SJ
   Harris, A
   Kearns, J
   Borrion, A
   Peters, CA
   Gadhamshetty, VR
AF Masten, Susan J.
   Harris, Angela
   Kearns, Joshua
   Borrion, Aiduan
   Peters, Catherine A.
   Gadhamshetty, Venkataramana R.
TI Global Environmental Engineering for and with Historically Marginalized
   Communities
SO ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE community-based participatory research; environmental justice;
   marginalized populations; sustainable development; WaSH
AB Marginalized communities lack full participation in social, economic, and political life, and they disproportionately bear the burden of environmental and health risks. This special issue of Environmental Engineering Science, the official journal of the Association of Environmental Engineering and Science Professors (AEESP), reports research on the unique environmental challenges faced by historically marginalized communities around the world. The results of community-based participatory research with an Afro-descendant community in Columbia, Native American communities in Alaska, United States, villagers in the Philippines, disadvantaged communities in California, United States, rural communities in Mexico and Costa Rica, homeless encampments in the San Diego River (United States) watershed entrepreneurs in Durban, South Africa, and remote communities in the island nation of Fiji are presented. The research reported in this special issue is transdisciplinary, bringing engineers together with anthropologists, sociologists, economists, and public health experts. In the 13 articles in this special issue, some of the topics covered include inexpensive technologies for water treatment, novel agricultural strategies for reversing biodiversity losses, and strategies for climate change adaptation. In addition, one article covered educational strategies for teaching ethics to prepare students for humanitarian engineering, including topics of poverty, sustainability, social justice, and engineering decisions under uncertainty. Finally, an article presented ways that environmental engineering professors can engage and promote the success of underrepresented minority students and enable faculty engaged in community-based participatory research.
C1 [Masten, Susan J.] Michigan State Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
   [Harris, Angela] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Civil Construct & Environm Engn, Raleigh, NC USA.
   [Kearns, Joshua] Aqueous Solut, Moravian Falls, NC USA.
   [Borrion, Aiduan] UCL, Dept Civil Environm & Geomat Engn, London, England.
   [Peters, Catherine A.] Princeton Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Princeton, NJ USA.
   [Gadhamshetty, Venkataramana R.] South Dakota Sch Mines & Technol, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Rapid City, SD USA.
C3 Michigan State University; North Carolina State University; University
   of London; University College London; Princeton University; South Dakota
   School Mines & Technology
RP Masten, SJ (corresponding author), Michigan State Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
EM masten@egr.msu.edu
RI Kearns, Josh/AAX-3753-2020; Peters, Catherine/B-5381-2013
OI Peters, Catherine/0000-0003-2418-795X; Borrion,
   Aiduan/0000-0002-9869-1887; Kearns, Joshua/0000-0003-4425-6377; Harris,
   Angela/0000-0001-8639-8539
CR [Anonymous], 2020, World Bank, DOI [10.1596/978-1-4648-1602-4., DOI 10.1596/978-1-4648-1602-4, 10.1596/978-1-4648-1602-4]
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NR 20
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 3
U2 41
PU MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
PI NEW ROCHELLE
PA 140 HUGUENOT STREET, 3RD FL, NEW ROCHELLE, NY 10801 USA
SN 1092-8758
EI 1557-9018
J9 ENVIRON ENG SCI
JI Environ. Eng. Sci.
PD MAY 1
PY 2021
VL 38
IS 5
BP 285
EP 287
DI 10.1089/ees.2021.0103
EA APR 2021
PG 3
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SG2NG
UT WOS:000637384700001
PM 34079201
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Aryal, JP
   Sapkota, TB
   Rahut, DB
   Krupnik, TJ
   Shahrin, S
   Jat, ML
   Stirling, CM
AF Aryal, Jeetendra Prakash
   Sapkota, Tek Bahadur
   Rahut, Dil Bahadur
   Krupnik, Timothy J.
   Shahrin, Sumona
   Jat, M. L.
   Stirling, Clare M.
TI Major Climate risks and Adaptation Strategies of Smallholder Farmers in
   Coastal Bangladesh
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Gender; Climate change adaptation; Climate risks; Smallholder farmers;
   Multivariate probit model
ID AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION; IMPACT; DETERMINANTS; PRODUCTIVITY; GENDER;
   RESPONSES; ETHIOPIA; ADOPTION; POVERTY; TRENDS
AB Rural households in South Asia's coastal deltas face numerous livelihood challenges, including risks posed by climatic variability and extreme weather events. This study examines major climate risks, farmers' adaptation strategies, and the factors affecting the choice of those strategies using data collected from 630 households in southwestern coastal Bangladesh. Farmers identified cyclones, excessive rain and flooding, and salinity as direct climate risks. Increased crop diseases/pests and livestock diseases were perceived as indirect risks resulting from climatic variability. Farmers used multiple adaptation strategies against those risks such as modifications in farm management, use of savings and borrowing funds from family and neighbors, and periodically reducing household food consumption. Off-farm employment and seeking assistance from governmental as well as non-governmental organizations (NGOs) were also common adaptation strategies. The results show that male-headed households are more likely to change farming practices and reduce consumption compared with female-headed households that conversely tended to take assistance from NGOs as an adaptation strategy. Ownership of land and livestock, as well as farmers' prior exposure to climate change and educational training, also had a significant effect on the choice of adaptation strategy. Therefore, development interventions and policies that aimed at improving resource endowment and training to farmers on climatic risks and their adaptation strategies can help minimize the impact of climatic risks.
C1 [Aryal, Jeetendra Prakash; Rahut, Dil Bahadur] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, Carretera Mexico Veracruz Km 45 Batan, Texcoco, Mexico.
   [Sapkota, Tek Bahadur; Jat, M. L.] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, New Delhi, India.
   [Krupnik, Timothy J.; Shahrin, Sumona] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Stirling, Clare M.] Mondelez Int, Cocoa Life, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
C3 CGIAR; International Maize & Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT); CGIAR;
   International Maize & Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT); CGIAR;
   International Maize & Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT); Mondelez
   International
RP Rahut, DB (corresponding author), Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, Carretera Mexico Veracruz Km 45 Batan, Texcoco, Mexico.
EM d.rahut@cgiar.org
RI Rahut, Dil Bahadur/AAD-8370-2022; Shahrin, Sumona/KTI-8023-2024;
   Sapkota, Tek/AAC-3155-2020; Jat, ML/O-2824-2019; Krupnik,
   Timothy/J-6363-2019; Rahut, Dil Bahadur/AES-0258-2022
OI Aryal, Jeetendra/0000-0002-9128-5739; Rahut, Dil
   Bahadur/0000-0002-7505-5271; Sapkota, Tek/0000-0001-5311-0586
FU CGIAR; USAID; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF)
FX This work was carried out by International Maize and Wheat Improvement
   Center (CIMMYT) as part of the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change,
   Agriculture, and Food Security (CCAFS), with support from CGIAR Fund
   Donors and through bilateral funding agreements. For details, please
   visit https://ccafs.cgia r.org/donors. Further support was also provided
   by the USAID supported Climate Services for Resilient Development (CSRD)
   in South Asia and USAID and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (BMGF)
   funded Cereal Systems Initiative for South Asia (CSISA) project. We
   thank field teams for collecting data in Bangladesh. The views expressed
   here are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views
   of the authors' institutions, CCAFS, BMGF, or USAID, and shall not be
   used for advertising purposes.
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NR 66
TC 71
Z9 71
U1 5
U2 38
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0364-152X
EI 1432-1009
J9 ENVIRON MANAGE
JI Environ. Manage.
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 66
IS 1
BP 105
EP 120
DI 10.1007/s00267-020-01291-8
EA MAY 2020
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LS2WI
UT WOS:000531205600001
PM 32388655
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Brainard, DC
   Byl, B
   Hayden, ZD
   Noyes, DC
   Bakker, J
   Werling, B
AF Brainard, D. C.
   Byl, B.
   Hayden, Z. D.
   Noyes, D. C.
   Bakker, J.
   Werling, B.
TI Managing drought risk in a changing climate: Irrigation and cultivar
   impacts on Michigan asparagus
SO AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Asparagus; Climate change adaptation; Drought stress; Rooting depth;
   Sub-surface irrigation; Overhead irrigation
ID ROOTING DEPTH; YIELD; SUSCEPTIBILITY; ESTABLISHMENT
AB Increasing temperatures and rainfall variability in the Midwestern U.S. have spurred interest in strategies to reduce risks of heat and drought stress in traditionally rainfed crops including asparagus. A long-term field experiment was conducted on sandy soils in Western Michigan from 2010-17 to evaluate the effects of three levels of irrigation (none, overhead or sub-surface drip) and two asparagus cultivars (Guelph Millennium [GM] and Jersey Supreme [JS]) for reducing these risks. Overhead irrigation during the fern growth period resulted in cumulative yield improvements of 10% for GM during the 2012-17 growing seasons, with the largest yield benefits (21%) occurring in 2012, following hot, dry conditions the previous summer. In contrast, cumulative yields of JS were unaffected by irrigation, and yield reductions of 13% due to irrigation were observed in 2017, following wet conditions the previous late summer and fall. Estimates of cultivar water-use by depth suggest that JS was better able to tolerate drought due to a deeper root system compared to GM. However, our results suggest that JS may also be more sensitive than GM to excessive soil moisture during fall senescence. Yield response did not vary with delivery system, but sub-surface drip used less water than overhead irrigation. These results demonstrate the important role of both genetics and management practices in mitigating drought risk.
C1 [Brainard, D. C.; Byl, B.; Hayden, Z. D.; Noyes, D. C.] Michigan State Univ, Dept Hort, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
   [Byl, B.] Nels Nyblad Family Farm & Byl Orchards, E Lansing, MI USA.
   [Bakker, J.] Michigan Asparagus Res Board, Dewitt, MI USA.
   [Werling, B.] Michigan State Univ Extens, Hart, MI USA.
C3 Michigan State University
RP Brainard, DC (corresponding author), Michigan State Univ, Dept Hort, E Lansing, MI 48824 USA.
EM brainar9@msu.edu
FU Michigan Asparagus Research Board; USDA/MDARD Specialty Crop Block Grant
   Program; USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture; Michigan State
   University AgBioResearch; MSU Project GREEEN
FX The work in this publication stems, in part, from the Master's Thesis
   "Sub-surface Drip and Overhead Irrigation Effects on Asparagus
   Production Under Michigan Growing Conditions" carried out at Michigan
   State University (MSU) by Benjamen Byl (Byl, 2013). Funding was provided
   through grants from the Michigan Asparagus Research Board, MSU Project
   GREEEN, and the USDA/MDARD Specialty Crop Block Grant Program. We also
   acknowledge support from USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture
   and Michigan State University AgBioResearch. We also thank collaborating
   farms including Oomen Brothers Farm, Oomen Farms and Malburg Farms for
   their generous advice and assistance. We also recieved helpful advice
   from Daniel Drost, Paul Banks, Norm Myers and Beau Shacklette.
CR Allen R. G., 1998, FAO Irrigation and Drainage Paper
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NR 42
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 45
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-3774
EI 1873-2283
J9 AGR WATER MANAGE
JI Agric. Water Manage.
PD MAR 1
PY 2019
VL 213
BP 773
EP 781
DI 10.1016/j.agwat.2018.11.017
PG 9
WC Agronomy; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Water Resources
GA HK4SF
UT WOS:000457952700073
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Findlater, KM
   Satterfield, T
   Kandlikar, M
   Donner, SD
AF Findlater, Kieran M.
   Satterfield, Terre
   Kandlikar, Milind
   Donner, Simon D.
TI Six languages for a risky climate: how farmers react to weather and
   climate change
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE; HOMO-ECONOMICUS; ADAPTATION; ADOPTION;
   PERCEPTIONS; MANAGEMENT
AB How climate-sensitive actors-like commercial farmers-perceive, understand, and react to weather and climate stimuli will ultimately determine the success or failure of climate change adaptation policies. Many studies have characterized farmers' climate risk perceptions or farming practices, but few have evaluated the in situ decision-making processes that link (or fail to link) risk perceptions to adaptive behaviors. Here, we use a novel methodology to reveal patterns in climate-sensitive decision-making by commercial grain farmers in South Africa. We structure, linguistically code, and statistically analyze causal relationships described in 30 mental models interviews. We show that farmers' framing of weather and climate risks strongly predicts their adoption of conservation agriculture (CA)-climate-resilient best practices that reduce shorter-term financial and weather risks and longer-term agronomic risks. These farmers describe weather and climate risks using six exhaustive and mutually exclusive languages: agricultural, cognitive, economic, emotional, political, and survival. The prevalence of agricultural and economic language only weakly predicts CA practice, whereas emotional and farm survival language strongly limits CA adoption. The framing of weather risks in terms of farm survival impedes adaptations that are likely to improve such survival in the longer term. But this survival framing is not necessarily indicative of farmers' current economic circumstances. It represents a consequential mindset rather than a financial state and it may go undetected in more conventional studies relying on direct survey or interview questions.
C1 [Findlater, Kieran M.; Satterfield, Terre; Kandlikar, Milind] Univ British Columbia, Inst Resources Environm & Sustainabil, 429-2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
   [Findlater, Kieran M.] Univ Cape Town, African Climate & Dev Initiat, Geol Sci Bldg,Level 6,13 Lib Rd, ZA-7700 Cape Town, South Africa.
   [Donner, Simon D.] Univ British Columbia, Dept Geog, 1984 West Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, Canada.
C3 University of British Columbia; University of Cape Town; University of
   British Columbia
RP Findlater, KM (corresponding author), Univ British Columbia, Inst Resources Environm & Sustainabil, 429-2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.; Findlater, KM (corresponding author), Univ Cape Town, African Climate & Dev Initiat, Geol Sci Bldg,Level 6,13 Lib Rd, ZA-7700 Cape Town, South Africa.
EM k.findlater@alumni.ubc.ca
OI Findlater, Kieran/0000-0002-6818-5588
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NR 46
TC 24
Z9 27
U1 1
U2 27
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JUN
PY 2018
VL 148
IS 4
BP 451
EP 465
DI 10.1007/s10584-018-2217-z
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA GI6DH
UT WOS:000434459200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lawrence, J
   Bell, R
   Blackett, P
   Stephens, S
   Allan, S
AF Lawrence, Judy
   Bell, Rob
   Blackett, Paula
   Stephens, Scott
   Allan, Sylvia
TI National guidance for adapting to coastal hazards and sea-level rise:
   Anticipating change, when and how to change pathway
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Sea-level rise; Decision-making; Uncertainty;
   Dynamic adaptive pathways planning; Coastal hazards; Engagement;
   National guidance
ID CLIMATE; PERCEPTIONS; IMPACT
AB Sea-level rise challenges public policy-making because existing planning frameworks and methods are designed to promote certainty using static and time-bound planning and legal instruments. Sea-level rise is a dynamic and uncertain process, which is deeply uncertain towards the latter part of this century and beyond. Communities require decision making approaches that can enable adjustments to policies ahead of damage, without entrenching current exposure to hazards or incurring larger than necessary adjustment costs in the future. We first discuss the nature of the sea-level problem, the policy context that creates decision-making challenges and how they have been typically addressed through policy and practice. Secondly, we show how an assessment and planning approach, designed to address uncertainty and change (the Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways (DAPP) planning approach), has been integrated into national guidance for coastal hazard and climate change decision making in New Zealand. The Guidance integrates hazard and sea-level rise assessments with uncertainty type and with the scale and scope of activity. It is underpinned with values-based community engagement, and uses signals and decision triggers for monitoring and adjusting pathways to meet objectives over time. The applicability of the approach in the Guidance for other policy problems involving uncertainty, is also discussed.
C1 [Lawrence, Judy] Victoria Univ Wellington, New Zealand Climate Change Res Inst, POB 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand.
   [Bell, Rob; Blackett, Paula; Stephens, Scott] NIWA, POB 11115, Hamilton, New Zealand.
   [Allan, Sylvia] Allan Planning & Res Ltd, 26 Patrick S4, Lower Hutt, New Zealand.
C3 Victoria University Wellington; National Institute of Water &
   Atmospheric Research (NIWA) - New Zealand
RP Lawrence, J (corresponding author), Victoria Univ Wellington, New Zealand Climate Change Res Inst, POB 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand.
EM judy.lawrence@vuw.ac.nz; rob.bell@niwa.co.nz; paula.blackett@niwa.co.nz;
   scott.stephens@niwa.co.nz; sylvia.allan@ihug.co.nz
RI Lawrence, Judy/W-9823-2019
OI Bell, Robert/0000-0002-8490-8942
FU Ministry for the Environment, New Zealand; Sea-level Change project in
   the NIWA Strategic Science Investment Fund [CAVA1804]; Deep South
   National Science Challenge
FX All authors were funded by the Ministry for the Environment, New
   Zealand, to revise the Coastal Hazard Guidance, based on their
   respective expertise. NIWA authors were funded by the Sea-level Change
   project (CAVA1804) in the NIWA Strategic Science Investment Fund for
   preparation of this paper. The lead author and NIWA authors also
   received funding from the Deep South National Science Challenge for the
   Supporting Decision Making in a Changing Climate:Tools and Measures
   Project.
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NR 47
TC 76
Z9 84
U1 0
U2 36
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD APR
PY 2018
VL 82
BP 100
EP 107
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.01.012
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GB9LQ
UT WOS:000429395700011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fatichi, S
   Ivanov, VY
   Paschalis, A
   Peleg, N
   Molnar, P
   Rimkus, S
   Kim, J
   Burlando, P
   Caporali, E
AF Fatichi, Simone
   Ivanov, Valeriy Y.
   Paschalis, Athanasios
   Peleg, Nadav
   Molnar, Peter
   Rimkus, Stefan
   Kim, Jongho
   Burlando, Paolo
   Caporali, Enrica
TI Uncertainty partition challenges the predictability of vital details of
   climate change
SO EARTHS FUTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Climate variability; Precipitation extremes; Stochastic
   downscaling; Weather generators; Engineering design
ID NORTH-AMERICAN CLIMATE; INTERNAL VARIABILITY; FUTURE CHANGES; WATER
   CLOUDS; TIME-SERIES; PROJECTIONS; MODEL; CMIP5; PARAMETERIZATION;
   PRECIPITATION
AB Decision makers and consultants are particularly interested in detailed information on future climate to prepare adaptation strategies and adjust design criteria. Projections of future climate at local spatial scales and fine temporal resolutions are subject to the same uncertainties as those at the global scale but the partition among uncertainty sources (emission scenarios, climate models, and internal climate variability) remains largely unquantified. At the local scale, the uncertainty of the mean and extremes of precipitation is shown to be irreducible for mid and end-of-century projections because it is almost entirely caused by internal climate variability (stochasticity). Conversely, projected changes in mean air temperature and other meteorological variables can be largely constrained, even at local scales, if more accurate emission scenarios can be developed. The results were obtained by applying a comprehensive stochastic downscaling technique to climate model outputs for three exemplary locations. In contrast with earlier studies, the three sources of uncertainty are considered as dependent and, therefore, non-additive. The evidence of the predominant role of internal climate variability leaves little room for uncertainty reduction in precipitation projections; however, the inference is not necessarily negative, because the uncertainty of historic observations is almost as large as that for future projections with direct implications for climate change adaptation measures.
C1 [Fatichi, Simone; Peleg, Nadav; Molnar, Peter; Rimkus, Stefan; Burlando, Paolo] ETH, Inst Environm Engn, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Ivanov, Valeriy Y.; Kim, Jongho] Univ Michigan, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Paschalis, Athanasios] Univ Southampton, Fac Engn & Environm, Southampton, Hants, England.
   [Paschalis, Athanasios] Duke Univ, Nicholas Sch Environm, Durham, NC 27708 USA.
   [Rimkus, Stefan] SCOR Global P&C, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Kim, Jongho] Sejong Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Seoul, South Korea.
   [Caporali, Enrica] Univ Florence, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Florence, Italy.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; University of
   Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of Southampton; Duke
   University; Sejong University; University of Florence
RP Fatichi, S (corresponding author), ETH, Inst Environm Engn, Zurich, Switzerland.
EM simone.fatichi@ifu.baug.ethz.ch
RI Ivanov, Valeriy/B-4510-2013; Caporali, Enrica/JZE-1275-2024; Molnar,
   Peter/F-3066-2013; Rimkus, Stefan/C-9853-2013; Peleg, Nadav/Q-9719-2016
OI CAPORALI, ENRICA/0000-0001-6389-3801; Fatichi,
   Simone/0000-0003-1361-6659; Molnar, Peter/0000-0001-6437-4931; Ivanov,
   Valeriy/0000-0002-5208-2189; Rimkus, Stefan/0000-0002-1636-4226; Peleg,
   Nadav/0000-0001-6863-2934
FU SNSF [P2EZP2-52244]; Stavros Niarchos Foundation; NSF [EAR 1151443];
   Directorate For Geosciences; Division Of Earth Sciences [1151443]
   Funding Source: National Science Foundation
FX We thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments that contributed to
   improve the quality of the manuscript. We acknowledge the World Climate
   Research Programme's Working Group on Coupled Modelling, which is
   responsible for CMIP, and we thank the climate modeling groups (listed
   in Table S1 of this paper) for producing and making available their
   model output. For CMIP, the U.S. Department of Energy's Program for
   Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison provides coordinating
   support and led development of software infrastructure in partnership
   with the Global Organization for Earth System Science Portals. A.
   Paschalis was supported by the SNSF (Grant P2EZP2-52244) and the Stavros
   Niarchos Foundation. V. Ivanov acknowledges the support of NSF Grant EAR
   1151443.
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NR 70
TC 94
Z9 100
U1 0
U2 37
PU WILEY-BLACKWELL
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 2328-4277
J9 EARTHS FUTURE
JI Earth Future
PD MAY
PY 2016
VL 4
IS 5
BP 240
EP 251
DI 10.1002/2015EF000336
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA DR1LP
UT WOS:000379667300008
OA gold, Green Accepted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Martin, M
   Billah, M
   Siddiqui, T
   Abrar, C
   Black, R
   Kniveton, D
AF Martin, Maxmillan
   Billah, Motasim
   Siddiqui, Tasneem
   Abrar, Chowdhury
   Black, Richard
   Kniveton, Dominic
TI Climate-related migration in rural Bangladesh: a behavioural model
SO POPULATION AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Hazards; Cognitive model; Adaptation; Decision-making;
   Planned behaviour
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; NANG-RONG; LAND-USE; POPULATION; ADAPTATION; FLOWS;
   RISK; VULNERABILITY; ENVIRONMENT; ECONOMICS
AB Research into the climate change and migration nexus has often focussed solely on how people move in response to the impacts of variability and change in climate. This notion often ignores the nature of migration as a tried and tested livelihood choice amid a variety of socio-economic and environmental opportunities and limitations. This paper closely looks at the behavioural aspects of migration decision-making in Bangladesh in the context of changes in its economy, and, increasingly, exposure to the impacts of climate variability and change. We find that villagers in areas particularly affected by increasing climatic stresses and shocks are diversifying their traditional livelihood strategies by migrating. Environmental factors, including climatic stresses and shocks, often make such shifts even more necessary. Although the migrants' primary motivation is better income, in effect, migration becomes an effective form of adaptation. Based on a qualitative study in three geographically distinct places of Bangladesh, we propose that migration is a socially acceptable behaviour that occurs in the context of perceived environmental change and climate variability. Migration decisions are mediated by a set of 'behavioural factors' that assesses the efficacy of different responses to opportunities and challenges, their socio-cultural acceptance and the ability to respond successfully. This understanding has policy relevance for climate change adaptation, in terms of both how migrants are perceived and how their movements are planned for.
C1 [Martin, Maxmillan; Black, Richard; Kniveton, Dominic] Univ Sussex, Sch Global Studies, Dept Geog, Brighton BN1 9SJ, E Sussex, England.
   [Billah, Motasim; Siddiqui, Tasneem; Abrar, Chowdhury] Univ Dhaka, RMMRU, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
   [Black, Richard] Univ London, SOAS, London WC1H 0XG, England.
C3 University of Sussex; University of Dhaka; University of London;
   University of London School Oriental & African Studies (SOAS)
RP Martin, M (corresponding author), Univ Sussex, Sch Global Studies, Dept Geog, Brighton BN1 9SJ, E Sussex, England.
EM mm584@sussex.ac.uk; d.r.kniveton@sussex.ac.uk
RI Martin, Max/K-9037-2018
OI Martin, Max/0000-0001-8047-078X; Black, Richard/0000-0003-4276-2057;
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NR 108
TC 69
Z9 77
U1 0
U2 100
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0199-0039
EI 1573-7810
J9 POPUL ENVIRON
JI Popul. Env.
PD SEP
PY 2014
VL 36
IS 1
BP 85
EP 110
DI 10.1007/s11111-014-0207-2
PG 26
WC Demography; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Demography; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AN4NZ
UT WOS:000340566100005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vos, CC
   van der Hoek, DCJ
   Vonk, M
AF Vos, Claire C.
   van der Hoek, Dirk C. J.
   Vonk, Marijke
TI Spatial planning of a climate adaptation zone for wetland ecosystems
SO LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Biodiversity; Adaptation strategy; Ecological network;
   Adaptive capacity; Spatial planning
ID HABITAT FRAGMENTATION; BIODIVERSITY; CONSERVATION; LANDSCAPES;
   PERSISTENCE; NETWORKS; DISTRIBUTIONS; RESILIENCE; MANAGEMENT; IMPACTS
AB Here we present a spatial planning approach for the implementation of adaptation measures to climate change in conservation planning for ecological networks. We analyse the wetland ecosystems of the Dutch National Ecological Network for locations where the effectiveness of the network might be weakened because of climate change. We first identify potential dispersal bottlenecks where connectivity might be insufficient to facilitate range expansions. We then identify habitat patches that might have a too low carrying capacity for populations to cope with additional population fluctuations caused by weather extremes. Finally, we describe the spatial planning steps that were followed to determine the best locations for adaptation measures. An essential part of our adaptation strategy is to concentrate adaptation measures in a 'climate adaptation zone'. Concentrating adaptation measures is a cost-effective planning strategy, rendering the largest benefit per area unit. Measures are taken where abiotic conditions are optimal and measures to enhance the spatial cohesion of the network are taken close to existing areas, thus creating the highest possible connectivity with the lowest area demands. Another benefit of a climate adaptation zone is that it provides a spatial protection zone where activities that will have a negative impact on ecosystem functioning might be avoided or mitigated. The following adaptation measures are proposed within the climate adaptation zone: (1) link habitat networks to enable species to disperse from present to future suitable climate zones, (2) enlarge the carrying capacity by either enlarging the size of natural areas or by improving habitat quality to shorten population recovery after disturbances, (3) increase the heterogeneity of natural areas, preferably by stimulating natural landscape-forming processes, to avoid large synchronised extinctions after extreme weather events. The presented approach can be generalised to develop climate adaptation zones for other ecosystem types inside or outside Europe, where habitat fragmentation is a limiting factor in biodiversity responses to climate change.
C1 [Vos, Claire C.] Alterra Wageningen Univ & Res Ctr, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [van der Hoek, Dirk C. J.; Vonk, Marijke] Netherlands Environm Assessment Agcy, NL-3720 AH Bilthoven, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Netherlands National Institute for
   Public Health & the Environment
RP Vos, CC (corresponding author), Alterra Wageningen Univ & Res Ctr, POB 47, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM claire.vos@wur.nl; dirk-jan.vanderhoek@pbl.nl; marijke.vonk@pbl.nl
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NR 64
TC 21
Z9 26
U1 1
U2 51
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-2973
EI 1572-9761
J9 LANDSCAPE ECOL
JI Landsc. Ecol.
PD DEC
PY 2010
VL 25
IS 10
BP 1465
EP 1477
DI 10.1007/s10980-010-9535-5
PG 13
WC Ecology; Geography, Physical; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography; Geology
GA 669SR
UT WOS:000283371000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jamshed, A
   Patel, C
   Puriya, A
   Iqbal, N
   Rana, IA
   Mcmillan, JM
   Pandey, R
   Altaf, S
   Mehmood, RT
   bin Saad, U
AF Jamshed, Ali
   Patel, Chirag
   Puriya, Anshul
   Iqbal, Nimra
   Rana, Irfan Ahmad
   Mcmillan, Joanna M.
   Pandey, Rajiv
   Altaf, Shahbaz
   Mehmood, Rana Tahir
   bin Saad, Umair
TI Flood resilience assessment from the perspective of urban (in)formality
   in Surat, India: Implications for sustainable development
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainability; Resilience building; Indicators; Disaster risk
   reduction; Climate change adaptation; Informality
ID COMMUNITY RESILIENCE; INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS; DISASTER RESILIENCE;
   BUILDING RESILIENCE; KHYBER PAKHTUNKHWA; RISK-ASSESSMENT; VULNERABILITY;
   HAZARDS; DHAKA; GOVERNANCE
AB Urbanization has resulted in increasing the pace of informality, specifically in developing countries like India. Informality is taking place at locations that are exposed to various hazards, and therefore, resilience building of both informal and formal settlements is needed to achieve sustainable development. Resilience assessment is key in defining appropriate area-specific resilience measures. Given that, this research assesses the resilience of formal and informal settlements of Surat city in India and presents implications for sustainable development. To assess resilience, an indicator-based approach was taken, using a household survey to collect the data. Analysis suggests that the resilience of formal and informal settlements is significantly different. Key differences were found in physical and institutional resilience, where informal settlements were found to be significantly less resilient than formal settlements. Several measures, such as gender-sensitive education and livelihood programs, as well as mobile water and sanitation, have positive implications for sustainable development. Overall, the study can guide disaster managers and policy makers to adopt a strategic and more targeted approach to strengthen resilience and achieve sustainable development.
C1 [Jamshed, Ali] Univ Stuttgart, Inst Spatial & Reg Planning IREUS, Pfaffenwalding 7, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany.
   [Patel, Chirag] Univ Stuttgart, Infrastruct Planning, Pfaffenwalding 7, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany.
   [Puriya, Anshul] Atal Bihari Vajpayee Inst Good Governance & Policy, Bhopal, India.
   [Iqbal, Nimra] Univ Stuttgart, Inst Spatial & Reg Planning IREUS, Pfaffenwalding 7, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany.
   [Rana, Irfan Ahmad] Natl Univ Sci & Technol NUST, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Rana, Irfan Ahmad] Univ Nevada, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Reno, NV 89503 USA.
   [Mcmillan, Joanna M.] Univ Stuttgart, Inst Spatial & Reg Planning IREUS, Pfaffenwalding 7, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany.
   [Pandey, Rajiv] Indian Council Forestry Res & Educ ICFRE, Dehra Dun, India.
   [Altaf, Shahbaz] Natl Univ Sci & Technol NUST, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Mehmood, Rana Tahir] Univ Technol Malaysia, Fac Built Environm, Urban & Reg Planning Dept, Johor Baharu, Malaysia.
   [bin Saad, Umair] Lahore Dev Author, Lahore, Pakistan.
C3 University of Stuttgart; University of Stuttgart; University of
   Stuttgart; National University of Sciences & Technology - Pakistan;
   Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno;
   University of Stuttgart; Indian Council of Forestry Research & Education
   (ICFRE); National University of Sciences & Technology - Pakistan;
   Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
RP Jamshed, A (corresponding author), Univ Stuttgart, Inst Spatial & Reg Planning IREUS, Pfaffenwalding 7, D-70569 Stuttgart, Germany.
EM ali.jamshed@ireus.uni-stuttgart.de; chirag.patel3141@gmail.com;
   apuriya@ar.iitr.ac.in; nimra.iqbal@ireus.uni-stuttgart.de;
   irfanrana90@hotmail.com; joanna.mcmillan@ireus.uni-stuttgart.de;
   rajivfri@yahoo.com; saltaf@nit.nust.edu.pk;
   tahirmehmood@graduate.utm.my; umairbinsaad54@gmail.com
RI Jamshed, Ali/AAF-6809-2020; PURIYA, ANSHUL/CAJ-3019-2022; Mehmood, Rana
   Tahir/LEH-6637-2024; Altaf, Shahbaz/GSE-3596-2022; Rana, Irfan
   Ahmad/C-2560-2017
OI Altaf, Shahbaz/0000-0001-7846-4129; Puriya, Anshul/0000-0002-6800-0512
FU We would like to thank the participants of the household survey for
   their cooperation and time. We are also grateful to the SMC staff for
   providing us with the relevant information for this study.
FX We would like to thank the participants of the household survey for
   their cooperation and time. We are also grateful to the SMC staff for
   providing us with the relevant information for this study.
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NR 139
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 14
U2 32
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 120
IS 10
SI SI
BP 9297
EP 9326
DI 10.1007/s11069-023-06267-5
EA OCT 2023
PG 30
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA A9R8O
UT WOS:001090735500002
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Garrido-Perez, JM
   García-Herrera, R
   Barriopedro, D
   Ordóñez, C
AF Garrido-Perez, Jose M.
   Garcia-Herrera, Ricardo
   Barriopedro, David
   Ordonez, Carlos
TI Shifting summer holidays in Spain as an adaptation measure to climate
   change
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Holidays; Electricity demand; Work productivity; Air quality; Ozone;
   Global warming
ID METEOROLOGICAL DRIVERS; AIR-POLLUTION; SURFACE OZONE; DECOMPOSITION;
   TEMPERATURE; VARIABILITY; SENSITIVITY; SCENARIOS; IMPACTS; FUTURE
AB This paper assesses whether moving summer holidays to the warmest period of the year in Spain could be a useful climate change adaptation strategy. While the most popular period for Spanish summer holidays has traditionally been August, we illustrate that the second half of July is the hottest period of the year and when the negative effects of high temperatures are most pronounced. If the holiday period in the second fortnight of August was moved to the second fortnight of July, some of the associated impacts would be mitigated due to the reduced anthropogenic activity during non-working days. In particular, we find a significant reduction in the annual peak of labour productivity loss (similar to 25 %) and, to a lesser extent, of electricity demand and near-surface ozone concentrations (similar to 3-4 %). Finally, we also show that global warming could lead to enhanced differences between both fortnights (even with no change in the seasonal cycle of temperature) because of the non-linear relationships between temperature and its impacts. Therefore, the positive effect of shifting holidays would be even larger in the coming future.
C1 [Garrido-Perez, Jose M.; Garcia-Herrera, Ricardo; Barriopedro, David; Ordonez, Carlos] Univ Complutense Madrid, Dept Fis Tierra & Astrofis, Madrid, Spain.
   [Garcia-Herrera, Ricardo; Barriopedro, David] UCM, Inst Geociencias IGEO, CSIC, Madrid, Spain.
C3 Complutense University of Madrid; Complutense University of Madrid;
   Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC); CSIC-UCM -
   Instituto de Geociencias (IGEO)
RP Garrido-Perez, JM (corresponding author), Univ Complutense Madrid, Dept Fis Tierra & Astrofis, Madrid, Spain.
EM josgarri@ucm.es
RI Ordóñez, Carlos/F-1450-2016; Garcia-Herrera, Ricardo/ABE-4731-2020;
   Barriopedro, David/C-1421-2008
OI Barriopedro, David/0000-0001-6476-944X
FU Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation [PID2021-122252OB-I00];
   European Commission - Next GenerationEU (Regulation EU)
FX We acknowledge support from MALONE (PID2021-122252OB-I00) , project
   funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. This research
   work has also received support from the European Commission -
   NextGenerationEU (Regulation EU 2020/2094) , through CSIC's
   Interdisciplinary Thematic Platform Clima (PTI Clima) /Development of
   Operational Climate Services. We thank the Spanish Instituto Nacional de
   Estadistica (INE) and Red Electrica de Espana (REE) for providing the
   trips by residents and electricity demand data, respectively. The
   authors are also grateful to the World Climate Research Programme's
   Working Group on Coupled Modelling, which is responsible for CMIP, and
   the modelling groups for producing and making available their model
   out-puts. ERA5 and CAMS data provided courtesy ECMWF. The authors thank
   two anonymous reviewers for their useful comments
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NR 55
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 1
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD DEC 15
PY 2023
VL 904
AR 166879
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.166879
EA SEP 2023
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA T8OA0
UT WOS:001080510000001
PM 37678533
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nasir, N
   Kansal, A
   Alshaltone, O
   Barneih, F
   Shanableh, A
   Al-Shabi, M
   Al Shammaa, A
AF Nasir, Nida
   Kansal, Afreen
   Alshaltone, Omar
   Barneih, Feras
   Shanableh, Abdallah
   Al-Shabi, Mohammad
   Al Shammaa, Ahmed
TI Deep learning detection of types of water-bodies using optical variables
   and ensembling
SO INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS WITH APPLICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Stacked modeling; ANOVA; Smote; Classification; Meta learning
ID QUALITY; SUPPORT; BODY; SEGMENTATION; ALGORITHMS
AB Water features are one of the most crucial environmental elements for strengthening climate-change adaptation. Remote sensing (RS) technologies driven by artificial intelligence (AI) have emerged as one of the most soughtafter approaches for automating water information extraction and indeed. In this paper, a stacked ensemble model approach is proposed on AquaSat dataset (more than 500,000 images collection via satellite and Google Earth Engine). A one-way Analysis of variance (ANOVA) test and the Kruskal Wallis test are conducted for various optical-based variables at 99% significance level to understand how these vary for different water bodies. An oversampling is done on the training data using Synthetic Minority Oversampling Technique (SMOTE) to solve the problem of class imbalance while the model is tested on an imbalanced data, replicating the real-life situation. To enhance state-of-the-art, the pros of standalone machine learning classifiers and neural networks have been utilized. The stacked model obtained 100% accuracy on the testing data when using the decision tree classifier as the meta model. This study has been cross validated five-fold and will help researchers working in in-situ water bodies detection with the use of stacked model classification.
C1 [Nasir, Nida; Kansal, Afreen; Barneih, Feras; Shanableh, Abdallah; Al-Shabi, Mohammad] Univ Sharjah, Res Inst Sci & Engn, Sharjah, U Arab Emirates.
   [Kansal, Afreen] London Sch Econ, Dept Stat, London, England.
   [Alshaltone, Omar; Barneih, Feras; Shanableh, Abdallah; Al-Shabi, Mohammad; Al Shammaa, Ahmed] Univ Sharjah, Coll Engn, Sharjah, U Arab Emirates.
   [Al Shammaa, Ahmed] Univ Khorfakkan, Sharjah, U Arab Emirates.
C3 University of Sharjah; University of London; London School Economics &
   Political Science; University of Sharjah
RP Nasir, N (corresponding author), Univ Sharjah, Res Inst Sci & Engn, Sharjah, U Arab Emirates.
EM nnasir@sharjah.ac.ae; a.kansal1@lse.ac.uk; oalshaltone@sharjah.ac.ae;
   fbarneih@sharjah.ac.ae; shanableh@sharjah.ac.ae; malshabi@sharjah.ac.ae;
   a.kansal1@lse.ac.uk
RI Nasir, Nida/AAQ-7587-2021
OI Nasir, Nida/0000-0002-7785-9935
FU University of Sharjah and its Research Institute of Science and
   Engineering (RISE)
FX We would like to extend sincere thanks to the University of Sharjah and
   its Research Institute of Science and Engineering (RISE) especially to
   the Bio-Sensing Research Group for supporting this work.
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NR 52
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 0
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
EI 2667-3053
J9 INTELL SYST APPL
JI Intell. Syst. Appl.
PD MAY
PY 2023
VL 18
AR 200222
DI 10.1016/j.iswa.2023.200222
PG 19
WC Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence; Computer Science, Information
   Systems; Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Computer Science
GA F0Z7U
UT WOS:001307193900007
OA Green Accepted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maria, DL
   Maria-Therese, G
   Ece, K
AF Maria, Dellmuth Lisa
   Maria-Therese, Gustafsson
   Ece, Kural
TI Global adaptation governance: Explaining the governance responses of
   international organizations to new issue linkages
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Global adaptation governance; Governance responses; International
   organizations; Problem complexity; Institutional fragmentation; Resource
   availability
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; PERSPECTIVES; EXPERIENCES; POLICIES; SYSTEM; WORLD
AB Climate change adaptation is increasingly perceived as a global and interconnected policy challenge among practitioners and academics, making localized solutions insufficient. In parallel to this trend, a growing number of international organizations that do not have climate as their core mandates link adaptation to various issue areas, such as energy, health, and conflict resolution. Yet we still know little about how and why international organizations respond to adaptation challenges. This article develops an innovative theoretical framework to understand the factors that influence the governance responses of international organizations to adaptation challenges in the context of their respective issue areas. Our analysis reveals that there are three main and interrelated factors influencing international governance responses: problem complexity, institutional fragmentation, and fiscal pressures. We examine our framework by drawing on of two sources of data: first, a yearly large-n dataset at the level of fourteen international organizations from 2007 to 2017 created on the basis of official documents; and second, in-depth case studies of three UN agencies central in addressing three prominent issue linkages: climate-conflict, climate-health, and climate-migration. We conclude by sketching broader implications for the theory and practice of global adaptation governance.
C1 [Maria, Dellmuth Lisa; Ece, Kural] Stockholm Univ, Dept Econ Hist & Int Relat, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Maria-Therese, Gustafsson] Stockholm Univ Maria Therese, Dept Polit Sci, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Stockholm University
RP Maria-Therese, G (corresponding author), Stockholm Univ Maria Therese, Dept Polit Sci, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
EM gustafsson@statsvet.su.se
RI Dellmuth, Lisa/AFR-8126-2022
FU Glocalizing Climate Governance (GlocalClim) project - Formas
   [201801705]; Mistra Geopolitics Navigating towards a Secure and
   Sustainable Future - Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental
   Research (Mistra) [2016/11 #5]
FX This work was supported by the Glocalizing Climate Governance
   (GlocalClim) project funded by Formas under grant number 201801705, and
   Mistra Geopolitics Navigating towards a Secure and Sustainable Future,
   funded by the Swedish Foundation for Strategic Environmental Research
   (Mistra) under grant number 2016/11 #5.
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NR 97
TC 8
Z9 10
U1 8
U2 45
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 114
BP 204
EP 215
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2020.07.027
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA OU3MW
UT WOS:000591436800002
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pannier, E
   Vu, TC
   Espagne, E
   Pulliat, G
   Nguyen, TTH
AF Pannier, Emmanuel
   Vu, Toan Canh
   Espagne, Etienne
   Pulliat, Gwenn
   Nguyen, Thi Thu Ha
TI The Three Dialectics of Adaptation Finance in Vietnam
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation finance; social capital; institutional
   readiness; Vietnam
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; MEKONG DELTA; STRATEGIES; PROVINCE; POLICIES;
   FARMERS; RISK
AB The goal of this paper is to analyze the complex institutional landscape of adaptation finance in Vietnam, a middle-income country highly vulnerable to the impact of climate change. While resources from international organizations and national authorities occupy a prominent position in adaptation funding, the use of local resources that directly or indirectly support adaptation practices is also an important factor to consider. We hypothesize that it is that interplay between official climate change finance on the one hand and local social dynamics on the other hand that shapes the structure of adaptation funding. These very particular financing circuits consequently determine the kind of adaptation actions that are actually implemented. The paper unfolds the adaptation finance flows at all scales by using qualitative field studies, technical and legal reports, and a wide-ranging literature on adaptation project financing, and thus identifies three types of dialectical tensions that might hinder Vietnamese institutional readiness for adaptation finance: the adaptation/development financing nexus, the adaptation/reaction financing behaviors, and the endogenous/exogenous financing dichotomy. Ultimately, the paper derives from these dialectical tensions within the architecture and functioning of adaptation finance key takeaway messages for a prospective analysis of adaptation funding that better informs adaptation finance policies.
C1 [Pannier, Emmanuel] French Natl Res Inst Sustainable Dev IRD, Res Unit Local Heritage Environm & Globalizat, F-75006 Paris, France.
   [Vu, Toan Canh] Inst Social & Environm Transit ISET, Hanoi 10000, Vietnam.
   [Espagne, Etienne] Agence Francaise Dev, Res Dept, F-75012 Paris, France.
   [Pulliat, Gwenn] French Natl Ctr Sci Res, CNRS, Res Unit ART Dev, F-34090 Montpellier, France.
   [Nguyen, Thi Thu Ha] Univ Rouen, LASTA, F-76000 Rouen, France.
C3 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Universite de Rouen
   Normandie
RP Espagne, E (corresponding author), Agence Francaise Dev, Res Dept, F-75012 Paris, France.
EM emmanuel.pannier@ird.fr; toanvu@i-s-e-t.org; espagnee@afd.fr;
   gwenn.pulliat@cnrs.fr; hanguyencerdi@gmail.com
RI Pulliat, Gwenn/HMP-5282-2023
OI Pulliat, Gwenn/0000-0003-2649-5614
FU French Agency for Development (AFD); French National Research Institute
   for Sustainable Development (IRD) through the GEMMES-Vietnam project
FX This research was funded by French Agency for Development (AFD) and
   French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development (IRD)
   through the GEMMES-Vietnam project.
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NR 70
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 6
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 18
AR 7691
DI 10.3390/su12187691
PG 24
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA OJ9EP
UT WOS:000584256800001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Juschten, M
   Jiricka-Pürrer, A
   Unbehaun, W
   Hössinger, R
AF Juschten, Maria
   Jiricka-Puerrer, Alexandra
   Unbehaun, Wiebke
   Hoessinger, Reinhard
TI The mountains are calling! An extended TPB model for understanding
   metropolitan residents' intentions to visit nearby alpine destinations
   in summer
SO TOURISM MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Theory of planned behaviour (TPB); Destination choice; Climate change
   adaptation; Heat adaptation; Summer retreat destinations; Past
   behaviour; Media coverage; Travel motives
ID PLANNED BEHAVIOR MODEL; CLIMATE-CHANGE; TRAVEL MODE; ATTITUDE; TOURISM;
   MOTIVATION; EXTENSION; EFFICACY; CHOICE; HABIT
AB This study investigated the suitability of an extended Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) to research the travel intention of metropolitan citizens to nearby destinations. The consideration of heat waves in this context is a novel approach. The survey data was collected from 877 Viennese respondents. Structural equation modelling shows a very good fit of the final model to the data; model extensions yield a strong increase of explained variance. The results suggest that heat-related change of intention is influenced by the strength of heat stress perceived during past heat waves. Nevertheless, subjective and social norm are the strongest determinants of intention, whereas attitude is a very weak predictor. Additional significant predictors are outdoor sports as a travel motive, media coverage, and past behaviour. The first application of an extended TPB model to summer tourism in the context of climate change yields important insights as to how climate change affects the destination choice of summer tourists. The results provide valuable starting points for attracting heat stressed metropolitan visitors.
C1 [Juschten, Maria; Unbehaun, Wiebke; Hoessinger, Reinhard] Univ Nat Resources & Appl Life Sci BOKU, Inst Transport Studies, Peter Jordan Str 82, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.
   [Jiricka-Puerrer, Alexandra] BOKU, Inst Landscape Dev Recreat & Conservat Planning, Peter Jordan Str 82, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.
C3 BOKU University; BOKU University
RP Jiricka-Pürrer, A (corresponding author), BOKU, Inst Landscape Dev Recreat & Conservat Planning, Peter Jordan Str 82, A-1190 Vienna, Austria.
EM maria.juschten@boku.ac.at; alexandra.jiricka@boku.ac.at;
   wiebke.unbehaun@boku.ac.at; reinhard.hoessinger@boku.ac.at
OI Juschten, Maria/0000-0002-8486-9322; Hossinger,
   Reinhard/0000-0002-0090-0573; Jiricka-Purrer,
   Alexandra/0000-0002-6842-1835
FU Austrian Climate and Energy Fund under the 8th Call of the Austrian
   Climate Research Programme (ACRP)
FX This paper stems from a Research Project funded by the Austrian Climate
   and Energy Fund under the 8th Call of the Austrian Climate Research
   Programme (ACRP). We also want to thank Prof. Christiane Brandenburg for
   her valuable feedback on the manuscript and Lynette Caitlin Mikula for
   proofreading the final text.
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NR 70
TC 80
Z9 83
U1 9
U2 140
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0261-5177
EI 1879-3193
J9 TOURISM MANAGE
JI Tourism Manage.
PD DEC
PY 2019
VL 75
BP 293
EP 306
DI 10.1016/j.tourman.2019.05.014
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies; Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism; Management
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Social Sciences - Other Topics;
   Business & Economics
GA IU2PV
UT WOS:000483423200024
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Valdivia-Garcia, M
   Weir, P
   Graham, DW
   Werner, D
AF Valdivia-Garcia, Maria
   Weir, Paul
   Graham, David W.
   Werner, David
TI Predicted Impact of Climate Change on Trihalomethanes Formation in
   Drinking Water Treatment
SO SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
LA English
DT Article
ID DISSOLVED ORGANIC-CARBON; UPLAND; UK; CHLORINE; THMS
AB Quantitative predictions of impacts on public water supplies are essential for planning climate change adaptations. Monitoring data from five full-scale Scottish drinking water treatment plants (DWTPs) showed that significant correlations exist between conditionally carcinogenic trihalomethanes (THMs) levels, water temperature (r = 0.812, p = 0.0013) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) (r = 0.892, p < 0.0001), respectively. The strong seasonality of these parameters demonstrated how climate can influence THMs formation. We quantified with laboratory experiments the sensitivity of THMs formation to changes in water temperature and DOC concentration. The laboratory data accurately reproduced real-world THM formation in the DWTPs. We then combined these validated relationships with information from the literature about future trends in mean summer temperatures and surface water DOC in the British Isles, to estimate future global warming impacts on THMs formation in DWTPs that use chlorine for disinfection. An increase in mean summer temperatures will likely increase THM formation, with a 1.8 degrees C temperature increase and 39% THMs increase by 2050 representing our mid-range scenario. Such an increase has major implications to potable water around the world, either an increased health risk or increased water treatment costs to maintain an equivalent quality potable supply.
C1 [Valdivia-Garcia, Maria; Graham, David W.; Werner, David] Newcastle Univ, Sch Engn, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear, England.
   [Valdivia-Garcia, Maria; Weir, Paul] Scottish Water, Castle House, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
C3 Newcastle University - UK
RP Werner, D (corresponding author), Newcastle Univ, Sch Engn, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear, England.
EM david.werner@ncl.ac.uk
RI Graham, Duncan/C-8440-2011
OI Graham, David W/0000-0002-9753-496X
FU Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (United Kingdom)
   [EP/G037094/1]; Scottish Water
FX This work was fully supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences
   Research Council (United Kingdom) Grant EP/G037094/1 and Scottish Water.
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NR 26
TC 35
Z9 38
U1 4
U2 27
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2045-2322
J9 SCI REP-UK
JI Sci Rep
PD JUL 10
PY 2019
VL 9
AR 9967
DI 10.1038/s41598-019-46238-0
PG 10
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA IH8CE
UT WOS:000474731500010
PM 31292461
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Limones-Rodríguez, N
   Marzo-Artigas, J
   Pita-López, MF
   Díaz-Cuevas, MP
AF Limones-Rodriguez, Natalia
   Marzo-Artigas, Javier
   Fernanda Pita-Lopez, Maria
   Pilar Diaz-Cuevas, Maria
TI The impact of climate change on air conditioning requirements in
   Andalusia at a detailed scale
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
ID COOLING ENERGY DEMAND; URBAN HEAT-ISLAND; ELECTRICITY; TRENDS;
   METHODOLOGY; SCENARIOS
AB This work calculates the current heating and cooling degree days and also examines heating and cooling degree days in relation to three subdivisions of the twenty-first century. On the basis of these data, we were able to calculate the heating and cooling degree months and degree years. After examining both sets of data, we studied the total needs of air conditioningalso referred to in the current paper as climatization needsfor Andalusia as a whole. The results indicate an increase in air conditioning needs, and we also noted that the areas adversely affected by this increase were more numerous than those which benefited, at the end of the century. It should be noted that climate change will also necessitate the gradual replacement of heating with cooling, which will require profound changes in the energy, land planning, and housing policies of the region. The true magnitude of the challenge becomes clear when the climatization degree days are related to the population which they affect; the majority of the population is located in areas where the climatization needs will increase over the course of the century. Undoubtedly, this issue is a major protagonist in the climate change adaptation process in Andalusia.
C1 [Limones-Rodriguez, Natalia] World Bank, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
   [Marzo-Artigas, Javier; Fernanda Pita-Lopez, Maria; Pilar Diaz-Cuevas, Maria] Univ Seville, Dept Phys Geog, C Dona Maria de Padilla S-N, E-41009 Seville, Spain.
C3 The World Bank; University of Sevilla
RP Limones-Rodríguez, N (corresponding author), World Bank, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
EM nlimones@worldbank.org; javimarzo@gmail.com; mfpita@us.es; pilard@us.es
RI LIMONES, NATALIA/HHN-6091-2022; DIAZ CUEVAS, MARIA DEL PILAR/K-2692-2014
OI DIAZ CUEVAS, MARIA DEL PILAR/0000-0003-0846-9930; LIMONES RODRIGUEZ,
   NATALIA/0000-0001-9578-3391
FU Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [CSO2015-64026-P]; FEDER
   [CSO2015-64026-P]; European Union (Developing Skills in the Field of
   Integrated Energy Planning in Med Landscapes Project, ENEPLAN)
FX This research was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and
   Competitiveness and FEDER (Project CSO2015-64026-P, EVALSOC) and by the
   European Union (Developing Skills in the Field of Integrated Energy
   Planning in Med Landscapes Project, ENEPLAN).
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NR 48
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 0
U2 6
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI WIEN
PA SACHSENPLATZ 4-6, PO BOX 89, A-1201 WIEN, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD NOV
PY 2018
VL 134
IS 3-4
BP 1047
EP 1063
DI 10.1007/s00704-017-2324-1
PG 17
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA GY8GN
UT WOS:000448861400023
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Afriyie, K
   Ganle, JK
   Santos, E
AF Afriyie, Kwadwo
   Ganle, John Kuumuori
   Santos, Eric
TI "The floods came and we lost everything': weather extremes and
   households' asset vulnerability and adaptation in rural Ghana
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; weather extremes; flooding; assets; vulnerability;
   adaptation; Ghana
ID CLIMATE; PRECIPITATION; VARIABILITY; LIVELIHOODS; COMMUNITIES;
   PRIORITIES; FRAMEWORK; GENDER; TRENDS; IMPACT
AB Extreme weather events such as flooding have been observed to deplete households' assets and render households vulnerable to shocks and poverty. Few empirical studies have however examined households' asset vulnerability and adaptation to such extreme events in Ghana. Based on qualitative research with two ecologically fragile communities in Ghana, this paper explores the asset vulnerability and adaptation strategies of households against periodic flooding. Findings suggested that households' assets most vulnerable to flooding were farmlands, human health, housing and financial savings. However, flooding did not affect households' assets equally; the effects were gendered and differentiated, often occasioned by inequalities in exposure, vulnerability, access to resources, capabilities and opportunities. Nonetheless, many households are actively adapting their assets by acquiring new knowledge about early warning systems, employing different farming practices and diversifying their assets. Understanding the differences in households' asset vulnerability as well as in the priorities that men and women, as well as the young and old, place on different asset adaptation strategies could therefore be important in the effectiveness of climate change adaptation as well as the sustainability of communities.
C1 [Afriyie, Kwadwo] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Geog & Rural Dev, Sustainable Livelihoods Rural Governance & Povert, Kumasi, Ghana.
   [Ganle, John Kuumuori] Univ Ghana, Dept Populat Family & Reprod Hlth, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
   [Santos, Eric] Intelligence Nat Int, Accra, Ghana.
C3 Kwame Nkrumah University Science & Technology; University of Ghana
RP Ganle, JK (corresponding author), Univ Ghana, Dept Populat Family & Reprod Hlth, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
EM johnganle@yahoo.com
RI Ganle, John/JDW-9383-2023
OI GANLE, JOHN KUUMUORI/0000-0002-8382-3437
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NR 48
TC 39
Z9 40
U1 3
U2 37
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 3
BP 259
EP 274
DI 10.1080/17565529.2017.1291403
PG 16
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FZ8CF
UT WOS:000427832500006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Zulriskan, AP
   Hasibuan, HS
   Koestoer, RH
AF Zulriskan, A. P.
   Hasibuan, H. S.
   Koestoer, R. H.
GP IOP
TI Spatial planning of small island to anticipating climate change effect
   (case study of Harapan and Kelapa Islands, Indonesia)
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CLIMATE CHANGE (ICCC 2018)
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 3rd International Conference on Climate Change (ICCC)
CY NOV 27-28, 2018
CL Solo City, INDONESIA
AB The vulnerability is a sequence of conditions that determine whether a hazard will lead to disaster or not. Small islands easily affected by climate change, which promotes extreme waves, sea level rise, rob floods, and other disasters. The limited area of the small islands requires integrated and sustainable management. Harapan and Kelapa Islands are some of the vulnerable islands that susceptible to climate change. The problem in this research is the lack of spatial arrangement of small islands region based on climate change adaptation. This study aims to create a model of land use for spatial arrangement of small islands, especially the land area in terms of changes in land use. The methods used in this study were analysis of land use change, analysis of climate change impacts on social, economic, and environmental conditions, and predict future land use scenarios using spatial modeling. The results showed that with increasing population growth, rising sea levels, rising temperatures and salinity, and erratic rainfall patterns, land requirements for settlements increased. The conclusion of this study is the additional area in Harapan and Kelapa islands should restrict, so the mitigation and adaptation due to the impact of climate change can be done well and the risk of disasters becomes small.
C1 [Zulriskan, A. P.] Univ Indonesia, Grad Student Magister Program, Sch Environm Sci, Salemba 4, Jakarta, Indonesia.
   [Hasibuan, H. S.; Koestoer, R. H.] Univ Indonesia, Sch Environm Sci, Salemba 4, Jakarta, Indonesia.
C3 University of Indonesia; University of Indonesia
RP Hasibuan, HS (corresponding author), Univ Indonesia, Sch Environm Sci, Salemba 4, Jakarta, Indonesia.
EM hayati.hasibuan@ui.ac.id
RI Hasibuan, Hayati/AAD-1183-2021
FU Grant of Indexed International Publication for Final Project of
   Students/Publikasi Terindeks Internasional untuk Tugas Akhir Mahasiswa
   (PITTA) Universitas Indonesia
FX This Research is funded by the Grant of Indexed International
   Publication for Final Project of Students/Publikasi Terindeks
   Internasional untuk Tugas Akhir Mahasiswa (PITTA) Universitas Indonesia
   2018.
CR Adrianto L, 2004, SUSTAINABLE DEV MANA
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   [Anonymous], LOOKING BACK PROJECT
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   Subair, 2014, ADAPTATION CLIMATE C
   WRI, 2001, COASTL LENGTH
NR 14
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 2
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2018
VL 200
AR 012064
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/200/1/012064
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BM3JF
UT WOS:000462172400064
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Shivamurthy, M
   Shankara, MH
   Radhakrishna, R
   Chandrakanth, MG
AF Shivamurthy, M.
   Shankara, M. H.
   Radhakrishna, Rama
   Chandrakanth, M. G.
BE Filho, WL
   Esilaba, AO
   Rao, KPC
   Sridhar, G
TI Impact of Climate Change and Adaptation Measures Initiated by Farmers
SO ADAPTING AFRICAN AGRICULTURE TO CLIMATE CHANGE: TRANSFORMING RURAL
   LIVELIHOODS
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Conference on Transforming Rural Livelihoods in Africa - How Can Land
   and Water Management Contribute to Enhanced Food Security and Address
   Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation
CY OCT 20-25, 2013
CL Nakuru, KENYA
SP Soil Sci Soc E Africa, African Soil Sci Soc
DE Adaptation; Capacity building endeavors; Climate change; Coping
   mechanism; Impact; Perception
AB This paper presents the results from a study conducted to examine adaptation measures initiated by farmers in response to variability and changes in climate and develop a model for climate change adaptation. Drop in rainy days and amount of rainfall concomitant with raise in daily temperature after the year 2000 has been acknowledged widely by farmers. This is corroborated by the actual rainfall and temperatures recorded in the local meteorological observatory. These factors exacerbated groundwater extraction for irrigation and domestic needs. In order to cope with the predicament, farmers shifted to late sowing varieties, dairying and adopted soil and water conservation measures such as farm ponds, ridges and dead-furrows and mulching. Those using conventional irrigation, shifted to drip irrigation, cultivating horticulture crops. Case study of a vulnerable woman farmers indicated that by participating in the groundwater market, the farmer purchased groundwater to cultivate vegetables and keeping three local cows which provided them with steady flow of income from milk. Thus, coping mechanisms were to sustain incomes and resilient due to climate change crisis. To create awareness and understanding of climate change and the challenges for social scientists an integrated model has been proposed by using synergies from program development, program delivery and program impact.
C1 [Shivamurthy, M.; Shankara, M. H.; Radhakrishna, Rama; Chandrakanth, M. G.] Univ Agr Sci, GKVK, Dept Agr Extens, Bengaluru 560065, India.
C3 University of Agricultural Sciences Bangalore
RP Shivamurthy, M (corresponding author), Univ Agr Sci, GKVK, Dept Agr Extens, Bengaluru 560065, India.
EM murudaiah.shivamurthy@gmail.com
CR [Anonymous], 2001, Third Assessment Report: Climate Change 2001 TAR
NR 1
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-13000-2; 978-3-319-12999-0
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2015
BP 119
EP 126
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-13000-2_10
PG 8
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Agriculture, Multidisciplinary;
   Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BF2JL
UT WOS:000380473000010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Böcher, M
   Krott, M
AF Boecher, Michael
   Krott, Max
TI The RIU model as an analytical framework for scientific knowledge
   transfer: the case of the "decision support system forest and climate
   change"
SO BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Scientific knowledge transfer; Forest management; Climate change
   adaptation; Decision; Support system
ID RESEARCH ORGANIZATIONS; SCIENCE; POLICY; MANAGEMENT
AB Since a direct, so-called "linear" scientific knowledge transfer from science to political practice does not seem to be possible, we suggest an alternative model of the science-policy-interface. This model understands scientific knowledge transfer as the connection between research (R), integration (I), and utilization (U)-the RIU model. Within this RIU-model, scientific knowledge is produced in the science system (research), and science-based problem solutions are utilized within practice by political actors (utilization). Between the two spheres there is no "automatic" connection that leads to a linear application of science in policy making. Rather, the RIU-model highlights the important sphere of "integration", a step that lies between science and utilization. A case study on a German decision support system for sustainable forest management within climate change is presented. It is shown that this informational instrument failed since no application in practice could be observed. An analysis by using the RIU model demonstrates (1) what are the reasons for the failure in this case and (2) which recommendations can be drawn by the RIU model for scientific advice that matters in forest policy-making.
C1 [Boecher, Michael; Krott, Max] Univ Gottingen, Chairgrp Forest & Nat Conservat Policy, Gottingen, Germany.
C3 University of Gottingen
RP Böcher, M (corresponding author), Univ Gottingen, Chairgrp Forest & Nat Conservat Policy, Gottingen, Germany.
EM mboeche@gwdg.de
OI Krott, Max/0000-0002-7315-1390; Boecher, Michael/0000-0002-1838-9144
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NR 51
TC 38
Z9 40
U1 2
U2 29
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0960-3115
EI 1572-9710
J9 BIODIVERS CONSERV
JI Biodivers. Conserv.
PD DEC
PY 2014
VL 23
IS 14
SI SI
BP 3641
EP 3656
DI 10.1007/s10531-014-0820-5
PG 16
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AU6GI
UT WOS:000345701400015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hoyle, HE
AF Hoyle, Helen E.
TI Climate-adapted, traditional or cottage-garden planting? Public
   perceptions, values and socio-cultural drivers in a designed garden
   setting
SO URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING
LA English
DT Article
DE Aesthetic effect; Nature-based solutions; Perceived biodiversity;
   Restorative effect; Urban green infrastructure; Wellbeing
ID URBAN GREEN SPACES; BIODIVERSITY; INCREASE; INFRASTRUCTURE;
   TEMPERATURES; LANDSCAPES; EXPERIENCE; DISORDERS; RICHNESS; FEEL
AB The global climate crisis precipitates a call to 'futureproof' cities by introducing resilient climate-adapted urban green infrastructure (UGI). Recent UK research has revealed public support for climate-adapted UGI, yet there is a lack of research focusing on the values underlying public perceptions, particularly in relation to climate change, and the socio-cultural factors driving these. This was addressed by asking 249 people to walk through one of three contrasting areas of planting: exotic (climate-adapted); traditional or cottage-garden, within a designed garden setting, whilst conducting a self-guided questionnaire assessing participants' perceptions of aesthetics, self-reported restorative effect, and plant and invertebrate biodiversity. Participants' held values in relation to climate change, non-native species, and nature-connectedness were also addressed. Findings indicated aesthetic preference for climate-adapted planting over the other two styles, providing further evidence of cultural acceptance for policymakers and land-managers seeking to 'futureproof' cities by introducing climate-adapted UGI. Planting of a cottage-garden style was perceived as the least attractive, but the most restorative. Sociocultural characteristics including age, educational qualifications, and taking holidays overseas were drivers of perceptions. Professional involvement and interest in the environment, landscape, and horticulture were identified as drivers of perceptions and values. Values in relation to climate change were directly related to participants' educational qualifications. This identifies a need to consider novel approaches to climate change education to promote wider understanding of the implications of climate-change and the potential for climateadapted UGI to deliver 'futureproofing' benefits for climate-change mitigation and human mental wellbeing.
C1 [Hoyle, Helen E.] Univ West England, Dept Architecture & Built Environm, UWE Bristol, Ctr Sustainable Planning & Environm, Room 3Q13,Frenchay Campus,Coldharbour Lane, Bristol BS16 1QY, Avon, England.
C3 University of West England
RP Hoyle, HE (corresponding author), Univ West England, Dept Architecture & Built Environm, UWE Bristol, Ctr Sustainable Planning & Environm, Room 3Q13,Frenchay Campus,Coldharbour Lane, Bristol BS16 1QY, Avon, England.
EM Helen.Hoyle@uwe.ac.uk
OI Hoyle, Helen/0000-0001-9036-4147
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NR 57
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 4
U2 60
PU ELSEVIER GMBH
PI MUNICH
PA HACKERBRUCKE 6, 80335 MUNICH, GERMANY
SN 1618-8667
EI 1610-8167
J9 URBAN FOR URBAN GREE
JI Urban For. Urban Green.
PD NOV
PY 2021
VL 65
AR 127362
DI 10.1016/j.ufug.2021.127362
EA OCT 2021
PG 13
WC Plant Sciences; Environmental Studies; Forestry; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Plant Sciences; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Forestry; Urban
   Studies
GA WR9MX
UT WOS:000714817900001
OA Green Accepted, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Scholten, P
AF Scholten, Peter
BE Keskitalo, ECH
TI Dutch approaches to flood risks: developments in integrative water
   management and the synchronization of public and private agendas for
   climate adaptation in the Netherlands
SO CLIMATE CHANGE AND FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT: ADAPTATION AND EXTREME EVENTS
   AT THE LOCAL LEVEL
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID GOVERNANCE; LESSONS
C1 Umea Univ, Dept Geog & Econ Hist, Umea, Sweden.
C3 Umea University
RP Scholten, P (corresponding author), Umea Univ, Dept Geog & Econ Hist, Umea, Sweden.
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NR 36
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 0
PU EDWARD ELGAR PUBLISHING LTD
PI CHELTENHAM
PA THE LYPIATTS, 15 LANSDOWN RD, CHELTENHAM GL50 2JA, GLOS, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-78100-667-2; 978-1-78100-666-5
PY 2013
BP 258
EP 289
PG 32
WC Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BA1KV
UT WOS:000332675000009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vaughn, SE
AF Vaughn, Sarah E.
TI DISAPPEARING MANGROVES: The Epistemic Politics of Climate Adaptation in
   Guyana
SO CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE expertise; vulnerability; climate adaptation; geological imaginaries;
   mangroves
ID PAPUA-NEW-GUINEA; UNCERTAINTY; ONTOLOGIES; EXPERTISE; FUTURES; MATTER
AB This article details the epistemic politics that shape the climate adaptation of sea defense in Guyana. Rethinking the material arrangements of expertise in the Anthropocene, I track the work of a group of technoscientific experts participating in the Guyana Mangrove Restoration Project (GMRP). In an attempt to redesign sea defense around mangrove ecosystems, GMRP participants recognize that climate adaptation is not solely dependent on their well-intentioned efforts. As research objects, mangroves are not only forms of evidence but also tools that guide expert action and distinctions in day-to-day labor. Moreover, mangroves draw out the explicit contingencies of modeling, placing expert groups in tension with one another as each seeks to advance their own ideas for mangrove protection, management, or change. I show that this relational ontology is emblematic of climate-adaptation policy's broader operative logics, or what I call inverse performativity. This is a process whereby an unruly world forces one expert group to seek help from others, building a new ecology of expertise to adapt to a changing climate. Impermanent and wondrous, mangroves urge us to think more creatively about vulnerability to climate change and the kinds of practices that inspire knowledge about it.
C1 [Vaughn, Sarah E.] Yale Univ, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
   [Vaughn, Sarah E.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
C3 Yale University; University of California System; University of
   California Berkeley
RP Vaughn, SE (corresponding author), Yale Univ, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.; Vaughn, SE (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
OI Vaughn, Sarah/0000-0001-7127-0575
FU Mellon Mays-Social Science Research Council; American Council of Learned
   Societies
FX I am indebted to all those who worked for the GMRP and welcomed me into
   their professional and personal lives. My explorations would not have
   been possible without their interest and, most of all, their patience. I
   am grateful to Andy Graan, Elina Hartikainen, Karl Swinehart, Joe Masco,
   David Bond, Ben Orlove, Ram Natarajan, and Don Moore for their sharp
   readings of various drafts. I would like to give special thanks to Jake
   Kosek for challenges that pushed me to think critically about the many
   forms expertise and vulnerability take. This article also benefited from
   engagements at the MIT-Harvard Workshop for the History of Environment,
   Agriculture, Technology, and Science, the Ethnography and Social Theory
   Colloquium in the Department of Anthropology at Yale University, and the
   Environmental Studies Workshop at the University of Chicago. The
   Cultural Anthropology editorial collective and anonymous reviewers
   provided invaluable feedback that made this article possible. I
   especially thank Dominic Boyer for his thoughtful suggestions and
   encouragement. Finally, research for this article was supported by the
   Mellon Mays-Social Science Research Council grant initiatives and the
   American Council of Learned Societies.
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NR 64
TC 48
Z9 60
U1 0
U2 27
PU SOC CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY
PI HOUSTON
PA DEPT ANTHROPOLOGY, MS-20, RICE UNIV, PO BOX 1892, HOUSTON, TX 77251 USA
SN 0886-7356
EI 1548-1360
J9 CULT ANTHROPOL
JI Cult. Anthropol.
PD MAY
PY 2017
VL 32
IS 2
BP 242
EP 268
DI 10.14506/ca32.2.07
PG 27
WC Anthropology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Anthropology
GA EW9DC
UT WOS:000402816000007
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schwaller, NL
   Kelmenson, S
   BenDor, TK
   Spurlock, D
AF Schwaller, Nora Louise
   Kelmenson, Sophie
   BenDor, Todd K.
   Spurlock, Danielle
TI From abstract futures to concrete experiences: How does political
   ideology interact with threat perception to affect climate adaptation
   decisions?
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; Theory of planned behavior; Protection motivation
   theory; Flooding; Sea level rise; Coastal climate adaptation
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; PLANNED BEHAVIOR; POLICY; PROTECTION; COMMUNICATION;
   VALUES; MODEL; POLITICIZATION; DETERMINANTS; ORIENTATION
AB Climate change forecasts predict impacts that will increasingly expose coastal residents to existential risks, necessitating aggressive adaptation. While the polarization of climate change attitudes in American politics represents a barrier to climate adaptation efforts, it is not well-understood how political ideology mediates how individuals connect the abstract concept of "climate change" to concrete experiences with environmental risks. Understanding this link in the context of adaptation decision-making is important, as the effects of many, household-level adaptation efforts compound over space and time, affecting community flood risk and vulnerability. This paper asks, how do political ideologies interact with threat perception to affect coastal climate adaptation decisions? We frame this analysis using the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) and Protection Motivation Theory (PMT). Using responses from a survey of residents (n = 164) in North Carolina's (USA) Albemarle-Pamlico Peninsula, we examine how measures of residents' subjective norms, threat-appraisals, and self-efficacy influence their intent to retreat or topographically adapt. We find that, despite political polarization around climate change, generally, when given concrete examples of risk, respondents' political beliefs appear unrelated to their plans to protect their property and livelihoods.
C1 [Schwaller, Nora Louise; Kelmenson, Sophie; BenDor, Todd K.; Spurlock, Danielle] Univ N Carolina, Dept City & Reg Planning, New East Bldg,Campus Box 3140, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
C3 University of North Carolina; University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
RP Schwaller, NL (corresponding author), Univ N Carolina, Dept City & Reg Planning, New East Bldg,Campus Box 3140, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA.
EM nschwall@live.unc.edu; soph@live.unc.edu; bendor@unc.edu;
   dspurloc@live.unc.edu
RI kelmenson, sophie/Y-1493-2019; Schwaller, Nora/GSN-9220-2022; BenDor,
   Todd/E-1375-2016
OI Schwaller, Nora/0000-0002-2244-5735
FU U.S. National Science Foundation under Coastal SEES [1427188]; U.S.
   National Science Foundation Geography and Spatial Sciences [1660450];
   Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci; Direct For Social, Behav &
   Economic Scie [1660450] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
FX This paper is based upon work graciously supported by the U.S. National
   Science Foundation under Coastal SEES Grant No. 1427188 and U.S.
   National Science Foundation Geography and Spatial Sciences Grant No.
   1660450. We would like to thank our survey respondents, as well as Todd
   Miller, Christine Avenarius, Christine Pickens, Jessica Whitehead,
   Michelle Moorman, Teresa Edwards, and Katie Clark for their input on
   survey design and implementation. This research was approved under UNC
   IRB #16-1107.
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NR 113
TC 18
Z9 21
U1 5
U2 41
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD OCT
PY 2020
VL 112
BP 440
EP 452
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2020.07.001
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA NR3EE
UT WOS:000571444800015
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Stults, M
   Larsen, L
AF Stults, Missy
   Larsen, Larissa
TI Tackling Uncertainty in US Local Climate Adaptation Planning
SO JOURNAL OF PLANNING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE uncertainty; climate change; local planning; adaptation
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; DECISION-MAKING; RESILIENCE; VULNERABILITY;
   ROBUST; RISK; MANAGEMENT; SCENARIOS; CAPACITY; LESSONS
AB Climate adaptation presents some new forms of planning uncertainty. We identified thirteen types of climate change uncertainty and grouped these into four categories. Next, we summarized eleven planning techniques, noting that only six of these techniques reflect an adapt and monitor approach that actively engages uncertainty. We then evaluated the types of uncertainty and planning techniques identified in forty-four US local climate adaptation plans. We found no communities used scenario planning or robust strategies despite the emphasis placed on these techniques in the literature.
C1 [Stults, Missy] Univ Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Larsen, Larissa] Univ Michigan, Urban & Reg Planning Program URP, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of
   Michigan System; University of Michigan
RP Stults, M (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Urban & Reg Planning Program, 440 Church St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.; Stults, M (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Sch Nat Resources & Environm, 440 Church St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
EM Missy.stults@gmail.com
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NR 83
TC 18
Z9 22
U1 1
U2 19
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0739-456X
EI 1552-6577
J9 J PLAN EDUC RES
JI J. Plan. Educ. Res.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 40
IS 4
BP 416
EP 431
DI 10.1177/0739456X18769134
PG 16
WC Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA OP3XZ
UT WOS:000588016100006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lioubimtseva, E
   Zylman, H
   Carron, K
   Poynter, K
   Rashrash, BME
AF Lioubimtseva, Elena
   Zylman, Hannah
   Carron, Katherine
   Poynter, Kaytlin
   Rashrash, Bushra Mohamed-Elmabruk
TI Equity and Inclusion in Climate Action and Adaptation Plans of Michigan
   Cities
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; equity; diversity; urban; indigenous knowledge
AB Community engagement in climate action and adaptation planning is an essential prerequisite for overcoming existing and projected environmental injustices associated with the negative impacts of climate change. The diversity and inclusion of stakeholders are crucial for addressing equity in both the development and implementation of local climate plans. Our study attempts to evaluate and compare consideration of equity in climate action and climate adaptation plans of Michigan cities and its association with the diversity of stakeholders involved in the planning process. Data analysis is based on the content of eight municipal climate action and/or climate adaptation plans, related documents, and interviews with city planners along with community activists. Data derived from the climate action and adaptation plans were also compared to the strategies outlined in the Tribal Climate Adaptation Menu, which integrates climate science and indigenous knowledge. The study concludes that municipalities that engage more diverse groups of stakeholders appear to be more attentive to social equity and more likely to offer specific climate action and adaptation measures focusing on vulnerable groups. The integration of indigenous knowledge could provide valuable insights for municipalities through collaboration with tribal communities and climate adaptation experts.
C1 [Lioubimtseva, Elena; Zylman, Hannah; Carron, Katherine; Poynter, Kaytlin; Rashrash, Bushra Mohamed-Elmabruk] Grand Valley State Univ, Dept Geog & Sustainable Planning, Allendale, MI 49401 USA.
   [Poynter, Kaytlin] Univ Colorado, Coll Architecture & Planning, Denver, CO 80217 USA.
C3 Grand Valley State University; University of Colorado System; University
   of Colorado Denver
RP Lioubimtseva, E (corresponding author), Grand Valley State Univ, Dept Geog & Sustainable Planning, Allendale, MI 49401 USA.
EM lioubime@gvsu.edu; zylmanh@mail.gvsu.edu; carronka@mail.gvsu.edu;
   kaytlin.poynter@ucdenver.edu; rashrabu@mail.gvsu.edu
OI Lioubimtseva, Elena/0000-0003-4388-3854
FU R.G. Mawby Fellowship at the Dorothy A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy
FX This research was supported by the R.G. Mawby Fellowship at the Dorothy
   A. Johnson Center for Philanthropy.
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NR 52
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 4
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD SEP
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 17
AR 7745
DI 10.3390/su16177745
PG 17
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA F7Q4L
UT WOS:001311718500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Weppelman, I
   Patuano, A
AF Weppelman, Ineke
   Patuano, Agnes
TI Motivating Climate-Adaptation Actions in Dutch Private Gardens:
   Developing an Effective Communication Tool
SO SCIENCE COMMUNICATION
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE climate adaptation; communication tool; willingness to act; protection
   motivation theory; urban residents
ID PARTICIPATION; CHALLENGES; ENGAGEMENT; ART
AB In the effort to adapt the urban environment to climate change, motivating residents is key. Various communication guidelines have been proposed in the literature, but few have been tested in practice. This study reports on the development and use of an interactive communication tool based on these guidelines; this tool aimed to motivate climate-adaptation actions in private gardens through increasing self-efficacy. After using the tool, participants showed a significant increase in their willingness to act for climate adaptation. On this basis, some recommendations can be formulated to promote effective communication able to motivate action.
C1 [Weppelman, Ineke; Patuano, Agnes] Wageningen Univ & Res, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research
RP Weppelman, I (corresponding author), Wageningen Univ & Res, Team Reg Dev & Spatial Use, Wageningen Environm Res, Droevendaalsesteeg 3,POB 47, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM ineke.weppelman@wur.nl
RI Patuano, Agnès/AAX-7270-2020
OI Weppelman, Ineke/0000-0002-0178-6450
CR Adobe Dreamweaver, 2020, Software
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NR 79
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 4
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 1075-5470
EI 1552-8545
J9 SCI COMMUN
JI Sci. Commun.
PD 2024 SEP 20
PY 2024
DI 10.1177/10755470241277199
EA SEP 2024
PG 37
WC Communication
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Communication
GA G6R3G
UT WOS:001317882300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hoffman, KN
   Kovaka, K
AF Hoffman, Kate Nicole
   Kovaka, Karen
TI A New Heuristic for Climate Adaptation
SO PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
AB An influential heuristic for thinking about climate adaptation asserts that "natural" adaptation strategies are the best ones. This heuristic has been roundly criticized but is difficult to dislodge in the absence of an alternative. We introduce a new heuristic that assesses adaptation strategies by looking at their maturity, power, and commitment. Maturity is the extent to which we understand an adaptation strategy's effects. Power is the size of the effect an adaptation strategy will have. Commitment is the degree to which an adaptation strategy is difficult to test or reverse.
C1 [Hoffman, Kate Nicole] Univ Penn, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
   [Kovaka, Karen] Univ Calif San Diego, San Diego, CA USA.
C3 University of Pennsylvania; University of California System; University
   of California San Diego
RP Hoffman, KN (corresponding author), Univ Penn, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
EM hoffmakn@sas.upenn.edu
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NR 23
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 0031-8248
EI 1539-767X
J9 PHILOS SCI
JI Philos. Sci.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 91
IS 5
BP 1327
EP 1337
DI 10.1017/psa.2023.163
EA DEC 2023
PG 11
WC History & Philosophy Of Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC History & Philosophy of Science
GA M7E9M
UT WOS:001161280600001
OA Green Published, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Baker, I
   Peterson, A
   Brown, G
   McAlpine, C
AF Baker, Ingrid
   Peterson, Ann
   Brown, Greg
   McAlpine, Clive
TI Local government response to the impacts of climate change: An
   evaluation of local climate adaptation plans
SO LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Local government; Plan evaluation
ID NEED; VULNERABILITY; QUEENSLAND; ENGAGEMENT; BARRIERS; LESSONS
AB Internationally, there is increasing responsibility on local governments to prepare and adapt to global climate change through climate adaptation planning. This study evaluated seven local climate adaptation plans in Southeast Queensland, Australia by developing and applying a quantitative, multi-criteria analysis framework. The results indicated that local governments were not effectively planning for climate impacts. While they were aware of expected climate change impacts, their capacity to use this information to develop geographically specific action plans was limited. We discuss the wider relevance of the evaluation framework, its potential uses outside the study area and how it may be adjusted to suit different local and regional needs and context. We also discuss key structural, procedural and contextual limitations that emerged from our evaluation of Southeast local governments, and provide recommendations to improve the development of the next generation of local climate adaptation plans. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Baker, Ingrid; McAlpine, Clive] Univ Queensland, Sch Geog Planning & Environm Management, Ctr Spatial Environm Res, Landscape Ecol & Conservat Grp, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
   [McAlpine, Clive] Univ Queensland, ARC Ctr Excellence Environm Decis, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
C3 University of Queensland; University of Queensland
RP Baker, I (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Geog Planning & Environm Management, Ctr Spatial Environm Res, Landscape Ecol & Conservat Grp, Chamberlain Bldg 35,Campbell Rd,St Lucia Campus,R, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
EM ingrid.baker@uqconnect.edu.au; a.peterson@uq.edu.au;
   greg.brown@uq.edu.au; c.mcalpine@uq.edu.au
RI McAlpine, Clive/A-3907-2010; Brown, Greg/AAA-6138-2019; Brown,
   Gregory/F-3904-2013
OI Brown, Gregory/0000-0003-3283-4619; McAlpine, Clive/0000-0003-0457-8144
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NR 53
TC 258
Z9 311
U1 6
U2 200
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0169-2046
EI 1872-6062
J9 LANDSCAPE URBAN PLAN
JI Landsc. Urban Plan.
PD AUG
PY 2012
VL 107
IS 2
BP 127
EP 136
DI 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2012.05.009
PG 10
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies; Geography; Geography, Physical; Regional
   & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Physical Geography; Public
   Administration; Urban Studies
GA 983UX
UT WOS:000307145300007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mayer, A
   Göttig, R
   Sedlbauer, K
AF Mayer, Anica
   Goettig, Roland
   Sedlbauer, Klaus
TI Bewertung der Klimaanpassung von Gebauden mittels der Klimaperformanz
SO BAUPHYSIK
LA English
DT Article
DE Baukultur; Burogebaude; klimagerechtes Bauen; Komfort; nachhaltiges
   Bauen; building culture; Climate Culture Building; office buildings;
   climate-adapted building; comfort; sustainable building
ID STRATEGIES
AB Der Klimawandel und seine Folgen machen die Einsparung von Energie und CO2-Ausstoss beim Betrieb von Gebauden dringend erforderlich. Eine klimaangepasste Bauweise anstelle energieintensiver Klimatechnik zur Anpassung des Innenraumklimas ist ein wichtiger Beitrag. Um die Klimaanpassung von Gebauden zu quantifizieren und zu bewerten, wurde eine neue Grosse, die Klimaperformanz, entwickelt. Sie ermoglicht eine einfache Einschatzung und Bewertung der Klimaanpassung eines geplanten Gebaudes. Die Anwendung der Methode wird anhand einer Fallstudie gezeigt. Somit konnen Planer im Entwurf klimaangepasster Bauten zukunftig unterstutzt werden, einen Beitrag zur Reduktion der CO2-Emissionen zu leisten als auch Behaglichkeitsanspruchen gerecht zu werden. Der Ansatz ermoglicht zudem eine Identifikation der relevanten Stellschrauben im klimaangepassten Entwurf.
   Evaluation of the climate adaptation of buildings using the climate performanceClimate change and its consequences make the saving of energy and CO ₂ emissions in the operation of buildings urgently necessary. A climate-adapted construction method instead of energy-intensive air-conditioning technology to adapt the indoor climate is an important contribution. In order to quantify and evaluate the climate adaptation of buildings, a new parameter, the climate performance indicator, has been developed. It enables a simple assessment and evaluation of the climate adaptation of a planned building. The application of the method is demonstrated by means of a case study. In this way, planners can be supported in the design of climate-adapted buildings in the future to make a contribution to the reduction of CO ₂ emissions as well as to meet comfort requirements. The approach also enables the identification of relevant parameters in climate-adapted design.
C1 [Mayer, Anica; Goettig, Roland; Sedlbauer, Klaus] Tech Univ Munich, Lehrstuhl Bauphys, Arcisstr 21, D-80333 Munich, Germany.
C3 Technical University of Munich
RP Mayer, A (corresponding author), Tech Univ Munich, Lehrstuhl Bauphys, Arcisstr 21, D-80333 Munich, Germany.
EM anica.mayer@tum.de; goettig@tum.de; sedlbauer@tum.de
OI Mayer, Anica/0009-0006-6628-1759
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NR 28
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU ERNST & SOHN
PI BERLIN
PA ROTHERSTRASSE 21, BERLIN, DEUTSCHLAND 10245, GERMANY
SN 0171-5445
EI 1437-0980
J9 BAUPHYSIK
JI Bauphysik
PD AUG
PY 2023
VL 2023
IS 4
BP 199
EP 204
DI 10.1002/bapi.202300008
PG 6
WC Construction & Building Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology
GA S2LI3
UT WOS:001069531800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rahn, E
   Vaast, P
   Läderach, P
   van Asten, P
   Jassogne, L
   Ghazoul, J
AF Rahn, Eric
   Vaast, Philippe
   Laderach, Peter
   van Asten, Piet
   Jassogne, Laurence
   Ghazoul, Jaboury
TI Exploring adaptation strategies of coffee production to climate change
   using a process-based model
SO ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
LA English
DT Article
DE Coffea arabica L.; Agroforestry system; Spatial decision support;
   Adaptation to climate change; Parameter uncertainty
ID GLOBAL SENSITIVITY-ANALYSIS; LIGHT-USE EFFICIENCY; ARABICA L.; CARBON
   ALLOCATION; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; AGROFORESTRY SYSTEMS; PLANT
   RESPIRATION; CO2 CONCENTRATION; GROWN COFFEE; CROP SYSTEMS
AB The response of coffee (Coffea arabica L.) agronomical performance to changes in climate and atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration ([CO2)) is uncertain. Improving our understanding of potential responses of the coffee plant to these changes while taking into consideration agricultural management is required for identifying best-bet adaptation strategies. A mechanistic crop modelling approach enables the inclusion of a wide range of prior knowledge and an evaluation of assumptions. We adapt a model by connecting it to spatially variable soil and climate data, by which we are able to calculate yield of rain-fed coffee on a daily time-step. The model takes account of variation in microclimate and water use as influenced by shade trees. The approach is exemplified at two East African sites with distinctly different climates (Mt. Elgon, Uganda, and Mt. Kilimanjaro, Tanzania) using a global sensitivity analysis for evaluation of model behavior and prior parameter uncertainty assessment. We use the climate scenario driven by the Hadley Global Environment Model 2-Earth System representative for the year 2050 to discuss potential responses of the coffee plant to interactions of elevated [COO, temperature, and water availability. We subsequently explore the potential for adaptation to this scenario through shade management. The results indicate that under current climatic conditions optimal shade cover at low elevations (1000 m.a.s.l.) is 50%, provided soil water storage capacity is sufficient, enabling a 13.5% increase in coffee yield compared to unshaded systems. Coffee plants are expected to be severely impacted (ranging from 18% to 32% coffee yield reductions) at low elevations by increased temperature ( + 2.5 degrees C) and drought stress when no elevated [CO2] is assumed. Water competition between coffee and shade trees are projected to be a severe limitation in the future, requiring careful selection of appropriate shade tree species or the adoption of other technologies like conservation measures or irrigation. The [CO2]-fertilization effect could potentially mitigate the negative effect of temperature increase and drought stress up to 13-21% depending on site conditions and will increase yield at higher altitudes. High uncertainty remains regarding impacts of climate change on flowering. The presented model allows for estimating the optimal shade level along environmental gradients now and in the future. Overall, it shows that shade proves to be an important adaptation strategy, but this requires improved understanding regarding site-specific management and selection of tree species. Moreover, we do not yet include climate change uncertainty.
C1 [Rahn, Eric; Ghazoul, Jaboury] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Environm Syst Sci, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Rahn, Eric; Laderach, Peter] Int Ctr Trop Agr CIAT, Cali, Colombia.
   [Rahn, Eric; van Asten, Piet; Jassogne, Laurence] IITA, Kampala, Uganda.
   [Vaast, Philippe] World Agroforestry Ctr ICRAF, Hanoi, Vietnam.
   [Vaast, Philippe] Univ Montpellier, Eco&Sols, Ctr Cooperat Int Rech Agron Dev CIRAD, Montpellier, France.
   [van Asten, Piet] Olam Int Ltd, Kampala, Uganda.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; Alliance;
   International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; Universite de
   Montpellier; Institut Agro; Montpellier SupAgro; CIRAD; Institut de
   Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD)
RP Rahn, E (corresponding author), Swiss Fed Inst Technol, CHN H 71,Univ Str 16, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
EM eric.rahn@usys.ethz.ch
RI Ghazoul, Jaboury/B-2121-2018
OI van Asten, Piet/0000-0003-0584-3552; Ghazoul,
   Jaboury/0000-0002-8319-1636; Laderach, Peter/0000-0001-8708-6318
FU Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ);
   Professorship of Ecosystem Management, ETH Zurich; Research Program on
   Forest, Trees and Agriculture (FTA); CGIAR Fund
FX This research was funded by the Federal Ministry for Economic
   Cooperation and Development (BMZ),the Professorship of Ecosystem
   Management, ETH Zurich and the Research Program on Forest, Trees and
   Agriculture (FTA). It was implemented as part of the CGIAR Research
   Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS), which
   is carried out with support from CGIAR Fund Donors and through bilateral
   funding agreements. For details please visit
   https://ccafs.cgiar.org/donors. The views expressed in this document
   cannot be taken to reflect the official opinions of these organizations.
   We would like to thank Bruno Rapidel and Oriana Ovalle-Rivera for
   sharing their insights on the CAF2014 model and Beatriz Rodriguez for
   helping in preparing the climate data with MarkSim. Finally, we thank
   two anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments.
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NR 135
TC 81
Z9 90
U1 2
U2 108
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0304-3800
EI 1872-7026
J9 ECOL MODEL
JI Ecol. Model.
PD MAR 10
PY 2018
VL 371
BP 76
EP 89
DI 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2018.01.009
PG 14
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FY8FR
UT WOS:000427100100007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Malloy, JT
   Ashcraft, CM
   Kirshen, P
   Safford, TG
   Aytur, SA
   Rogers, SH
AF Malloy, Jeffrey T. T.
   Ashcraft, Catherine M. M.
   Kirshen, Paul
   Safford, Thomas G. G.
   Aytur, Semra A. A.
   Rogers, Shannon H. H.
TI Implementing just climate adaptation policy: An analysis of recognition,
   framing, and advocacy coalitions in Boston, USA
SO FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE just climate adaptation; Advocacy Coalition Framework (ACF); social
   justice; climate policy; Climate Ready Boston; public policy
   implementation
ID PUBLIC-PARTICIPATION; JUSTICE; FRAMEWORK; EQUITY; OPPORTUNITIES;
   VULNERABILITY; CAPABILITIES
AB Cities face intersectional challenges implementing climate adaptation policy. This research contributes to scholarship dedicated to understanding how policy implementation affects socially vulnerable groups, with the overarching goal of promoting justice and equity in climate policy implementation. We apply a novel framework that integrates social justice theory and the advocacy coalition framework to incrementally assess just climate adaptation in Boston, Massachusetts in the United States. Boston made an ambitious commitment to address equity as part of its climate planning and implementation efforts. In this paper, we evaluate the first implementation stage over the period 2016-2019 during which Boston developed coastal resilience plans for three neighborhoods. Despite Boston's commitment to equity, we find injustice was nevertheless reproduced through representation and coalition dynamics, the framing of problems and solutions, and a failure to recognize the priorities and lived experiences of city residents. The assessment framework presented can be adapted to evaluate how other climate adaptation initiatives advance social justice and highlights the need for incremental evaluation over short time periods to inform ongoing implementation efforts.
C1 [Malloy, Jeffrey T. T.] Univ New Hampshire, Nat Resources & Environm Studies, Durham, NH 03824 USA.
   [Ashcraft, Catherine M. M.; Rogers, Shannon H. H.] Univ New Hampshire, Dept Nat Resources & Environm, Durham, NH USA.
   [Kirshen, Paul] Univ Massachusetts Boston, Sch Environm, Boston, MA USA.
   [Safford, Thomas G. G.] Univ New Hampshire, Dept Sociol, Durham, NH USA.
   [Aytur, Semra A. A.] Univ New Hampshire, Dept Hlth Management & Policy, Durham, NH USA.
   [Rogers, Shannon H. H.] Univ New Hampshire, Community & Econ Dev, Cooperat Extens, Durham, NH USA.
C3 University System Of New Hampshire; University of New Hampshire;
   University System Of New Hampshire; University of New Hampshire;
   University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Boston;
   University System Of New Hampshire; University of New Hampshire;
   University System Of New Hampshire; University of New Hampshire;
   University System Of New Hampshire; University of New Hampshire
RP Malloy, JT (corresponding author), Univ New Hampshire, Nat Resources & Environm Studies, Durham, NH 03824 USA.
EM Jeffrey.malloy@unh.edu
OI Ashcraft, Catherine/0000-0001-9706-1042
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NR 52
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 13
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-9634
J9 FRONT SUSTAIN CITIES
JI Front. Sustain. Cities
PD NOV 21
PY 2022
VL 4
AR 928230
DI 10.3389/frsc.2022.928230
PG 13
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Urban Studies
GA 7U1DY
UT WOS:000911878100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dow, K
   Tuler, S
AF Dow, Kirstin
   Tuler, Seth
TI Risk Amplification and Attenuation as Communication Strategies in
   Climate Adaptation in Urban Areas
SO RISK ANALYSIS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; government agencies; resilience; risk communication;
   social amplification of risk
ID SOCIAL AMPLIFICATION; AGENDA; FRAMEWORK; WORK
AB Climate risks are motivating adaptation with local municipal actors becoming key participants in a complex web of climate risk communication. Some cities have created civil service positions focused on climate resilience. We conducted interviews with six such individuals in four U.S. Atlantic coast cities to investigate how they think about and negotiate communication challenges associated with implementation of climate resilience strategies. We grounded our study in the Social Amplification of Risk Framework (SARF), which despite its longevity and wide usage has rarely been used to understand the role of government actors. We found substantial complexity in how these government representatives develop both amplifying and attenuating communication strategies as they often simultaneously reach multiple audiences holding different perspectives. They are familiar with and employ risk communication practices. However, they report needing to modify their efforts as climate adaptation issues and goals evolve over time, and experiment in situations, such as discussions of retreat, where established communication practices provide insufficient guidance. In order to develop a deeper understanding of the governmental risk communication actors, we suggest four potential avenues for taking advantage of the strengths of SARF as a framework for connecting and integrating with other models and theories. We also propose several directions for research based on the challenges these practitioners are finding in their work to facilitate adaptation to climate risks. The activity of government actors is rich in its applied risk communication practice and its challenges offer new questions to expand our thinking about the SARF and risk communication more broadly.
C1 [Dow, Kirstin] Univ South Carolina, Dept Geog, Callcott Bldg, Columbia, SC 29208 USA.
   [Tuler, Seth] Worcester Polytech Inst, Dept Integrat & Global Studies, Worcester, MA 01609 USA.
C3 University of South Carolina System; University of South Carolina
   Columbia; Worcester Polytechnic Institute
RP Dow, K (corresponding author), Univ South Carolina, Dept Geog, Callcott Bldg, Columbia, SC 29208 USA.
EM KDow@sc.edu
RI Tuler, Seth/KOC-8361-2024
OI Tuler, Seth/0009-0004-3930-1107
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NR 48
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 16
U2 46
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0272-4332
EI 1539-6924
J9 RISK ANAL
JI Risk Anal.
PD JUL
PY 2022
VL 42
IS 7
SI SI
BP 1440
EP 1454
DI 10.1111/risa.13819
EA SEP 2021
PG 15
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Mathematics,
   Interdisciplinary Applications; Social Sciences, Mathematical Methods
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health; Mathematics; Mathematical
   Methods In Social Sciences
GA 3E8GN
UT WOS:000700648500001
PM 34585415
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yoon, N
   Fields, K
   Cochran, B
   Nabatchi, T
AF Yoon, Nara
   Fields, Katie
   Cochran, Bobby
   Nabatchi, Tina
TI Collaborative Governance at Scale: Examining the Regimes, Platforms, and
   System in the State of Oregon
SO AMERICAN REVIEW OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
LA English
DT Article
DE collaborative governance; collaborative governance regimes;
   collaborative platforms; collaborative system
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; PUBLIC MANAGEMENT; DECISION-MAKING;
   INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS; RESOURCE-MANAGEMENT; NETWORKS; GOVERNMENT;
   OUTCOMES; PARTICIPATION; INSTITUTIONS
AB This article takes a first step toward analyzing the characteristics of a cross-policy, state-wide collaborative system. Specifically, using data from the Atlas of Collaboration project, we offer a big-picture analysis of how over 200 externally directed collaborative governance regimes (CGRs) are operationalized in a state-level collaborative system consisting of 13 collaborative platforms operating across five policy areas (economic development, education, health, natural resources, public safety) in Oregon. We focus on three attributes-geographic scope, collaborative size, and collaborative characteristics-aggregated at the system level across CGRs, as well as across collaborative platforms and policy areas. The descriptive findings reveal that collaborative efforts are geographically dispersed across the state, involve thousands of participants representing organizations from the public, private, and nonprofit sectors, and vary across multiple characteristics, such as organizational form, lead organization, funding model, structural roles, staffing, and extent of face-to-face dialogue. These findings lay the groundwork for future theoretical development and empirical research.
C1 [Yoon, Nara] James Madison Univ, Sch Strateg Leadership Studies, 298 Port Republ Rd, Harrisonburg, VA 22807 USA.
   [Fields, Katie] Portland State Univ, Natl Policy Consensus Ctr, Portland, OR 97207 USA.
   [Cochran, Bobby] Willamette Partnership, Community Resilience & Innovat, Portland, OR USA.
   [Nabatchi, Tina] Syracuse Univ, Publ Adm, Maxwell Sch Citizenship & Publ Affairs, Syracuse, NY USA.
C3 James Madison University; Portland State University; Syracuse University
RP Yoon, N (corresponding author), James Madison Univ, Sch Strateg Leadership Studies, 298 Port Republ Rd, Harrisonburg, VA 22807 USA.
EM yoonnx@jmu.edu
OI Nabatchi, Tina/0000-0002-1410-3647; , Nara/0000-0001-8870-5360
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NR 94
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 11
U2 89
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0275-0740
EI 1552-3357
J9 AM REV PUBLIC ADM
JI Amer. Rev. Public Adm.
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 52
IS 6
BP 439
EP 456
AR 02750740221104521
DI 10.1177/02750740221104521
EA JUN 2022
PG 18
WC Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration
GA 3D1FC
UT WOS:000808067100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hakkarainen, V
   Mäkinen-Rostedt, K
   Horcea-Milcu, A
   D'Amato, D
   Jämsä, J
   Soini, K
AF Hakkarainen, Viola
   Makinen-Rostedt, Katri
   Horcea-Milcu, Andra
   D'Amato, Dalia
   Jamsa, Johanna
   Soini, Katriina
TI Transdisciplinary research in natural resources management: Towards an
   integrative and transformative use of co-concepts
SO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptive co-management; co-creation; co-design; co-learning;
   co-production; sustainability transformations
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE COMANAGEMENT; SUSTAINABILITY
   SCIENCE; KNOWLEDGE COPRODUCTION; PARTICIPATORY RESEARCH;
   ENVIRONMENTAL-MANAGEMENT; RELATIONAL THINKING; LEVERAGE POINTS;
   GOVERNANCE; FRAMEWORK
AB Transdisciplinary research often utilizes collaborative ways of knowledge production to enable deliberate transformations towards sustainability. Multiple concepts with varying definitions are applied, leading to confusion in the aims and uses of these concepts. In this article, we review five concepts relevant to the current debate on the new collaborative ways of knowledge production in transdisciplinary research. We focus on the concepts of co-creation, co-production, co-design, co-learning, and adaptive co-management in the context of natural resources management (NRM). This study couples a literature review and a conceptual analysis, and aims to clarify definitions, use, the interlinkages of these concepts and to shed light on their intertwined nature. We propose an integrative understanding of the concepts to facilitate collaborative modes and to enable the transformative aims of research processes. To this end, we discuss how to harvest the transformative potential of the "co-concepts" by focusing on reflexivity, power analysis and process orientation.
C1 [Hakkarainen, Viola; Soini, Katriina] Nat Resources Inst Finland, Bioecon & Environm Unit, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Hakkarainen, Viola] Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Ecosyst & Environm Res Program, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Hakkarainen, Viola; D'Amato, Dalia] Univ Helsinki, Helsinki Inst Sustainabil Sci HELSUS, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Makinen-Rostedt, Katri] Tampere Univ, Fac Management & Business, Polit Unit, Tampere, Finland.
   [Horcea-Milcu, Andra] Babes Bolyai Univ, Hungarian Dept Biol & Ecol, Cluj Napoca, Romania.
   [D'Amato, Dalia] Univ Helsinki, Fac Agr & Forestry, Dept Forest Sci, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Jamsa, Johanna] Univ Turku, Fac Sci & Engn, Dept Geog & Geol, Turku, Finland.
C3 Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke); University of Helsinki;
   University of Helsinki; Tampere University; Babes Bolyai University from
   Cluj; University of Helsinki; University of Turku
RP Hakkarainen, V (corresponding author), Nat Resources Inst Finland, Latokartanonkaari 9, Helsinki 00790, Finland.
EM viola.hakkarainen@helsinki.fi
RI D'Amato, Dalia/AAJ-6538-2020; Horcea-Milcu, Andra-Ioana/AAF-8772-2019
OI Hakkarainen, Viola/0000-0001-8965-0947; Horcea-Milcu,
   Andra-Ioana/0000-0003-1757-6615; Makinen-Rostedt,
   Katri/0000-0002-1502-2902; D'Amato, Dalia/0000-0002-3992-7263
FU Operationalizing Ecosystem Services in Business Sustainability [315912];
   Academy of Finland; Marie Sklodowska-Curie [840207]; Maj and Tor
   Nessling Foundation; Tiina and Antti Herlin Foundation; Finnish Cultural
   Foundation; European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation
   programme [76538]; Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [840207] Funding Source:
   Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)
FX Operationalizing Ecosystem Services in Business Sustainability,
   Grant/Award Number: 315912; Academy of Finland; Marie Sklodowska-Curie,
   Grant/Award Number: 840207; Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation; Tiina and
   Antti Herlin Foundation; Finnish Cultural Foundation; European Union's
   Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation programme, Grant/Award Number:
   76538
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NR 169
TC 41
Z9 44
U1 1
U2 33
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0968-0802
EI 1099-1719
J9 SUSTAIN DEV
JI Sustain. Dev.
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 30
IS 2
SI SI
BP 309
EP 325
DI 10.1002/sd.2276
EA DEC 2021
PG 17
WC Development Studies; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Regional
   & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Public
   Administration
GA 0M8JD
UT WOS:000734376900001
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Dubey, PK
   Singh, A
   Chaurasia, R
   Singh, GS
   Abhilash, PC
AF Dubey, Pradeep Kumar
   Singh, Ajeet
   Chaurasia, Rajan
   Singh, Gopal S.
   Abhilash, Purushothaman Chirakkuzhyil
BA Dubey, PK
   Singh, GS
   Abhilash, PC
BF Dubey, PK
   Singh, GS
   Abhilash, PC
TI Adaptive Agricultural Practices Employed in Eastern Uttar Pradesh, India
SO ADAPTIVE AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES: BUILDING RESILIENCE IN A CHANGING
   CLIMATE
SE SpringerBriefs in Environmental Science
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Adaptive agricultural practices; Crop diversification; Dryland
   agriculture; Eastern UP; Environmental challenges; Integrated farming
   practices; Resource conservation; Varietal selection
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; KNOWLEDGE; FOOD
AB The present study was undertaken to evaluate various adaptive agronomic practices employed by indigenous farmers of eastern Uttar Pradesh in North India. For this, extensive field survey was conducted in selected districts of eastern Uttar Pradesh and various practices done by farmers were noted for further studies. The promising practices were classified at three distinct level such as (1) crop or species level, (2) farm or field level, and (3) landscape level. Major emphasis was given to documenting crop diversification strategy, varietal selection and preferences over the period (especially in rice) and critical natural resource conservation methods that is employed by the local farmers themselves to sustain food production under changing climatic conditions. The present study could able to identify so many promising practices for further validation and the subsequent scaling-up of promising practices. It is concluded that integrating traditional and indigenous farming technologies offer huge promise in climate change adaptation in agriculture and is a sustainable and adaptive way for maximizing food production under changing climatic conditions.
C1 [Dubey, Pradeep Kumar; Singh, Ajeet; Chaurasia, Rajan; Singh, Gopal S.] Banaras Hindu Univ, Inst Environm & Sustainable Dev, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India.
   [Abhilash, Purushothaman Chirakkuzhyil] Banaras Hindu Univ, Inst Environm & Sustainable Dev, Sustainabl Sci, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India.
C3 Banaras Hindu University (BHU); Banaras Hindu University (BHU)
RP Chaurasia, R (corresponding author), Banaras Hindu Univ, Inst Environm & Sustainable Dev, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India.
EM pca.iesd@bhu.ac.in
RI Abhilash, Purushothaman/C-2740-2009
OI Singh, Ajeet/0000-0002-0666-9157; CHAURASIA, RAJAN/0000-0001-9561-9380
CR Abhilash PC, 2016, ENERGY ECOL ENVIRON, V1, P54, DOI 10.1007/s40974-016-0007-x
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NR 24
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 23
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2191-5547
EI 2191-5555
BN 978-3-030-15519-3; 978-3-030-15518-6
J9 SPRINGERBR ENV SCI
PY 2020
BP 93
EP 122
DI 10.1007/978-3-030-15519-3_5
D2 10.1007/978-3-030-15519-3
PG 30
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Agronomy; Environmental Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BN6FR
UT WOS:000485166300008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Landicho, LD
   Paelmo, RF
   Cabahug, RD
   de Luna, CC
   Visco, RG
   Tolentino, LL
AF Landicho, Leila D.
   Paelmo, Roselyn F.
   Cabahug, Rowena D.
   de Luna, Catherine C.
   Visco, Roberto G.
   Tolentino, Lutgarda L.
TI Climate Change Adaptation Strategies of Smallholder Agroforestry Farmers
   in the Philippines
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; agroforestry; local knowledge; agricultural production
   systems; impacts
AB This article argues that smallholder agroforestry farmers in the selected provinces in the Philippines have already been experiencing climate change in their respective areas as indicated by the change in the rainfall and temperature patterns. Using direct interviews and focus group discussions, the respondent-farmers highlighted that increased incidence of pests and diseases, stunted growth of crops, low crop productivity, delayed planting, delayed fruiting of some crops particularly perennial species, poor quality of produce, increased cost in farm operations, low income and decreased yield of some crops, are among the general impacts of climate change in their agricultural production systems. On the positive aspect, some crops had increased yield as an impact of climate change. The farmers employ their local knowledge and skills in adapting to the impacts of climate change. Among these include changing cropping patterns, integrating more crops in the farm, engaging in other off-farm and non-farm activities as additional source of income, changing the cultivated crops, mulching, and using organic fertilizers, among others. This article also highlights the benefits that the respondent-farmers derive from agroforestry, a land use management system that is currently being practiced in the study sites.
C1 [Landicho, Leila D.; Paelmo, Roselyn F.; Cabahug, Rowena D.; de Luna, Catherine C.; Visco, Roberto G.; Tolentino, Lutgarda L.] Univ Philippines, Coll Forestry & Nat Resources, Inst Agroforestry, Los Banos, Laguna, Philippines.
C3 University of the Philippines System; University of the Philippines Los
   Banos; University of the Philippines Open University
RP Landicho, LD (corresponding author), Univ Philippines, Coll Forestry & Nat Resources, Inst Agroforestry, Los Banos, Laguna, Philippines.
EM ldlandicho@gmail.com
RI Landicho, Leila/ABH-4083-2020
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NR 28
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 32
PU UNIV PHILIPPINES LOS BANOS, COLLEGE
PI LAGUNA
PA SCHOOL ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & MANAGEMENT, LAGUNA, 4031, PHILIPPINES
SN 0119-1144
J9 J ENVIRON SCI MANAG
JI J. Environ. Sci. Manage.
PY 2016
VL 19
IS 1
BP 37
EP 45
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DQ3HM
UT WOS:000379093400005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Trenkwalder, TW
   Yee, S
   Espinoza, A
AF Trenkwalder, Ted W.
   Yee, Sandy
   Espinoza, Andres
BE Oates, D
   Burkhart, E
   Grob, J
TI A Marine Oil Terminal Trestle Repair and Replacement Project
SO Ports 2016: Port Planning and Development
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 14th Triennial International Conference on Port Planning and Development
   (PORTS)
CY JUN 12-15, 2016
CL New Orleans, LA
SP Amer Soc Civil Engineers, Coasts Oceans Ports & Rivers Inst, Ports and Harbors Comm
AB This paper discusses the repair and replacement of an existing 90-yr old timber berth and trestle to meet the operational and seismic demands mandated by the Marine Oil Terminal Engineering and Maintenance Standards (MOTEMS). Many older marine oil terminals in California have been required to meet the MOTEMS regulations. However, many operators are looking for innovative ways to achieve the regulation requirements with restricted capital budgets. This terminal meets the MOTEMS requirements and capital constraints by replacing and repairing portions of the trestle. The strengthened structures meet the present demands for operational and seismic conditions as well as climate change issues. The author and his colleagues have recently completed the design and permitting of the first timber structure in the San Francisco Bay Area that includes operational, seismic, and sea level impact design requirements. The paper discusses the geotechnical and operational constraints, design criteria, permitting coordination, climate change adaptive measures, instrumentation requirements, early construction issues, and path forward for future waterfront structures. This paper also discusses the various alternative replacement and repair designs, the selection of the most cost effective options, lessons learned and some pitfalls to avoid for future rehabilitation projects.
C1 [Trenkwalder, Ted W.; Yee, Sandy; Espinoza, Andres] COWI Marine Inc, 1300 Clay St,7th FL, Oakland, CA 94612 USA.
C3 COWI A/S
RP Trenkwalder, TW (corresponding author), COWI Marine Inc, 1300 Clay St,7th FL, Oakland, CA 94612 USA.
EM twt@cowi.com; syee@cowi.com; aesp@cowi.com
CR American Society of Civil Engineers, 2006, 710 ASCE
   California Building Code (CBC), 2010, MAR OIL TERM ENG MAI
   United States. Department of Defense, 2012, UN FAC CRIT UFC 4 15
   United States. Department of Defense, 2005, UN FAC CRIT UFC 4 15
NR 4
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
PI NEW YORK
PA UNITED ENGINEERING CENTER, 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017-2398 USA
BN 978-0-7844-7991-9
PY 2016
BP 343
EP 352
PG 10
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA BG5EB
UT WOS:000389434300035
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alam, K
AF Alam, Khorshed
TI Farmers' adaptation to water scarcity in drought-prone environments: A
   case study of Rajshahi District, Bangladesh
SO AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Bangladesh; Climate change; Drought; Rice farming;
   Multinomial logit model
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RICE YIELD; AGRICULTURE; STRATEGIES;
   VARIABILITY; VARIABLES; INSIGHTS
AB Water scarcity and droughts pose serious threats to the livelihood of farming communities and the economy in many parts of the world. Using a survey of 546 farming households and employing multinomial logit regression, this study investigates rice farmers' adaptation to water scarcity in a semi-arid climate in Bangladesh. It identified factors determining farmers' adaptation responses to addressing water scarcity. The analysis shows that farmers with more experience of farming, better schooling, more secure tenure rights, better access to electricity and institutional facilities and an awareness of climatic effects are more likely to adopt alternative adaptation strategies. Farmers' alternative adaptation choices are examined in comparison to the traditional approach of groundwater irrigation. This study raises issues of sustainability of agricultural adaptation practices in the context of an increasing dependence on groundwater irrigation. The results provide an insight to sustainable irrigation practices and an understanding of the characteristics of farms and farming households to frame better strategies to cope with water-stressed regimes in drought-prone environments. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 Univ So Queensland, Fac Business Educ Law & Arts, Sch Commerce, Toowoomba, Qld 4350, Australia.
C3 University of Southern Queensland
RP Alam, K (corresponding author), Univ So Queensland, Fac Business Educ Law & Arts, Sch Commerce, Toowoomba, Qld 4350, Australia.
EM khorshed.alam@usq.edu.au
OI Alam, Khorshed/0000-0003-2232-0745
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NR 57
TC 155
Z9 171
U1 4
U2 93
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-3774
EI 1873-2283
J9 AGR WATER MANAGE
JI Agric. Water Manage.
PD JAN 31
PY 2015
VL 148
BP 196
EP 206
DI 10.1016/j.agwat.2014.10.011
PG 11
WC Agronomy; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Water Resources
GA AW8XA
UT WOS:000346541500021
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nikolowski, J
   Goldberg, V
   Zimm, J
   Naumann, T
AF Nikolowski, Johannes
   Goldberg, Valeri
   Zimm, Jakob
   Naumann, Thomas
TI Analysing the vulnerability of buildings to climate change: Summer heat
   and flooding
SO METEOROLOGISCHE ZEITSCHRIFT
LA English
DT Article
DE vulnerability analysis; building damage; climate change; summer heat;
   flooding
ID DAMAGE ESTIMATION; MODELS
AB The REGKLAM project (Development and Testing of an Integrated Regional Climate Change Adaption Programme for the Model Region Dresden) forms part of the KLIMZUG programme (Managing Climate Change in the Regions for the Future) funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research. It is concerned with the adaptation of important sectors of the Dresden region to climate change. One aim is to investigate and where necessary reduce the vulnerability of buildings and settlement structures to changing climatic conditions. This paper looks at flood damage as an example for the potential of climate change impacts on buildings. In ex-post analyses and projections, the article presents the results of regional climatological studies. Interfaces between meteorology and civil engineering are discussed. On the basis of a typology of building stock in the region, the vulnerability of given building types to given impacts was analysed in the form of impact models. The examples of environmental causes chosen were summer heat and flooding. The paper concludes with a discussion of how buildings can be adapted to cope with the impacts described.
C1 [Nikolowski, Johannes; Zimm, Jakob; Naumann, Thomas] Leibniz Inst Ecol Urban & Reg Dev, D-01217 Dresden, Germany.
   [Goldberg, Valeri] Tech Univ Dresden, Dept Hydrociences, Chair Meteorol, Dresden, Germany.
C3 Leibniz Institut fur okologische Raumentwicklung; Technische Universitat
   Dresden
RP Nikolowski, J (corresponding author), Leibniz Inst Ecol Urban & Reg Dev, Weberpl 1, D-01217 Dresden, Germany.
EM j.nikolowski@ioer.de
OI Goldberg, Valeri/0000-0002-9477-1652
FU German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01 LR 0802]
FX The present work is based on the project REGKLAM ( Development and
   Testing of an Integrated Regional Climate Change Adaption Programme for
   the Model Region Dresden) which forms part of the KLIMZUG programme
   (Managing Climate Change in the Regions for the Future). We thank the
   German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) for the
   financial support (Project No. 01 LR 0802).
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NR 37
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 28
PU E SCHWEIZERBARTSCHE VERLAGSBUCHHANDLUNG
PI STUTTGART
PA NAEGELE U OBERMILLER, SCIENCE PUBLISHERS, JOHANNESSTRASSE 3A, D 70176
   STUTTGART, GERMANY
SN 0941-2948
EI 1610-1227
J9 METEOROL Z
JI Meteorol. Z.
PD APR
PY 2013
VL 22
IS 2
BP 145
EP 153
DI 10.1127/0941-2948/2013/0388
PG 9
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 179ZJ
UT WOS:000321561600006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Olander, LP
   Cooley, DM
   Galik, CS
AF Olander, Lydia P.
   Cooley, David M.
   Galik, Christopher S.
TI The Potential Role for Management of U.S. Public Lands in Greenhouse Gas
   Mitigation and Climate Policy
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Public lands; Climate change; Greenhouse gas mitigation; Carbon offsets;
   Climate policy
ID CARBON SEQUESTRATION; WATER; STORAGE; AFFORESTATION; WILDFIRE; WETLANDS;
   FORESTS; BALANCE; FLUXES
AB Management of forests, rangelands, and wetlands on public lands, including the restoration of degraded lands, has the potential to increase carbon sequestration or reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions beyond what is occurring today. In this paper we discuss several policy options for increasing GHG mitigation on public lands. These range from an extension of current policy by generating supplemental mitigation on public lands in an effort to meet national emissions reduction goals, to full participation in an offsets market by allowing GHG mitigation on public lands to be sold as offsets either by the overseeing agency or by private contractors. To help place these policy options in context, we briefly review the literature on GHG mitigation and public lands to examine the potential for enhanced mitigation on federal and state public lands in the United States. This potential will be tempered by consideration of the tradeoffs with other uses of public lands, the needs for climate change adaptation, and the effects on other ecosystem services.
C1 [Olander, Lydia P.; Cooley, David M.; Galik, Christopher S.] Duke Univ, Nicholas Inst Environm Policy Solut, Durham, NC 27708 USA.
C3 Duke University
RP Olander, LP (corresponding author), Duke Univ, Nicholas Inst Environm Policy Solut, POB 90335, Durham, NC 27708 USA.
EM lydia.olander@duke.edu
RI Galik, Christopher/AAK-9488-2020
OI Galik, Christopher/0000-0002-0356-1861
FU Linden Trust
FX We would like to thank the Linden Trust for Conservation for their
   support of this work; Rob Doudrick, David Moulton, Jim Morrison, Ann
   Ingerson, and Aaron Jenkins for their helpful comments on earlier
   drafts.
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NR 61
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 45
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0364-152X
EI 1432-1009
J9 ENVIRON MANAGE
JI Environ. Manage.
PD MAR
PY 2012
VL 49
IS 3
BP 523
EP 533
DI 10.1007/s00267-011-9806-1
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 905TZ
UT WOS:000301299400002
PM 22286920
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Spittlehouse, DL
AF Spittlehouse, DL
TI Integrating climate change adaptation into forest management
SO FORESTRY CHRONICLE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; impacts; adaptation; vulnerability; forests; ecosystems;
   risk management
ID IMPACTS; ECOSYSTEMS; RISK
AB Future climate change will affect society's ability to use forest resources. We take account of climate in forest management and this will help us adapt to the effects of climate change on forests. However, society will have to adjust to how forests adapt by changing expectations for the use of forest resources because management can only influence the timing and direction of forest adaptation at selected locations. There will be benefits as well as loses and an important component of adaptation will be balancing values. Adaptation options to respond to impacts on the timber supply in Canada for the next 50 to 100 years are limited mainly to forest protection and wood utilisation because these forests are already in the ground. Adaptation through reforestation will focus on commercial tree species. It is important to start developing adaptation strategies now. These include assessing forest vulnerability to climate change, revising expectations of forest use, determining research and educational needs, development of forest policies to facilitate adaptation, and determining when to implement responses. Government agencies should take the lead in creating an environment to foster adaptation in forestry and in developing the necessary information required to respond.
C1 BC Minist Forest, Res Branch, Victoria, BC V8W 9C2, Canada.
RP BC Minist Forest, Res Branch, POB 9519,Stn Prov Govt, Victoria, BC V8W 9C2, Canada.
EM dave.spittlehouse@gems4.gov.bc.ca
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   [No title captured]
NR 35
TC 76
Z9 92
U1 1
U2 42
PU CANADIAN INST FORESTRY
PI MATTAWA
PA C/O CANADIAN ECOLOGY CENTRE, PO BOX 430, 6905 HWY 17 W, MATTAWA, ONTARIO
   P0H 1V0, CANADA
SN 0015-7546
EI 1499-9315
J9 FOREST CHRON
JI For. Chron.
PD SEP-OCT
PY 2005
VL 81
IS 5
BP 691
EP 695
DI 10.5558/tfc81691-5
PG 5
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 979VW
UT WOS:000232974100029
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Zeng, ZZ
   Xia, HS
   Chen, HX
AF Zeng, Zhongzhong
   Xia, Haishan
   Chen, Haoxia
BE Chen, F
   Liu, Y
   Hua, G
TI Research of Chinese Ancient Urban Morphologies Based on Climate
   Adaptability
SO LTLGB 2012: PROCEEDINGS OF INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON LOW-CARBON
   TRANSPORTATION AND LOGISTICS, AND GREEN BUILDINGS. VOL 1
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference on Low-Carbon Transportation and Logistics, and
   Green Buildings (LTLGB)
CY OCT 12-13, 2012
CL Beijing Jiaotong Univ, Beijing, PEOPLES R CHINA
SP Univ Liverpool, Natl Nat Sci Fdn China, K C Wong Educ Fdn
HO Beijing Jiaotong Univ
DE Climate adaptability; Ancient Chinese urban form; Site selection; Urban
   water system; City layout
AB Ancient Chinese cities have a history of thousands of years. Different historical dynasties recorded different urban planning philosophy. Many of these ancient practices on urban planning and design can be used as references for today's urban planning. A study of the climate adaptability of ancient Chinese urban form is theoretically significant. It helps to guide the modern city design, to create and build a modern city with Chinese characteristics and to inherit and carry forward the local traditional culture. Moreover, such studies can enrich the current deficient knowledge in ancient city construction history.
C1 [Zeng, Zhongzhong; Xia, Haishan] Beijing Jiaotong Univ, Beijing 100044, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Haoxia] Lund Univ, Lund, Sweden.
C3 Beijing Jiaotong University; Lund University
EM zzzeng@bjtu.edu.cn; haishaxia@163.com; 1915479867@qq.com
FU Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2013JBM117]
FX Project supported by the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central
   Universities: 2013JBM117.
CR Dwight P, 1969, AGR DEV CHINA
   Gaubatz PiperR., 1996, Beyond the Great Wall: Urban From and Transformation on the Chinese Frontiers
   Rowe William., 1989, Hankow: Commerce and Society in a Chinese City, 1796-1889
   Rozman C, 1973, URBAN NETWORKS CHING
NR 4
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 22
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
BN 978-3-642-34651-4
PY 2013
BP 781
EP 785
DI 10.1007/978-3-642-34651-4_106
PG 5
WC Engineering, Civil; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies;
   Transportation; Transportation Science & Technology; Urban Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Transportation; Urban
   Studies
GA BA8CQ
UT WOS:000337970800106
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Riahi, K
   van Vuuren, DP
   Kriegler, E
   Edmonds, J
   O'Neill, BC
   Fujimori, S
   Bauer, N
   Calvin, K
   Dellink, R
   Fricko, O
   Lutz, W
   Popp, A
   Cuaresma, JC
   Samir, KC
   Leimbach, M
   Jiang, LW
   Kram, T
   Rao, S
   Emmerling, J
   Ebi, K
   Hasegawa, T
   Havlik, P
   Humpenöder, F
   da Silva, LA
   Smith, S
   Stehfest, E
   Bosetti, V
   Eom, J
   Gernaat, D
   Masui, T
   Rogelj, J
   Strefler, J
   Drouet, L
   Krey, V
   Luderer, G
   Harmsen, M
   Takahashi, K
   Baumstark, L
   Doelman, JC
   Kainuma, M
   Klimont, Z
   Marangoni, G
   Lotze-Campen, H
   Obersteiner, M
   Tabeau, A
   Tavoni, M
AF Riahi, Keywan
   van Vuuren, Detlef P.
   Kriegler, Elmar
   Edmonds, Jae
   O'Neill, Brian C.
   Fujimori, Shinichiro
   Bauer, Nico
   Calvin, Katherine
   Dellink, Rob
   Fricko, Oliver
   Lutz, Wolfgang
   Popp, Alexander
   Cuaresma, Jesus Crespo
   Samir, K. C.
   Leimbach, Marian
   Jiang, Leiwen
   Kram, Tom
   Rao, Shilpa
   Emmerling, Johannes
   Ebi, Kristie
   Hasegawa, Tomoko
   Havlik, Petr
   Humpenoeder, Florian
   da Silva, Lara Aleluia
   Smith, Steve
   Stehfest, Elke
   Bosetti, Valentina
   Eom, Jiyong
   Gernaat, David
   Masui, Toshihiko
   Rogelj, Joeri
   Strefler, Jessica
   Drouet, Laurent
   Krey, Volker
   Luderer, Gunnar
   Harmsen, Mathijs
   Takahashi, Kiyoshi
   Baumstark, Lavinia
   Doelman, Jonathan C.
   Kainuma, Mikiko
   Klimont, Zbigniew
   Marangoni, Giacomo
   Lotze-Campen, Hermann
   Obersteiner, Michael
   Tabeau, Andrzej
   Tavoni, Massimo
TI The Shared Socioeconomic Pathways and their energy, land use, and
   greenhouse gas emissions implications: An overview
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Shared Socioeconomic Pathways; SSP; Climate change; RCP; Community
   scenarios; Mitigation; Adaptation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE RESEARCH; CARBON-CYCLE MODELS; SCENARIO FRAMEWORK;
   ATMOSPHERE-OCEAN; SIMPLER MODEL; IMPACTS; ADAPTATION
AB This paper presents the overview of the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) and their energy, land use, and emissions implications. The SSPs are part of a new scenario framework, established by the climate change research community in order to facilitate the integrated analysis of future climate impacts, vulnerabilities, adaptation, and mitigation. The pathways were developed over the last years as a joint community effort and describe plausible major global developments that together would lead in the future to different challenges for mitigation and adaptation to climate change. The SSPs are based on five narratives describing alternative socio-economic developments, including sustainable development, regional rivalry, inequality, fossil-fueled development, and middle-of-the-road development. The long-term demographic and economic projections of the SSPs depict a wide uncertainty range consistent with the scenario literature. A multi-model approach was used for the elaboration of the energy, land-use and the emissions trajectories of SSP-based scenarios. The baseline scenarios lead to global energy consumption of 400-1200 EJ in 2100, and feature vastly different land-use dynamics, ranging from a possible reduction in cropland area up to a massive expansion by more than 700 million hectares by 2100. The associated annual CO2 emissions of the baseline scenarios range from about 25 GtCO(2) to more than 120 GtCO(2) per year by 2100. With respect to mitigation, we find that associated costs strongly depend on three factors: (1) the policy assumptions, (2) the socio-economic narrative, and (3) the stringency of the target. The carbon price for reaching the target of 2.6 W/m(2) that is consistent with a temperature change limit of 2 degrees C, differs in our analysis thus by about a factor of three across the SSP marker scenarios. Moreover, many models could not reach this target from the SSPs with high mitigation challenges. While the SSPs were designed to represent different mitigation and adaptation challenges, the resulting narratives and quantifications span a wide range of different futures broadly representative of the current literature. This allows their subsequent use and development in new assessments and research projects. Critical next steps for the community scenario process will, among others, involve regional and sectoral extensions, further elaboration of the adaptation and impacts dimension, as well as employing the SSP scenarios with the new generation of earth system models as part of the 6th climate model intercomparison project (CMIP6). (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
C1 [Riahi, Keywan; Fricko, Oliver; Lutz, Wolfgang; Cuaresma, Jesus Crespo; Samir, K. C.; Rao, Shilpa; Havlik, Petr; Rogelj, Joeri; Krey, Volker; Klimont, Zbigniew; Obersteiner, Michael] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Laxenburg, Austria.
   [van Vuuren, Detlef P.; Kram, Tom; Stehfest, Elke; Gernaat, David; Harmsen, Mathijs; Doelman, Jonathan C.] PBL Netherlands Environm Assessment Agcy, Bilthoven, Netherlands.
   [Kriegler, Elmar; Bauer, Nico; Popp, Alexander; Leimbach, Marian; Humpenoeder, Florian; Strefler, Jessica; Luderer, Gunnar; Baumstark, Lavinia; Lotze-Campen, Hermann] Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res, Telegrafenberg A31, D-14473 Potsdam, Germany.
   [Edmonds, Jae; Calvin, Katherine; Smith, Steve; Eom, Jiyong] Univ Maryland, Joint Global Change Res Inst, Pacific Northwest Natl Lab, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
   [O'Neill, Brian C.; Jiang, Leiwen] Natl Ctr Atmospher Res, 1850 Table Mesa Dr, Boulder, CO USA.
   [Fujimori, Shinichiro; Hasegawa, Tomoko; Masui, Toshihiko; Takahashi, Kiyoshi; Kainuma, Mikiko] Natl Inst Environm Studies, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan.
   [Dellink, Rob] OECD, Paris, France.
   [Samir, K. C.] Shanghai Univ, Asian Demog Res Inst, Shanghai, Peoples R China.
   [Emmerling, Johannes; da Silva, Lara Aleluia; Bosetti, Valentina; Drouet, Laurent; Marangoni, Giacomo; Tavoni, Massimo] Fdn Eni Enrico Mattei, Milan, Italy.
   [Emmerling, Johannes; da Silva, Lara Aleluia; Bosetti, Valentina; Drouet, Laurent; Marangoni, Giacomo; Tavoni, Massimo] Ctr Euromediterraneo Cambiamenti Climatici, Lecce, Italy.
   [Ebi, Kristie] Univ Washington, Sch Publ Hlth, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
   [Bosetti, Valentina] Bocconi Univ, Dept Econ, Milan, Italy.
   [Eom, Jiyong] KAIST Coll Business, Seoul, South Korea.
   [Tabeau, Andrzej] Univ Wageningen & Res Ctr, Landbouw Econ Inst, NL-6700 HB Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Tavoni, Massimo] Politecn Milan, Dept Management & Econ, Milan, Italy.
   [Lotze-Campen, Hermann] Humboldt Univ, Lotze Campen, Unter Linden 6, D-10099 Berlin, Germany.
C3 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); Potsdam
   Institut fur Klimafolgenforschung; University System of Maryland;
   University of Maryland College Park; United States Department of Energy
   (DOE); Pacific Northwest National Laboratory; National Center
   Atmospheric Research (NCAR) - USA; National Institute for Environmental
   Studies - Japan; Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development
   (OECD); Shanghai University; Fondazione Mattei; Centro Euro-Mediterraneo
   sui Cambiamenti Climatici (CMCC); University of Washington; University
   of Washington Seattle; Bocconi University; Korea Advanced Institute of
   Science & Technology (KAIST); Wageningen University & Research;
   Polytechnic University of Milan; Humboldt University of Berlin
RP Riahi, K (corresponding author), Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Laxenburg, Austria.
EM riahi@iiasa.ac.at
RI O'Neill, Brian/E-6531-2013; Strefler, Jessica/O-7556-2015; Tabeau,
   Andrzej/AAE-8214-2019; Hasegawa, Tomoko/AAB-2616-2019; Krey,
   Volker/ABD-5070-2021; Obersteiner, Michael/ADG-8592-2022; van Vuuren,
   Detlef/A-4764-2009; Popp, Alexander/N-7064-2014; Lotze-Campen,
   Hermann/AAA-5093-2020; Calvin, Katherine/ADF-2443-2022; Bosetti,
   Valentina/KLY-5840-2024; Drouet, Laurent/J-9894-2019; Kriegler,
   Elmar/I-3048-2016; EMMERLING, Johannes/K-8283-2019; Eom,
   Jiyong/A-1161-2014; Riahi, Keywan/B-6426-2011; Fujimori,
   Shinichiro/A-1288-2015; Klimont, Zbigniew/O-6683-2019; Stehfest,
   Elke/AAZ-4121-2020; Ebi, Kristie/AFK-6769-2022; Marangoni,
   Giacomo/HTL-9547-2023; TAKAHASHI, KIYOSHI/AFN-9175-2022; Masui,
   Toshihiko/ABQ-0172-2022; Rogelj, Joeri/I-7108-2012; Aleluia Reis,
   Lara/AFV-8907-2022; Oliver, Fricko/ABE-5732-2020; Luderer,
   Gunnar/G-2967-2012; Klimont, Zbigniew/P-7641-2015; Humpenoder,
   Florian/HHN-1081-2022
OI Oliver, Fricko/0000-0002-6835-9883; Luderer, Gunnar/0000-0002-9057-6155;
   TAKAHASHI, KIYOSHI/0000-0002-0163-545X; Klimont,
   Zbigniew/0000-0003-2630-198X; Humpenoder, Florian/0000-0003-2927-9407
FU Ministry of the Environment, Japan [2-1402]; Integrated Assessment
   Research Program in the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of
   Energy; European Union [308329, 603942, 603542]; Grants-in-Aid for
   Scientific Research [15K16164] Funding Source: KAKEN
FX NIES gratefully acknowledges research support of the "Global
   Environmental Research Fund" (2-1402) provided by the Ministry of the
   Environment, Japan; and PNNL gratefully acknowledges research support
   provided by the Integrated Assessment Research Program in the Office of
   Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The contribution of several
   IAM teams benefitted from the financial support provided by the s
   Seventh Programme FP7/2007-2013 under grant agreement no 308329
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   member countries.
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Z9 1883
U1 97
U2 1190
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD JAN
PY 2017
VL 42
BP 153
EP 168
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2016.05.009
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA EL5AS
UT WOS:000394634500015
OA Green Submitted, Green Accepted, Green Published, hybrid
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Avelino, J
   Cristancho, M
   Georgiou, S
   Imbach, P
   Aguilar, L
   Bornemann, G
   Läderach, P
   Anzueto, F
   Hruska, AJ
   Morales, C
AF Avelino, Jacques
   Cristancho, Marco
   Georgiou, Selena
   Imbach, Pablo
   Aguilar, Lorena
   Bornemann, Gustavo
   Laederach, Peter
   Anzueto, Francisco
   Hruska, Allan J.
   Morales, Carmen
TI The coffee rust crises in Colombia and Central America (2008-2013):
   impacts, plausible causes and proposed solutions
SO FOOD SECURITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Hemileia vastatrix; Coffea arabica; Crop losses; Food security; Coffee
   price; Crop management; Climate change; Smallholder; Mesoamerica
ID HEMILEIA-VASTATRIX BERK; LEAF RUST; GROWN COFFEE; ARABICA L;
   PLANTATIONS; MANAGEMENT; RESISTANCE; DISEASES; CLIMATE; EPIDEMIC
AB Coffee rust is a leaf disease caused by the fungus, Hemileia vastatrix. Coffee rust epidemics, with intensities higher than previously observed, have affected a number of countries including: Colombia, from 2008 to 2011; Central America and Mexico, in 2012-13; and Peru and Ecuador in 2013. There are many contributing factors to the onset of these epidemics e.g. the state of the economy, crop management decisions and the prevailing weather, and many resulting impacts e.g. on production, on farmers' and labourers' income and livelihood, and on food security. Production has been considerably reduced in Colombia (by 31 % on average during the epidemic years compared with 2007) and Central America (by 16 % in 2013 compared with 2011-12 and by 10 % in 2013-14 compared with 2012-13). These reductions have had direct impacts on the livelihoods of thousands of smallholders and harvesters. For these populations, particularly in Central America, coffee is often the only source of income used to buy food and supplies for the cultivation of basic grains. As a result, the coffee rust epidemic has had indirect impacts on food security. The main drivers of these epidemics are economic and meteorological. All the intense epidemics experienced during the last 37 years in Central America and Colombia were concurrent with low coffee profitability periods due to coffee price declines, as was the case in the 2012-13 Central American epidemic, or due to increases in input costs, as in the 2008-11 Colombian epidemics. Low profitability led to suboptimal coffee management, which resulted in increased plant vulnerability to pests and diseases. A common factor in the recent Colombian and Central American epidemics was a reduction in the diurnal thermal amplitude, with higher minimum/lower maximum temperatures (+0.1 degrees C/-0.5 degrees C on average during 2008-2011 compared to a low coffee rust incidence period, 1991-1994, in Chinchina, Colombia; +0.9 degrees C/-1.2 degrees C on average in 2012 compared with prevailing climate, in 1224 farms from Guatemala). This likely decreased the latency period of the disease. These epidemics should be considered as a warning for the future, as they were enhanced by weather conditions consistent with climate change. Appropriate actions need to be taken in the near future to address this issue including: the development and establishment of resistant coffee cultivars; the creation of early warning systems; the design of crop management systems adapted to climate change and to pest and disease threats; and socio-economic solutions such as training and organisational strengthening.
C1 [Avelino, Jacques] CIRAD, UPR Bioagresseurs Anal & Maitrise Risque, F-34398 Montpellier, France.
   [Cristancho, Marco] Natl Coffee Res Ctr, CENICAFE, Dept Plant Pathol, Chinchina, Colombia.
   [Avelino, Jacques; Georgiou, Selena; Imbach, Pablo] CATIE, Dept Res & Dev, Turrialba, Costa Rica.
   [Aguilar, Lorena] FEWS NET, Reg Off Latin Amer & Caribbean, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
   [Bornemann, Gustavo; Hruska, Allan J.] FAO, Plant Prod & Protect Div, Panama City, Panama.
   [Laederach, Peter] CIAT, Reg Off Cent Amer & Caribbean, Managua, Nicaragua.
   [Anzueto, Francisco] ANACAFE, Res Dept, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
   [Avelino, Jacques; Morales, Carmen] IICA PROMECAFE, Guatemala City, Guatemala.
   [Cristancho, Marco] Ctr Bioinformat & Biol Computac BIOS, Manizales, Colombia.
C3 CIRAD; CATIE - Centro Agronomico Tropical de Investigacion y Ensenanza;
   Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO); Alliance;
   International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT
RP Avelino, J (corresponding author), CIRAD, UPR Bioagresseurs Anal & Maitrise Risque, F-34398 Montpellier, France.
EM jacques.avelino@cirad.fr
RI ; Hruska, Allan/AAV-7547-2020; Avelino, Jacques/C-5624-2009
OI Imbach, Pablo/0000-0003-4078-6063; Hruska, Allan/0000-0003-0984-3816;
   Laderach, Peter/0000-0001-8708-6318; Avelino,
   Jacques/0000-0003-1983-9431; CRISTANCHO, MARCO/0000-0001-9115-4117
FU Cascade project (Ecosystem-based adaptation for smallholder farmers in
   Central America); German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature
   Conservation, Building and Nuclear Safety (BMUB); Neumann Foundation
FX We thank the Cascade project (Ecosystem-based adaptation for smallholder
   farmers in Central America) for their financial support for the analysis
   of weather and climatic data at Central American scale. This project is
   part of the International Climate Initiative (ICI). The German Federal
   Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Nuclear
   Safety (BMUB) supports this initiative on the basis of a decision
   adopted by the German Bundestag. We also acknowledge the Neumann
   Foundation for its financial support for the analysis of the weather and
   coffee rust data in Guatemala and the CGIAR Research Program on Climate
   Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) for its support of the
   analysis in Colombia. Special thanks to Dr Serge Savary for critically
   reading the manuscript.
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TC 356
Z9 398
U1 13
U2 231
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 1876-4517
EI 1876-4525
J9 FOOD SECUR
JI Food Secur.
PD APR
PY 2015
VL 7
IS 2
BP 303
EP 321
DI 10.1007/s12571-015-0446-9
PG 19
WC Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Food Science & Technology
GA CF6YG
UT WOS:000352702200012
OA hybrid
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kunapo, J
   Fletcher, TD
   Ladson, AR
   Cunningham, L
   Burns, MJ
AF Kunapo, Joshphar
   Fletcher, Tim D.
   Ladson, Anthony R.
   Cunningham, Luke
   Burns, Matthew J.
TI A spatially explicit framework for climate adaptation
SO URBAN WATER JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Spatial framework; climate adaption; strategic decision support system;
   vulnerability; intervention modelling
ID URBAN-ENVIRONMENT; FLOOD; DROUGHT; STORAGE; POLICY; TREES; RISK
AB Cities increasingly confront climate change-related problems of flooding, urban heat island effects, and the impact of drought on vegetation. There is a need for urban water and infrastructure planners to be able to identify vulnerable areas and to design, compare and evaluate interventions to address these problems. In response to this need, we developed the Integrated Climate Adaptation Model (ICAM), which is a Web-GIS tool based on a spatially explicit framework. ICAM has a user-friendly interface for use by a wide range of urban planning and design professionals. The tool is built on high-resolution spatial datasets, allowing users to identify critical areas that may be impacted by sea-level rise, drought, flooding, temperature increases and threats to tree heath and to consider the benefits of various grey and green infrastructure interventions. The tool is suitable for planning and evaluating interventions and to identify pathways for further desktop modelling.
C1 [Kunapo, Joshphar; Fletcher, Tim D.; Ladson, Anthony R.; Burns, Matthew J.] Univ Melbourne, Sch Ecosyst & Forest Sci, Richmond, Australia.
   [Kunapo, Joshphar] Grace Detailed GIS Serv, Taylors Lakes, Australia.
   [Cunningham, Luke] Water Technol, Notting Hill, Australia.
C3 University of Melbourne; Water Technology Australia
RP Kunapo, J (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Sch Ecosyst & Forest Sci, Richmond, Australia.; Kunapo, J (corresponding author), Grace Detailed GIS Serv, Taylors Lakes, Australia.
EM jkunapo@unimelb.edu.au
RI Fletcher, Tim/AAB-8356-2019
OI Fletcher, Tim/0000-0001-8819-5567
FU City of Melbourne; Office of Living Victoria; Melbourne Water
FX Funding provided by the City of Melbourne and the Office of Living
   Victoria is gratefully acknowledged, as is support by Melbourne Water.
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NR 48
TC 21
Z9 23
U1 4
U2 60
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1573-062X
EI 1744-9006
J9 URBAN WATER J
JI Urban Water J.
PY 2018
VL 15
IS 2
BP 159
EP 166
DI 10.1080/1573062X.2018.1424216
PG 8
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA FU1SM
UT WOS:000423629700008
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tao, FL
   Xiao, DP
   Zhang, S
   Zhang, Z
   Rötter, RP
AF Tao, Fulu
   Xiao, Dengpan
   Zhang, Shuai
   Zhang, Zhao
   Roetter, Reimund P.
TI Wheat yield benefited from increases in minimum temperature in the
   Huang-Huai-Hai Plain of China in the past three decades
SO AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Agriculture; Climate change; Crop yield; Impact and adaptation; Heat
   stress; Phenology
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; WINTER-WHEAT; CROP MANAGEMENT; GRAIN-GROWTH; IMPACTS;
   TRENDS; PRODUCTIVITY; PHENOLOGY; RESPONSES; DURATION
AB Our understanding of climate impacts and adaptations on crop growth and productivity can be accelerated by analyzing historical data over the past few decades. We used crop trial and climate data from 1981 to 2009 at 34 national agro-meteorological stations in the Huang-Huai-Hai Plain (HHHP) of China to investigate the impacts of climate factors during different growth stages on the growth and yields of winter wheat, accounting for the adaptations such as shifts in sowing dates, cultivars, and agronomic management. Maximum (T-max) and minimum temperature (T-min) during the growth period of winter wheat increased significantly, by 0.4 and 0.6 degrees C/decade, respectively, from 1981 to 2009, while solar radiation decreased significantly by 0.2 MJ/m(2)/day and precipitation did not change significantly. The trends in climate shifted wheat phenology significantly at 21 stations and affected wheat yields significantly at five stations. The impacts of T-max and T-min differed in different growth stages of winter wheat. Across the stations, during 1981-2009, wheat yields increased on average by 14.5% with increasing trends in T-min over the whole growth period, which reduced frost damage, however, decreased by 3.0% with the decreasing trends in solar radiation. Trends in Tmax and precipitation had comparatively smaller impacts on wheat yields. From 1981 to 2009, climate trends were associated with a <= 30% (or <= 1.0% per year) wheat yield increase at 23 stations in eastern and southern parts of HHHP; however with a <= 30% (or <= 1.0% per year) reduction at 11 other stations, mainly in western part of HHHP. We also found that wheat reproductive growth duration increased due to shifts in cultivars and flowering date, and the duration was significantly and positively correlated with wheat yield. This study highlights the different impacts of T-max and T-min in different growth stages of winter wheat, as well as the importance of management (e.g. shift of sowing date) and cultivars shift in adapting to climate change in the major wheat production region. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Tao, Fulu; Xiao, Dengpan; Zhang, Shuai] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Land Surface Pattern & Simulat, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Zhao] Beijing Normal Univ, State Key Lab Earth Surface Proc & Resource, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.
   [Tao, Fulu] Nat Resources Inst Finland Luke, FI-00790 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Xiao, Dengpan] Hebei Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci, Shijiazhuang 050011, Hebei, Peoples R China.
   [Roetter, Reimund P.] Univ Gottingen, Dept Crop Sci, Grisebachstr 6, Gottingen, Germany.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences & Natural
   Resources Research, CAS; Beijing Normal University; Natural Resources
   Institute Finland (Luke); Hebei Academy of Sciences; University of
   Gottingen
RP Tao, FL (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Land Surface Pattern & Simulat, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
EM taofl@igsnrr.ac.cn
RI Xiao, Dengpan/V-9035-2019; zhang, shuai/IVU-7877-2023; 张|Zhang,
   朝|Zhao/AAF-8815-2019; Rotter, Reimund P./Y-9579-2019
OI Tao, F/0000-0001-8574-0080; Xiao, Dengpan/0000-0001-6900-1237; Rotter,
   Reimund P./0000-0002-3804-9964
FU National Science Foundation of China [41571088, 31561143003, 41571493];
   FACCE MACSUR through Finnish Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry
FX This study is supported by the National Science Foundation of China
   (Project Nos. 41571088, 31561143003 and 41571493). Funding support by
   the FACCE MACSUR project the Finnish Ministry of Agriculture and
   Forestry is also gratefully acknowledged.
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NR 55
TC 90
Z9 97
U1 4
U2 122
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0168-1923
EI 1873-2240
J9 AGR FOREST METEOROL
JI Agric. For. Meteorol.
PD MAY 28
PY 2017
VL 239
BP 1
EP 14
DI 10.1016/j.agrformet.2017.02.033
PG 14
WC Agronomy; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA EV6MZ
UT WOS:000401884800001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Shekhawat, NS
   Rai, MK
   Phulwaria, M
   Rathore, JS
   Gupta, AK
   Purohit, M
   Patel, AK
   Kataria, V
   Shekhawat, S
AF Shekhawat, N. S.
   Rai, Manoj K.
   Phulwaria, Mahendra
   Rathore, Jitendra Singh
   Gupta, Amit Kumar
   Purohit, Meena
   Patel, Ashok Kumar
   Kataria, Vinod
   Shekhawat, Smita
BE Ramawat, KG
   Merillon, JM
   Ahuja, MR
TI Tree Biotechnology with Special Reference to Species of Fragile
   Ecosystems and Arid Environments
SO TREE BIOTECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID IN-VITRO PROPAGATION; TISSUE-CULTURE; FOREST TREES; CLONAL PROPAGATION;
   GENETIC-TRANSFORMATION; SEQUOIA-SEMPERVIRENS; PROSOPIS-CINERARIA;
   PHASE-CHANGE; SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS; TRANSGENIC TREES
AB Many trees and tree-like monocots grow/are grown for forestry, horticulture, and also as plantation crops. Forest trees are considered to be self-renewing resources and have thus attracted only modest management, research and genetic improvement as compared to the fruit trees and plantation crops. Trees have undergone limited domestication. Changing needs of the society, for products/wood/biomass to meet the daily needs, shape the use of trees in the world. The rising human population and the need to mitigate and adapt to climate change are driving forces that necessitate research, development and use of modern technologies for tree improvement and plantation. Worldwide, forest represents half of the biospheric carbon sink and the trees store estimated 2.4 Petagrams(Pg) carbon every year in form of biomass.
   Trees are necessary for the very existence of mankind as these provide essential ecosystem services. Trees have unique features of tallness, long life and ability to produce wood through the activities of cambium. Fast-growing, short-rotation trees may produce a large amount of cellulose-rich biomass (cellulose factories) to meet the biomass and energy need of the world in the modern era of Anthropocene, human-induced climate change and global warming causing drought-/heat-induced mortality and tree die-back. Woody perennials are valuable biomass producers in the drylands and arid regions of the world. A number of tree species contribute in maintaining productivity in the fragile ecosystem of the Indian Thar Desert and the Aravallis. However, there is need for genetic improvement and large-scale plantation of selected genotypes of trees native to these regions of the country. Both conventional and non-conventional methods of plant breeding need to be applied. Tools of genomics and biotechnology may be developed and applied for sustainable utilization of trees of the drylands. These are reviewed and discussed in this paper. Since the 1970s, at the Department of Botany, Jai Narain Vyas University, Jodhpur, biotechnological methods have been developed and defined. These include development of tissue culture for cloning of number of tree species of the region and use of molecular biological methods for analysis of phylogeny and clonal fidelity of tissue culture-raised plants.
C1 [Shekhawat, N. S.; Rai, Manoj K.; Phulwaria, Mahendra; Rathore, Jitendra Singh; Gupta, Amit Kumar; Purohit, Meena; Patel, Ashok Kumar; Kataria, Vinod; Shekhawat, Smita] Jai Narain Vyas Univ, Dept Bot, Jodhpur 342001, Rajasthan, India.
C3 Jai Narain Vyas University Jodhpur
RP Shekhawat, NS (corresponding author), Jai Narain Vyas Univ, Dept Bot, Jodhpur 342001, Rajasthan, India.
EM biotechunit@gmail.com
RI Rai, Manoj/F-3104-2012; gupta, Amit/KYQ-6219-2024; Patel, Dr.
   Ashok/AEO-1300-2022
OI Kataria, Vinod/0000-0001-5659-6374; Rai, Manoj K/0000-0002-2385-6325
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NR 171
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 2
PU CRC PRESS-TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP
PI BOCA RATON
PA 6000 BROKEN SOUND PARKWAY NW, STE 300, BOCA RATON, FL 33487-2742 USA
BN 978-1-4665-9715-0; 978-1-4665-9714-3
PY 2014
BP 187
EP 222
PG 36
WC Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology; Plant Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology; Plant Sciences
GA BF7RC
UT WOS:000384332400008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yoder, L
   Cain, A
   Rao, A
   Geiger, N
   Kravitz, B
   Mercer, M
   Miniard, D
   Nepal, S
   Nunn, T
   Sluder, M
   Weiler, G
   Attari, SZ
AF Yoder, Landon
   Cain, Alora
   Rao, Ananya
   Geiger, Nathaniel
   Kravitz, Ben
   Mercer, Mack
   Miniard, Deidra
   Nepal, Sangeet
   Nunn, Thomas
   Sluder, Mary
   Weiler, Grace
   Attari, Shahzeen Z.
TI Muddling through Climate Change: A Qualitative Exploration of India and
   US Climate Experts' Perspectives on Solutions, Pathways, and Barriers
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE expert elicitation; climate justice; qualitative analysis; climate
   change; climate change mitigation; climate change adaptation
ID POLICY; ADAPTATION; INSIGHTS
AB Climate solutions related to mitigation and adaptation vary across the United States and India, given their unique current socio-political-technological abilities and their histories. Here, we discuss results from online face-to-face interviews undertaken with 33 U.S.-based climate experts and 30 India-based climate experts. Using qualitative grounded theory, we explore open-ended responses to questions related to mitigation and adaptation and find the following: (1) there is broad agreement among experts in both countries on the main mitigation solutions focused on the decarbonization of energy systems, but (2) there are a diversity of views between experts on what to prioritize and how to achieve it. Similarly, there is substantial agreement that adaptation solutions are needed to address agriculture, water management, and infrastructure, but there is a wide variety of perspectives on other priorities and how best to proceed. Experts across both countries generally perceived mitigation as needing national policies to succeed, while adaptation is perceived as more local and challenging given the larger number of stakeholders involved in planning and implementation. Our findings indicate that experts agree on the goals of decarbonization, but there was no consensus on how best to accomplish implementation.
C1 [Yoder, Landon; Cain, Alora; Rao, Ananya; Mercer, Mack; Miniard, Deidra; Nepal, Sangeet; Nunn, Thomas; Sluder, Mary; Weiler, Grace; Attari, Shahzeen Z.] Indiana Univ, ONeill Sch Publ & Environm Affairs, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
   [Geiger, Nathaniel] Indiana Univ, Media Sch, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
   [Geiger, Nathaniel] Univ Michigan, Commun & Media, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Kravitz, Ben] Indiana Univ, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
   [Kravitz, Ben] Pacific Northwest Natl Lab, Atmospher Climate & Earth Sci Div, Richland, WA 99352 USA.
C3 Indiana University System; Indiana University Bloomington; Indiana
   University System; Indiana University Bloomington; University of
   Michigan System; University of Michigan; Indiana University System;
   Indiana University Bloomington; United States Department of Energy
   (DOE); Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
RP Geiger, N (corresponding author), Indiana Univ, Media Sch, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.; Geiger, N (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Commun & Media, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
EM geigern@umich.edu
RI Geiger, Nathaniel/X-9095-2019; Kravitz, Ben/P-7925-2014
OI Geiger, Nathaniel/0000-0003-1724-1081; Attari,
   Shahzeen/0009-0006-0818-6091; Yoder, Landon/0000-0002-0839-9920;
   Kravitz, Ben/0000-0001-6318-1150
FU Environmental Resilience Institute, Indiana University's Prepared for
   Environmental Change Grand Challenge Initiative; National Science
   Foundation [SES-1754740]; US Department of Energy [DE-AC05-76RL01830]
FX This work was supported by a grant from the Environmental Resilience
   Institute, Indiana University's Prepared for Environmental Change Grand
   Challenge Initiative. Support for BK was provided in part by the
   National Science Foundation through agreement SES-1754740. The Pacific
   Northwest National Laboratory is operated by Battelle Memorial Institute
   for the US Department of Energy under contract DE-AC05-76RL01830.
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NR 69
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUL
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 13
AR 5275
DI 10.3390/su16135275
PG 20
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YO2P5
UT WOS:001269365600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Store-Valen, M
   Temeljotov-Salaj, A
   Prabowo, BN
AF Store-Valen, Marit
   Temeljotov-Salaj, Alenka
   Prabowo, Bintang Noor
BE Lindahl, G
   Gottlieb, SC
TI Motivation for Doing a Sustainable Building Refurbishment from a
   Norwegian Building Owner's Perspective
SO SDGS IN CONSTRUCTION ECONOMICS AND ORGANIZATION, CREON 2022
SE Springer Proceedings in Business and Economics
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 11th Nordic Conference on Construction Economics and Organisation
   (CREON)
CY MAY 18-20, 2022
CL Copenhagen, DENMARK
DE Sustainable building renovation; Sustainable refurbishment; Adaptive
   reuse; Adaptability; Historic buildings
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE REUSE; DEMOLITION
AB Norway aims to be a part of the European Green Deal where refurbishing and renovating buildings is an important action towards sustainable development to reach national and global SDG. This paper aims to shed light on what motivates the building owner to do sustainable building refurbishment (SBR) and discuss strategies that promote further SBR. This is examined through a scoping literature review and in-depth interviews of public and private property owners in the southeast of Norway. This study confirms that the first and foremost motivations of doing a SBR are cost-driven, technically, and regulatory-driven. Secondly, environmental aspects have the potential to be a motivator due to future changes in terms of demands of doing climate gas calculations and the implementation of the EU's taxonomy. Social aspects such as user demands and user involvement are discussed but not found as a motivation in itself. However, for historical buildings, the willingness to invest and find sustainable solutions is more likely to be true, as historic buildings are important for the identity and attractiveness in their neighborhood. The findings suggested that stricter regulations and higher demolition fees, climate gas calculations and life cycle cost demands, and EU's taxonomy are likely to further promote SBR.
C1 [Store-Valen, Marit; Temeljotov-Salaj, Alenka; Prabowo, Bintang Noor] Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol NTNU, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Trondheim, Norway.
C3 Norwegian University of Science & Technology (NTNU)
RP Store-Valen, M (corresponding author), Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol NTNU, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Trondheim, Norway.
EM marit.valen@ntnu.no; alenka.temeliotov-salaj@ntnu.no;
   bintang.n.prabowo@ntnu.no
RI Prabowo, Bintang/KEJ-4594-2024
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NR 47
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2198-7246
EI 2198-7254
BN 978-3-031-25500-7; 978-3-031-25498-7; 978-3-031-25497-0
J9 SPR PROC BUS ECON
PY 2023
BP 165
EP 178
DI 10.1007/978-3-031-25498-7_12
PG 14
WC Architecture; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Architecture; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA BX5KO
UT WOS:001300003400012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Welcker, C
   Spencer, NA
   Turc, O
   Granato, I
   Chapuis, R
   Madur, D
   Beauchene, K
   Gouesnard, B
   Draye, X
   Palaffre, C
   Lorgeou, J
   Melkior, S
   Guillaume, C
   Presterl, T
   Murigneux, A
   Wisser, RJ
   Millet, EJ
   van Eeuwijk, F
   Charcosset, A
   Tardieu, F
AF Welcker, Claude
   Spencer, Nadir Abusamra
   Turc, Olivier
   Granato, Italo
   Chapuis, Romain
   Madur, Delphine
   Beauchene, Katia
   Gouesnard, Brigitte
   Draye, Xavier
   Palaffre, Carine
   Lorgeou, Josiane
   Melkior, Stephane
   Guillaume, Colin
   Presterl, Thomas
   Murigneux, Alain
   Wisser, Randall J.
   Millet, Emilie J.
   van Eeuwijk, Fred
   Charcosset, Alain
   Tardieu, Francois
TI Physiological adaptive traits are a potential allele reservoir for maize
   genetic progress under challenging conditions
SO NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
ID ANTHESIS-SILKING INTERVAL; WATER-DEFICIT; EVAPORATIVE DEMAND; DROUGHT
   TOLERANCE; CROP PRODUCTION; GRAIN-YIELD; GROWTH-RATE; DIVERSITY; TRENDS;
   IDENTIFICATION
AB Phenomic and genomic approaches are required to evaluate the progress of breeding strategies. Here, the authors analyse 65 years of genetic progress in maize, showing that breeders have selected traits with stable effects on yield whereas not for adaptive traits key for climate change adaptation.
   Combined phenomic and genomic approaches are required to evaluate the margin of progress of breeding strategies. Here, we analyze 65 years of genetic progress in maize yield, which was similar (101 kg ha(-1) year(-1)) across most frequent environmental scenarios in the European growing area. Yield gains were linked to physiologically simple traits (plant phenology and architecture) which indirectly affected reproductive development and light interception in all studied environments, marked by significant genomic signatures of selection. Conversely, studied physiological processes involved in stress adaptation remained phenotypically unchanged (e.g. stomatal conductance and growth sensitivity to drought) and showed no signatures of selection. By selecting for yield, breeders indirectly selected traits with stable effects on yield, but not physiological traits whose effects on yield can be positive or negative depending on environmental conditions. Because yield stability under climate change is desirable, novel breeding strategies may be needed for exploiting alleles governing physiological adaptive traits.
C1 [Welcker, Claude; Spencer, Nadir Abusamra; Turc, Olivier; Granato, Italo; Wisser, Randall J.; Tardieu, Francois] Univ Montpellier, Inst Agro, INRAE, LEPSE, Montpellier, France.
   [Chapuis, Romain] Univ Montpellier, Inst Agro, INRAE, DIASCOPE, Montpellier, France.
   [Madur, Delphine; Charcosset, Alain] Univ Paris Saclay, GQE Le Moulon, INRA, Univ Paris Sud,CNRS,AgroParisTech, Gif Sur Yvette, France.
   [Beauchene, Katia] Inst Vegetal, ARVALIS, Ouzouer Le Marche, France.
   [Gouesnard, Brigitte] Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, INRAE, Inst Agro,AGAP Inst, Montpellier, France.
   [Draye, Xavier] Catholic Univ Louvain, Earth & Life Inst, Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
   [Palaffre, Carine] Univ Bordeaux, INRAE, St Martin De Hinx, France.
   [Lorgeou, Josiane] ARVALIS, Inst Vegetal, Boigneville, France.
   [Melkior, Stephane] RAGT, Port De Lanne, France.
   [Guillaume, Colin] MAS Seeds, Haut Mauco, France.
   [Presterl, Thomas] KWS SAAT SE & Co KGaA, Einbeck, Germany.
   [Murigneux, Alain] Limagrain Europe, Chappes, France.
   [Millet, Emilie J.; van Eeuwijk, Fred] WUR, Biometris, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Universite de Montpellier; Institut Agro; INRAE; Institut Agro;
   Universite de Montpellier; INRAE; Universite Paris Saclay; Centre
   National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); AgroParisTech; INRAE;
   Institut Agro; CIRAD; Universite de Montpellier; INRAE; Universite
   Catholique Louvain; Universite de Bordeaux; INRAE; Wageningen University
   & Research
RP Tardieu, F (corresponding author), Univ Montpellier, Inst Agro, INRAE, LEPSE, Montpellier, France.
EM francois.tardieu@inrae.fr
RI Tardieu, Francois/I-3618-2012; Granato, Italo/F-2516-2014
OI Abu-Samra Spencer, Nadir/0000-0001-7350-8460; WELCKER,
   Claude/0000-0002-8275-1259; Draye, Xavier/0000-0002-3637-3330; Granato,
   Italo/0000-0003-2093-6810; Turc, Olivier/0000-0003-0659-1406
FU EU [FP7-244374]; Ministry of Agriculture; PROMAIS project
   [MAP-C2008-P227]; EU project H2020 [731013];  [ANR-10BTBR-01]; 
   [ANR-11-INBS-0012]
FX This work was supported by the EU project FP7-244374 (DROPS), the
   Ministry of Agriculture and PROMAIS project MAP-C2008-P227 (DivZea), the
   projects ANR-10BTBR-01 (Amaizing) and ANR-11-INBS-0012 (Phenome), and
   the EU project H2020 731013 (EPPN2020). We acknowledge the scientific
   advisory board, B Aizac, J Beigbeder, J Betran, JF Bizar, A Gallais, Ph
   Moreau, C Tabel, and A Vincent. We are grateful to key partners for
   field experiments: JL Olivier JM Groisset and C Deluc (Limagrain), G
   Brosse (Caussade), G Lene and H Magnan (RAGT), P Schopp (KWS), M
   Fourneau (Mas seeds), F Tanzi and E Basilico (Syngenta), A Fournier and
   B De Solan (Arvalis), P Bataillon, S Malavieille and B Largardere
   (INRAE), C Gelot and C Grizeau (GEVES), F Daveau and E Voinot (Euralis),
   J Lopez and MH Tixier (Biogemma/Limagrain). We also are grateful to P
   Sehabiague (Bayer), G Boulch (Corteva), A Gaillard (MAS seeds), J
   Laborde, and C Bauland (INRAE) for providing and generating the studied
   genetic materials and to L Cabrera Bosquet, B Suard, N Brichet (INRAE)
   for phenotyping platform experiments and A Meziane (INRAE) for data
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NR 88
TC 26
Z9 29
U1 7
U2 50
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
EI 2041-1723
J9 NAT COMMUN
JI Nat. Commun.
PD JUN 9
PY 2022
VL 13
IS 1
AR 3225
DI 10.1038/s41467-022-30872-w
PG 13
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 2A3RV
UT WOS:000809423400024
PM 35680899
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alejo, LA
AF Alejo, Lanie A.
TI Assessing the impacts of climate change on aerobic rice production using
   the DSSAT-CERES-Rice model
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE aerobic rice; climate change; DSSAT; optimum planting window
ID CROPPING SYSTEM; WATER-USE; YIELD; PERFORMANCE
AB This study assessed the impacts of climate change on aerobic rice production using the DSSAT-CERES-Rice model. Actual data observed from four cropping seasons in two sites were used for calibration and validation. Four Representative Concentration Pathway scenarios were used to simulate climate change. The optimum planting windows were simulated across these scenarios. Results showed that DSSAT-CERES-Rice could adequately simulate aerobic rice production. Changes in seasonal rainfall and increases in temperature especially during dry seasons adversely affected aerobic rice production. Reduction of rainfall during the wet seasons favored aerobic rice production. Yield losses are twice as large as gains. Changes in climate could cause yield improvements to decline from 83% to 53% and yield reductions to increase from 150% to 177% towards the end of the 21st century. Selecting the best planting windows could optimize production to avoid huge economic losses. Optimum planting windows were simulated during normal, dry, and wet climate conditions. The derived set of genetic coefficients could be used to assess various aerobic rice farm crop and nutrient management strategies as well as other climate and soil conditions. The long-term projections on aerobic rice production could guide policy and decision-makers on designing long-term climate change adaptation and mitigation plans and programs.
C1 [Alejo, Lanie A.] Isabela State Univ, Coll Engn, Dept Agr & Biosyst Engn, Echague, Isabela, Philippines.
C3 Isabela State University
RP Alejo, LA (corresponding author), Isabela State Univ, Coll Engn, Dept Agr & Biosyst Engn, Echague, Isabela, Philippines.
EM lhan_1023@yahoo.com
RI Alejo, Lanie/AAG-3756-2020
OI Alejo, Lanie/0000-0002-8058-483X
FU Philippine Rice Research Institute; Department of Agriculture-Bureau of
   Agricultural Research; Isabela State University (ISU)
FX The author acknowledges the research project headed by Ms. Jayvee A.
   Cruz and funded by the Philippine Rice Research Institute and Department
   of Agriculture-Bureau of Agricultural Research in collaboration with the
   Isabela State University (ISU) through the author. The crop data used in
   this study is part of the experiments established through this project.
   The author also thanks the ISU-Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and
   Astronomical Services Administration agrometeorological station for
   providing the daily weather data and Engr. Arlen S. Alejandro for
   proofreading the paper.
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NR 36
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 5
U2 66
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
EI 2408-9354
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PD MAY
PY 2021
VL 12
IS 3
BP 696
EP 708
DI 10.2166/wcc.2020.286
PG 13
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA SA3EK
UT WOS:000649181400003
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zucaro, R
   Manganiello, V
   Lorenzetti, R
   Ferrigno, M
AF Zucaro, Raffaella
   Manganiello, Veronica
   Lorenzetti, Romina
   Ferrigno, Marianna
TI Application of Multi-Criteria Analysis selecting the most effective
   Climate change adaptation measures and investments in the Italian
   context
SO BIO-BASED AND APPLIED ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE drought risk; water management; investment database; reservoirs; climate
   change
ID RESOURCE-MANAGEMENT
AB In the context of climate change, one of the EU's major political efforts focus on water management. Public investment is carried out considering several drivers, from economic development to demographics, climate, and pollutants. Meanwhile, the need for evaluation methods is also increasing, so their development has grown in recent years. Among these, Multi-Criteria Analysis methodologies (MCA) have taken on great importance. This work aims to demonstrate the usefulness of MCA in addressing crucial environmental issues, such as the use of water resources for agricultural and food production. The document presents an application of MCA for the ranking and selection of projects to be financed under the Italian National Plan on Water Resources. The Plan is part of the national initiatives planned for the adaptation of the agricultural sector to climate change. The selection criteria have been identified following a participatory approach, and to respond to both the challenge of climate change and the limited availability of funds. MCA is used to select the best projects to be financed with the available amount. The Italian experience confirms the effectiveness of MCA and highlights how the involvement of both decision makers and stakeholders is necessary for a successful application of MCA to environmental issues.
C1 [Zucaro, Raffaella; Manganiello, Veronica; Lorenzetti, Romina; Ferrigno, Marianna] Council Agr Res & Econ, Res Ctr Agr Policies & Bioecon CREA PB, Via Po 14, I-00198 Rome, RM, Italy.
C3 Consiglio per la Ricerca in Agricoltura e L'analisi Dell'economia
   Agraria (CREA)
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EM raffaella.zucaro@crea.gov.it; veronica.manganiello@crea.gov.it;
   romina.lorenzetti@crea.gov.it; marianna.ferrigno@crea.gov.it
RI Zucaro, Raffaella/ABC-8764-2020
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NR 30
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 6
PU FIRENZE UNIV PRESS
PI FIRENZE
PA JOURNALS DIVISION, BORGO ALBIZI, 28, FIRENZE, 50122, ITALY
SN 2280-6180
EI 2280-6172
J9 BIO-BASED APPL ECON
JI Bio-based Appl. Econ.
PY 2021
VL 10
IS 2
BP 109
EP 122
DI 10.36253/bae-9545
PG 14
WC Economics
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA XH7WJ
UT WOS:000725639800003
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Marchezini, V
   Londe, LR
AF Marchezini, Victor
   Londe, Luciana R.
TI Looking to future perceptions about climate change in Brazil: What
   children's teachers think, learn and teach about?
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Global environmental changes; Education; Social
   dimension; Environmental perception; Youth
ID CHANGE SCIENCE
AB The social and human sciences have had a minor role in the studies of climate change. There remains a significant gap in our knowledge and understanding of the many facets of this theme. The educational sector has been neglected in the climate change scientific debate, although it is acknowledged as a key sector. This article aims to understand how teachers are dealing with the climate change topic: what they think, learn and teach about it. It is focused on teachers at elementary schools (6-14 years old) in Sao Jose dos Campos, Sao Paulo State, Brazil. This type of social research is important for developing countries such as Brazil, where the sociological research on climate change is emergent. The identification of teachers' perceptions on climate change is an important step in finding ways to listen to and engage with them in the formulation of climate change adaptation plans, especially because they will be among the people responsible for preparing the younger generations of citizens. The survey of teachers' knowledge and perception about climate change provides two main approaches: (1) It supports better planning of future school activities, training, and updating knowledge and (2) It suggests how children are being prepared to understand and deal with this contemporary problem of climate change.
C1 [Marchezini, Victor; Londe, Luciana R.] Cemaden Natl Early Warning & Monitoring Ctr Nat H, Sao Jose Dos Campos, Brazil.
   [Marchezini, Victor] Natl Inst Space Res, Sao Jose Dos Campos, Brazil.
C3 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE)
RP Londe, LR (corresponding author), Cemaden Natl Early Warning & Monitoring Ctr Nat H, Sao Jose Dos Campos, Brazil.
EM luciana.londe@cemaden.gov.br
RI Marchezini, Victor/Q-4002-2016
OI Marchezini, Victor/0000-0002-1974-0960
FU Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP), Brazil [2018/06093-4]
FX Victor Marchezini thanks the Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP),
   Brazil (Grant No. 2018/06093-4).
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NR 35
TC 5
Z9 6
U1 1
U2 21
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 104
IS 3
BP 2325
EP 2337
DI 10.1007/s11069-020-04274-4
EA SEP 2020
PG 13
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA OK4DD
UT WOS:000566038100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Williams, AA
   Allen, JG
   Catalano, PJ
   Buonocore, JJ
   Spengler, JD
AF Williams, Augusta A.
   Allen, Joseph G.
   Catalano, Paul J.
   Buonocore, Jonathan J.
   Spengler, John D.
TI The Influence of Heat on Daily Police, Medical, and Fire Dispatches in
   Boston, Massachusetts: Relative Risk and Time-Series Analyses
SO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
ID AMBULANCE DISPATCHES; HOSPITAL ADMISSIONS; TEMPERATURE; MORTALITY;
   WEATHER; MORBIDITY; VIOLENCE; IMPACTS; WAVES
AB Objectives. To examine the impact of extreme heat on emergency services in Boston, MA.
   Methods. We conducted relative risk and time series analyses of 911 dispatches of the Boston Police Department (BPD), Boston Emergency Medical Services (BEMS), and Boston Fire Department (BFD) From November 2010 to April 2014 to assess the impact of extreme heat on emergency services.
   Results. During the warm season, there were 2% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0%, 5%) more BPD dispatches, 9% (95% CI = 7%, 12%) more BEMS dispatches, and 10% (95% CI = 5%, 15%) more BFD dispatches on days when the maximum temperature was 90 degrees F or higher, which remained consistent when we considered multiple days of heat. A 10 degrees F increase in daily maximum temperature, from 80 degrees to 90 degrees F, resulted in 1.016, 1.017, and 1.002 times the expected number of daily BPD, BEMS, and BFD dispatch calls, on average, after adjustment for other predictors.
   Conclusions. The burden of extreme heat on local emergency medical and police services may be agency-wide, and impacts on fire departments have not been previously documented.
   Public Health Implications. It is important to account for the societal burden of extreme heat impacts to most effectively inform climate change adaptation strategies and planning.
C1 [Williams, Augusta A.; Allen, Joseph G.; Spengler, John D.] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Environm Hlth, Boston, MA USA.
   [Catalano, Paul J.] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Biostat, Boston, MA USA.
   [Catalano, Paul J.] Dana Farber Canc Inst, Dept Data Sci, Boston, MA 02115 USA.
   [Williams, Augusta A.; Buonocore, Jonathan J.] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Ctr Climate Hlth & Global Environm, Boston, MA USA.
C3 Harvard University; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; Harvard
   University; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; Harvard
   University; Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; Harvard University; Harvard
   T.H. Chan School of Public Health
RP Williams, AA (corresponding author), 401 Pk Dr,4th Floor West, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
EM auw882@mail.harvard.edu
OI Williams, Augusta/0000-0002-1496-8931
FU Harvard University President's Climate Change Solutions Fund
FX This research was supported by the Harvard University President's
   Climate Change Solutions Fund.
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TC 8
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 12
PU AMER PUBLIC HEALTH ASSOC INC
PI WASHINGTON
PA 800 I STREET, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20001-3710 USA
SN 0090-0036
EI 1541-0048
J9 AM J PUBLIC HEALTH
JI Am. J. Public Health
PD MAY
PY 2020
VL 110
IS 5
BP 662
EP 668
DI 10.2105/AJPH.2019.305563
PG 7
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA LC4UC
UT WOS:000525320200028
PM 32191522
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maheshwari, B
   Pinto, U
   Akbar, S
   Fahey, P
AF Maheshwari, B.
   Pinto, U.
   Akbar, S.
   Fahey, P.
TI Is urbanisation also the culprit of climate change? - Evidence from
   Australian cities
SO URBAN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Land use changes; Urbanisation; Urban heat island effects; Climate
   change
ID URBAN HEAT-ISLAND; TIME-SERIES; TEMPERATURES; SURFACE; TRENDS; DESIGN;
   IMPACT
AB In this study, daily maximum and minimum air temperature (T-max and T-min), evaporation and rainfall data (1960-2011 period) were analysed for three Australian metropolitan cities, viz., Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, to understand whether urbanisation has influenced temperature, evaporation and rainfall in these cities and thus had an influence on the longer-term local climate variability. A total of nine key locations in each city were considered and one location in each city was a control. A modified segmented regression analysis was employed to understand the overall climate change and linear regression analysis to evaluate the impacts of urbanisation.
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C1 [Maheshwari, B.; Fahey, P.] Western Sydney Univ, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2767, Australia.
   [Pinto, U.] NSW Off Environm & Heritage, 480 Weeroona Rd, Lidcombe, NSW 2141, Australia.
   [Akbar, S.] Blacktown City Council, POB 63, Blacktown, NSW 2148, Australia.
C3 Western Sydney University; Office of Environment & Heritage - New South
   Wales
RP Maheshwari, B (corresponding author), Western Sydney Univ, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2767, Australia.
EM b.maheshwari@westernsydney.edu.au; Uthpala.Pinto@environment.nsw.gov.au;
   Saud.akbar@blacktown.nsw.gov.au; P.Fahey@westernsydney.edu.au
RI Maheshwari, Basant/AAG-8881-2020; Pinto, Uthpala/T-8875-2019; Fahey,
   P/AGP-0614-2022; Fahey, Paul/B-7985-2013
OI Fahey, Paul/0000-0002-6351-9876; Maheshwari, Basant/0000-0002-5496-4345
FU Western Sydney University
FX The funding for this study was provided by internal grant initiative of
   Western Sydney University. We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of
   the Late Garry McCully for his assistance in sourcing some data for this
   study.
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NR 55
TC 31
Z9 32
U1 6
U2 68
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0955
J9 URBAN CLIM
JI Urban CLim.
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 31
AR 100581
DI 10.1016/j.uclim.2020.100581
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA LJ8SP
UT WOS:000530431700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Boer, R
   Jadmiko, SD
   Hidayat, P
   Wachjar, A
   Ardiansyah, M
   Sulistyowati, D
   Situmorang, AP
AF Boer, Rizaldi
   Jadmiko, Syamsu Dwi
   Hidayat, Purnama
   Wachjar, Ade
   Ardiansyah, Muhammad
   Sulistyowati, Dewi
   Situmorang, Anter Parulian
BE Venkatramanan, V
   Shah, S
   Prasad, R
TI Managing Climate Risk in a Major Coffee-Growing Region of Indonesia
SO GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: AGRICULTURE PERSPECTIVES
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Climate change; Climate scenarios; Indonesia; Toba region; Coffee;
   Climate change adaptation; Coffee berry borer
ID POPULATION-DYNAMICS; TEMPERATURE; IMPACTS; RUST
AB Indonesia is currently one of the top four coffee exporting countries in the world. Climate change is projected to cause significant impacts on coffee. Without proper adaptation measures, this will significantly lower the productions. Changes in rainfall and increases in temperature will affect the phenological development that would eventually influence yield and quality of crop including the potential risks of pest and disease attacks. Assessment in Toba, a major coffee--growing region of Indonesia, indicated that in the middle of this century (the 2050s), under climate scenarios of RCP4.5 and RCP8.5, suitable areas for coffee production would decrease significantly. The average yield is projected to decrease between 25% and 75% of the current yield. However, the highlands that are currently not suitable for coffee (>1500 m above mean sea level) is projected to become suitable with a higher yield than the current. A significant increase in rainfall during the rainy season and prolonged dry season will also affect coffee phenological development. It will shift the peak of coffee flowering and harvesting seasons in Toba. The severity of the coffee berry borer Hypothenemus hampei (Ferrari) attack will also increase in the future. The current crop management farming practices should be adjusted and improved to adapt to such change.
C1 [Boer, Rizaldi; Jadmiko, Syamsu Dwi; Ardiansyah, Muhammad; Sulistyowati, Dewi; Situmorang, Anter Parulian] Bogor Agr Univ, Ctr Climate Risk & Opportun Management Southeast, Bogor, Indonesia.
   [Boer, Rizaldi] Bogor Agr Univ, Fac Mathemat & Nat Sci, Dept Geophys & Meteorol, Bogor, Indonesia.
   [Hidayat, Purnama] Bogor Agr Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Crop Protect, Bogor, Indonesia.
   [Wachjar, Ade] Bogor Agr Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Agron & Hort, Bogor, Indonesia.
   [Ardiansyah, Muhammad] Bogor Agr Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Soil Sci & Land Resources, Bogor, Indonesia.
C3 Bogor Agricultural University; Bogor Agricultural University; Bogor
   Agricultural University; Bogor Agricultural University; Bogor
   Agricultural University
RP Boer, R (corresponding author), Bogor Agr Univ, Ctr Climate Risk & Opportun Management Southeast, Bogor, Indonesia.; Boer, R (corresponding author), Bogor Agr Univ, Fac Mathemat & Nat Sci, Dept Geophys & Meteorol, Bogor, Indonesia.
RI Hidayat, Purnama/ACU-5509-2022; Ardiansyah, Muhammad/GPK-6799-2022
OI Boer, Rizaldi/0000-0001-5366-946X
FU Rainforest Alliance-UTZ
FX We thank for the financial support provided by Rainforest Alliance-UTZ.
   We also extend our gratitude for BITRA that provided support in
   conducting survey.
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NR 58
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 9
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG SINGAPORE PTE LTD
PI SINGAPORE
PA 152 BEACH ROAD, #21-01/04 GATEWAY EAST, SINGAPORE, 189721, SINGAPORE
BN 978-981-13-9570-3; 978-981-13-9569-7
PY 2020
BP 147
EP 205
DI 10.1007/978-981-13-9570-3_5
D2 10.1007/978-981-13-9570-3
PG 59
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Environmental Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BP6NP
UT WOS:000560077000006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yu, TK
   Chang, YJ
   Chang, IC
   Yu, TY
AF Yu, Tai-Kuei
   Chang, Yu-Jie
   Chang, I-Cheng
   Yu, Tai-Yi
TI A pro-environmental behavior model for investigating the roles of social
   norm, risk perception, and place attachment on adaptation strategies of
   climate change
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Partial least squares; Climate change; Pro-environmental behavior; Risk
   financial strategies
ID VALUES; DETERMINANTS; MITIGATION; CONSUMERS; SUSTAINABILITY;
   TRANSPORTATION; ACCEPTABILITY; AMPLIFICATION; METAANALYSIS; PREFERENCES
AB Today's climate change is a major problem and challenge for the global environment and human civilization, and it can lead to dramatical floods over specific regions. As climate change intensifies, climate change adaptation strategies, such as flood insurance, energy taxes, and other risky financial strategies, have drawn worldwide attention and discussion. Risk control methods have been widely used to mitigate the impact of climate change on past flood losses, but past risk control strategies on climate change have not focused on the exploration of the relationship between environment, society, and humans. Based on the theoretical model of pro-environmental behavior, this study compares and analyzes four theoretical models and proposes a modified competitiveness model to effectively predict the pro-environmental behavior of college students with partial least squares (PLS) manner. Social norm could play a dominant role of mediator between risk perception, place attachment, and pro-environmental behavior. Although risk perception and local attachment are positively related to risk financial strategy, the promotion of social norms will increase the intention of risk financial strategy. For intention of risk financial strategies within pro-environmental behavior, the efficiency of enhancing local attachment was higher than that of risk perception.
C1 [Yu, Tai-Kuei] Natl Quemoy Univ, Dept Business Adm, Kinmen 892, Taiwan.
   [Chang, Yu-Jie] Univ Taipei, Dept Earth & Life Sci, Taipei 10048, Taiwan.
   [Chang, I-Cheng] Natl Ilan Univ, Dept Environm Engn, Ilan 26047, Taiwan.
   [Yu, Tai-Yi] Ming Chuan Univ, Dept Risk Management & Insurance, Taipei 11103, Taiwan.
C3 National Quemoy University; University of Taipei; National Ilan
   University; Ming Chuan University
RP Yu, TK (corresponding author), Natl Quemoy Univ, Dept Business Adm, Kinmen 892, Taiwan.
EM yutk2012@nqu.edu.tw; yjchang@utaipei.edu.tw; icchang@niu.edu.tw;
   yti@mail.mcu.edu.tw
RI Chi, Chien-Yu/HJH-0077-2022; Yu, Tai-Yi/GNM-8279-2022
FU Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan [MOST
   104-2511-S-130-002-MY2]
FX This study was financially supported by the Ministry of Science and
   Technology of Taiwan (MOST 104-2511-S-130-002-MY2).
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NR 97
TC 40
Z9 44
U1 3
U2 86
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 0944-1344
EI 1614-7499
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLLUT R
JI Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res.
PD AUG
PY 2019
VL 26
IS 24
BP 25178
EP 25189
DI 10.1007/s11356-019-05806-7
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA IQ2CU
UT WOS:000480557400073
PM 31256407
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hoang, TV
   Ifaei, P
   Nam, K
   Rashidi, J
   Hwangbo, S
   Oh, JM
   Yoo, C
AF Tuan-Viet Hoang
   Ifaei, Pouya
   Nam, Kijeon
   Rashidi, Jouan
   Hwangbo, Soonho
   Oh, Jong-Min
   Yoo, ChangKyoo
TI Optimal Management of a Hybrid Renewable Energy System Coupled with a
   Membrane Bioreactor Using Enviro-Economic and Power Pinch Analyses for
   Sustainable Climate Change Adaption
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; enviro-economic analysis; membrane bioreactor;
   optimization model; power pinch analysis; renewable energy
ID MULTIOBJECTIVE OPTIMIZATION; AIR-QUALITY; WIND ENERGY; DESALINATION;
   INTEGRATION; VIETNAM; STORAGE; LOSSES; DESIGN
AB This study proposed an optimal hybrid renewable energy system (HRES) to sustainably meet the dynamic electricity demand of a membrane bioreactor. The model-based HRES consists of solar photovoltaic panels, wind turbines, and battery banks with grid connectivity. Three scenarios, 101 sub-scenarios, and three management cases were defined to optimally design the system using a novel dual-scale optimization approach. At the system scale, the power-pinch analysis was applied to minimize both the size of components and the outsourced needed electricity (NE) from Vietnam's electrical grid. At a local-scale, economic and environmental models were integrated, and the system was graphically optimized using a novel objective function, combined enviro-economic costs (CEECs). The results showed that the optimal CEECs were $850,710/year, $1,030,628/year, and $1,693,476/year for the management cases under good, moderate, and unhealthy air qualities, respectively. The smallest CEEC was obtained when 47% of the demand load of the membrane bioreactor was met using the HRES and the rest was supplied by the grid, resulting in 6,800,769 kg/year of CO2 emissions.
C1 [Tuan-Viet Hoang; Ifaei, Pouya; Nam, Kijeon; Rashidi, Jouan; Hwangbo, Soonho; Oh, Jong-Min; Yoo, ChangKyoo] Kyung Hee Univ, Ctr Environm Studies, Deptartment Environm Sci & Engn, Coll Engn, Seocheon Dong 1, Yongin 446701, Gyeonggi Do, South Korea.
   [Hwangbo, Soonho] Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Chem & Biochem Engn, Proc & Syst Engn Ctr PROSYS, Soltofts Plads 229, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
C3 Kyung Hee University; Technical University of Denmark
RP Hwangbo, S; Yoo, C (corresponding author), Kyung Hee Univ, Ctr Environm Studies, Deptartment Environm Sci & Engn, Coll Engn, Seocheon Dong 1, Yongin 446701, Gyeonggi Do, South Korea.; Hwangbo, S (corresponding author), Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Chem & Biochem Engn, Proc & Syst Engn Ctr PROSYS, Soltofts Plads 229, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
EM tuanvietxda@gmail.com; pooya_if@hotmail.com; spirit1058@gmail.com;
   Jouanra@gmail.com; hwsoonho@gmail.com; jmoh@khu.ac.kr; ckyoo@khu.ac.kr
RI Hwangbo, Soonho/AAA-2827-2021; Rashidi, Jouan/LEM-3874-2024; 유,
   창규/AAJ-1226-2020; Ifaei, Pouya/AAD-8907-2019
OI Ifaei, Pouya/0000-0002-6898-8583; Yoo, ChangKyoo/0000-0002-9406-7649;
   Hwangbo, Soonho/0000-0003-2208-9301
FU "Development of algae management using stream structures in the stream"
   - MOLIT (Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport)
   [18AWMP-B098640-04]; National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korea
   government (MSIT) [NRF-2017R1E1A1A03070713]; Korea Ministry of
   Environment (MOE) as Graduate School specialized in Climate Change
FX This subject was supported by "Development of algae management using
   stream structures in the stream" (code 18AWMP-B098640-04) funded by
   MOLIT (Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport). This work was
   supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant
   funded by the Korea government (MSIT) (No. NRF-2017R1E1A1A03070713), and
   Korea Ministry of Environment (MOE) as Graduate School specialized in
   Climate Change.
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NR 44
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 13
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
SN 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JAN 1
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 1
AR 66
DI 10.3390/su11010066
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HJ4ER
UT WOS:000457127300066
OA Green Published, gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mohammed, Y
   Yimer, F
   Tadesse, M
   Tesfaye, K
AF Mohammed, Yimer
   Yimer, Fantaw
   Tadesse, Menfese
   Tesfaye, Kindie
TI Meteorological drought assessment in north east highlands of Ethiopia
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Drought; Trends; SPI; Extremes; Mann-Kendall
ID STANDARDIZED PRECIPITATION INDEX; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SOUTH WOLLO; TRENDS;
   VARIABILITY; FREQUENCY; EXTREMES; RAINFALL; IMPACTS; BASIN
AB Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to investigate the patterns and trends of drought incidence in north east highlands of Ethiopia using monthly rainfall record for the period 1984-2014.
   Design/methodology/approach - Standard precipitation index and Mann-Kendal test were used to analyze drought incident and trends of drought occurrences, respectively. The spatial extent of droughts in the study area has been interpolated by inverse distance weighted method using the spatial analyst tool of ArcGIS.
   Findings - Most of the studied stations experienced drought episodes in 1984, 1987/1988, 1992/1993, 1999, 2003/2004 and 2007/2008 which were among the worst drought years in the history of Ethiopia. The year 1984 was the most drastic and distinct-wide extreme drought episode in all studied stations. The Mann-Kendal test shows an increasing tendencies of drought at three-month (spring) timescale at all stations though significant (p < 0.05) only at Mekaneselam and decreasing tendencies at three-month (summer) and 12-month timescales at all stations. The frequency of total drought was the highest in central and north parts of the region in all study seasons.
   Originality/value - This detail drought characterization can be used as bench mark to take comprehensive drought management measures such as early warning system, preparation and contingency planning, climate change adaptation programs.
C1 [Mohammed, Yimer; Yimer, Fantaw; Tadesse, Menfese] Hawassa Univ, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
   [Mohammed, Yimer] Dilla Univ, Dilla, Ethiopia.
   [Tesfaye, Kindie] Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
C3 Hawassa University; Dilla University; CGIAR; International Maize & Wheat
   Improvement Center (CIMMYT)
RP Mohammed, Y (corresponding author), Hawassa Univ, Hawassa, Ethiopia.; Mohammed, Y (corresponding author), Dilla Univ, Dilla, Ethiopia.
EM yimermoh2013@gmail.com
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NR 69
TC 56
Z9 57
U1 3
U2 11
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-8692
EI 1756-8706
J9 INT J CLIM CHANG STR
JI Int. J. Clim. Chang. Strateg. Manag.
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 1
SI SI
BP 142
EP 160
DI 10.1108/IJCCSM-12-2016-0179
PG 19
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FQ9AL
UT WOS:000418654400009
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chen, F
   Wang, HQ
   Yuan, YJ
AF Chen, Feng
   Wang, Huiqin
   Yuan, Yujiang
TI Two centuries of temperature variation and volcanic forcing
   reconstructed for the northern Tibetan Plateau
SO PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Dendroclimatology; northern Tibetan Plateau; maximum latewood density;
   temperature reconstruction; volcanic eruption
ID CENTRAL HENGDUAN MOUNTAINS; SUMMER TEMPERATURE; TREE-RINGS; CHINA;
   ERUPTIONS; DENSITY; HISTORY; REGION; ASIA
AB The northern Tibetan Plateau has been subject to recent warming far above the global average. With few instrumental climate records available for this region before the 1950s, paleoclimatic reconstructions must be used to understand annual-to-centennial-scale climate variations and local climate response to large-scale forcing mechanisms. We developed a maximum latewood density chronology of Qinghai spruce (Picea crassifolia) from the southern slope of the Qilian Mountains, northern Tibetan Plateau. Based on the chronology, we reconstructed August-September temperature for 1780-2008. The temperature reconstruction model accounts for 39.7% of instrumental temperature variance from 1957 to 2008, successfully capturing the most recent warming. Superposed epoch analysis indicated a volcanic forcing for temperature, resulting in pulses of cooler conditions that can persist for 2-4years. Tree-ring data indicated that warm-dry and cold-wet climate combinations mainly occurred in northern Tibetan Plateau before CE 1900, and revealed a clear wetting and warming trend since the 1980s. Our study provides long-term perspective on recent climate change in northern Tibetan Plateau to guide expectations of future climate variability and aid sustainable development, and provides scenarios for climate change adaptation and inputs for climate models representing a broader range of conditions than those of historical climate records.
C1 [Chen, Feng; Wang, Huiqin; Yuan, Yujiang] China Meteorol Adm, Inst Desert Meteorol, Key Lab Tree Ring Phys & Chem Res, Key Xinjiang Lab Tree Ring Ecol, Urumqi, Peoples R China.
C3 China Meteorological Administration
RP Chen, F (corresponding author), China Meteorol Adm, Inst Desert Meteorol, Key Lab Tree Ring Phys & Chem Res, Key Xinjiang Lab Tree Ring Ecol, Urumqi, Peoples R China.
EM desert@idm.cn
RI Chen, Feng/C-5859-2013
OI Chen, Feng/0000-0002-2551-8653
FU Meteorology Public Welfare Industry Research Special project
   [GYHY(QX)201506001-14]; NSFC Project [91547115, 41405081]; Young Talent
   Training Plan of Meteorological Departments of China Meteorological
   Administration; Xinjiang Youth Science and Technology Innovation
   personnel training project [qn2015yx040]
FX This work was supported by Meteorology Public Welfare Industry Research
   Special project [grant number GYHY(QX)201506001-14], NSFC Project [grant
   number 91547115], [grant number 41405081]. It was also supported by the
   Young Talent Training Plan of Meteorological Departments of China
   Meteorological Administration and Xinjiang Youth Science and Technology
   Innovation personnel training project [grant number qn2015yx040].
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NR 49
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 5
U2 48
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0272-3646
EI 1930-0557
J9 PHYS GEOGR
JI Phys. Geogr.
PY 2017
VL 38
IS 3
BP 248
EP 262
DI 10.1080/02723646.2017.1293484
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Geography, Physical; Geosciences,
   Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography; Geology;
   Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA ET5ZV
UT WOS:000400371000003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hoppe, T
   van der Vegt, A
   Stegmaier, P
AF Hoppe, Thomas
   van der Vegt, Arjen
   Stegmaier, Peter
TI Presenting a Framework to Analyze Local Climate Policy and Action in
   Small and Medium-Sized Cities
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE small and medium-sized cities; climate governance; energy transition;
   climate change mitigation; climate change adaptation
ID CO-BENEFITS; IMPLEMENTATION; INITIATIVES; GOVERNANCE; ADOPTION; GERMANY;
   ADAPTATION; COMMITMENT; BARRIERS; LESSONS
AB Academic attention to local climate policy usually focuses on large-sized cities. Given the climate challenges ahead this seems unjustified. Small and medium-sized cities (SMCs) deserve scholarly attention as well. The main question is: What factors influence climate change policy and local climate actions in SMCs? In this article we present an analytical framework to analyze climate change policy and local climate actions of SMCs. The framework addresses different aspects: policy-input, -throughput, -output, -outcome, characteristics of the local environment, local action arenas, influence by higher government levels, and interaction with climate change issue networks. The framework is used to analyze and compare four case studies of SMCs in the Dutch region of Twente (two urban and two rural municipalities, and addresses both adaptation and mitigation). Results show that both localist', multi-level' and issue network membership factors influence local climate policy action. Governance modes discerned concern mostly governing by authority' and self-governing'. When reflecting on the role of SMCs in climate action the study revealed the importance of local capacity building schemes issued by provincial government, inter-municipal network collaboration, and the potential for local governments to mobilize and organize citizen action.
C1 [Hoppe, Thomas] Delft Univ Technol, Policy Org Law & Gaming POLG, Dept Multiactor Syst MAS, Fac Technol Policy & Management TPM, Jaffalaan 5, NL-2628 BX Delft, Netherlands.
   [van der Vegt, Arjen; Stegmaier, Peter] Univ Twente, Dept Sci Technol & Policy Studies STPS, Inst Innovat & Governance Studies IGS, Fac Behav Management & Social Studies BMS, POB 217, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands.
C3 Delft University of Technology; University of Twente
RP Hoppe, T (corresponding author), Delft Univ Technol, Policy Org Law & Gaming POLG, Dept Multiactor Syst MAS, Fac Technol Policy & Management TPM, Jaffalaan 5, NL-2628 BX Delft, Netherlands.
EM T.Hoppe@tudelft.nl; arjenvdvegt@gmail.com; p.stegmaier@utwente.nl
RI Hoppe, Thomas/W-7895-2019
OI Stegmaier, Peter/0000-0003-4487-6760
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NR 94
TC 60
Z9 67
U1 6
U2 50
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD SEP
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 9
AR 847
DI 10.3390/su8090847
PG 41
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DZ0LC
UT WOS:000385529400019
OA gold, Green Submitted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Basharat, M
   Tariq, AUR
AF Basharat, Muhammad
   Tariq, Ata-Ur-Rehman
TI Command-scale integrated water management in response to spatial climate
   variability in Lower Bari Doab Canal irrigation system
SO WATER POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Groundwater mining; Integrated water management; Irrigation cost;
   Spatial climate variability; Water reallocation
ID GROUNDWATER; PAKISTAN
AB Design and management of the Indus Basin Irrigation System are aimed at achieving equity in canal water supply. This concept, which is more than a century old, ignores the due aspect of groundwater management in today's perspective. Recent research has proved that variation in irrigation demand and rainfall within the irrigation units has given birth to varying stresses on groundwater. In response to spatial climate variability, reallocation of canal supplies from the head towards the tail of the Lower Bari Doab Canal (LBDC) command was evaluated in this study, with the objective of achieving equitable total irrigation costs. The ensuing groundwater regime was simulated for 50 years' time with a groundwater model. A 25% reallocation from head towards tail-end improves the standard deviation of total irrigation cost equity from 1905 to 241. This command scale integration of available water resources also demonstrated a net saving in groundwater pumping cost to the tune of 7.24 to 18.9%, in comparison with existing equitable canal supplies. With this approach, at least minimal or no waterlogging in the headend area, even during wet years, and no groundwater mining in the tail-end, even during dry periods, are anticipated. In addition, this system-scale integrated water management would increase adaptive capacity to climate change adaptation.
C1 [Basharat, Muhammad] Water & Power Dev Author WAPDA, Int Waterlogging & Salin Res Inst IWASRI, Lahore 54000, Pakistan.
   [Tariq, Ata-Ur-Rehman] UET, CEWRE, Lahore 54000, Pakistan.
RP Basharat, M (corresponding author), Water & Power Dev Author WAPDA, Int Waterlogging & Salin Res Inst IWASRI, CMTL Bldg,Raiwind Rd,PO Thokar Niaz Baig, Lahore 54000, Pakistan.
EM basharatm@hotmail.com
RI Basharat, Muhammad/AGT-4034-2022
FU Centre of Excellence in Water Resources Engineering
FX The authors are thankful to the Punjab Irrigation Department, the SCARPs
   Monitoring Organization of WAPDA and the Pakistan Meteorological
   Department for providing their valuable data sets used in the study. The
   field data collection was funded by the Centre of Excellence in Water
   Resources Engineering, which is also thankfully acknowledged. Invaluable
   and extremely productive contributions from researcher colleagues in the
   form of reviews and discussions are also gratefully acknowledged.
   Efforts put in by Maham Basharat of Lahore Grammar School for
   grammatical editing of the manuscript are highly acknowledged.
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NR 25
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 3
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 1366-7017
J9 WATER POLICY
JI Water Policy
PY 2014
VL 16
IS 2
BP 374
EP 396
DI 10.2166/wp.2013.221
PG 23
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA AK5FB
UT WOS:000338449000010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pike, DA
   Mitchell, JC
AF Pike, D. A.
   Mitchell, J. C.
TI Burrow-dwelling ecosystem engineers provide thermal refugia throughout
   the landscape
SO ANIMAL CONSERVATION
LA English
DT Article
DE body temperature; datalogger; ectotherm; overheating; subterranean
   burrow; thermal refugia; tortoise; Gopherus polyphemus
ID TORTOISES GOPHERUS-POLYPHEMUS; BODY-TEMPERATURE; THERMOREGULATION;
   DESERT; ANIMALS; ECOLOGY; WARRENS; RABBIT
AB Ecosystem engineers play fundamental ecological roles by modifying habitats in ways that affect a multitude of other species and by creating refugia with novel microclimates. We hypothesize that burrow-creating organisms may facilitate climate change adaptation by providing refugia from extreme and fluctuating temperatures found aboveground. We support this hypothesis by showing that large burrow-dwelling tortoises, Gopherus polyphemus, likely depend upon burrows for thermoregulation. By exploiting the varied thermal conditions within burrows, tortoises avoided lethal temperatures and extreme fluctuations in body temperature, maintained moderate and stable body temperatures on hot days, and maintained relatively warm temperatures overnight. Climate change is predicted to increase maximum air temperatures throughout the geographic range of this species, with impacts most severe in Florida, US, where the range of future conditions could be above that of current maxima. This implies that environmental temperatures will be above lethal thermal limits more often, highlighting the importance of refugia from extreme conditions. Large burrowing animals (e.g. aardvarks, pocket gophers, rabbits, seabirds, tortoises, wombats) are widely distributed globally and could provide similar thermal refugia for countless commensal taxa. Burrows and the animals that create them are in urgent need of conservation, which will help ensure the widespread availability of refugia that offer protection from extreme temperatures under climate change.
C1 [Pike, D. A.] James Cook Univ, Sch Marine & Trop Biol, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Pike, D. A.] James Cook Univ, Ctr Trop Environm & Sustainabil Sci, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Mitchell, J. C.] Mitchell Ecol Res Serv, High Springs, FL USA.
C3 James Cook University; James Cook University
RP Pike, DA (corresponding author), James Cook Univ, Sch Marine & Trop Biol, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
EM david.pike22@gmail.com
RI Pike, David/B-2032-2012
FU Dynamac Corporation; Canaveral National Seashore; Department of
   Biological Sciences at Towson University
FX We thank N. Anderson for encouragement, field assistance and providing
   equipment; R. A. Seigel (Towson University) for discussions; R. Bolt
   (Dynamac Corporation) for logistical support; D. Dwelle and W. Porter
   (University of Madison) for measuring the reflectance of tortoise
   shells; P. Burger (Young's Indian River Animal Hospital) for supervising
   surgeries and donating equipment; NASA security for protecting our
   equipment; and two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments.
   Funding was provided by the Dynamac Corporation, Canaveral National
   Seashore (grants to R. A. Seigel) and the Department of Biological
   Sciences at Towson University (grants to D. A. P). Our study was
   approved by the Towson University Institutional Animal Care and Use
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NR 66
TC 88
Z9 114
U1 5
U2 238
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1367-9430
EI 1469-1795
J9 ANIM CONSERV
JI Anim. Conserv.
PD DEC
PY 2013
VL 16
IS 6
BP 694
EP 703
DI 10.1111/acv.12049
PG 10
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 257JI
UT WOS:000327379200013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Heinemeyer, C
   Reason, M
   Quatermass, N
   Wood, N
   Adekola, O
AF Heinemeyer, Catherine
   Reason, Matthew
   Quatermass, Natalie
   Wood, Natalie
   Adekola, Olalekan
TI Mutual learning through participatory storytelling: Creative approaches
   to climate adaptation education in secondary schools
SO RESEARCH IN EDUCATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Storytelling; dialogic learning; climate education; climate adaptation;
   participatory arts; secondary education; community resilience;
   emotionally literate pedagogies; climate justice
ID CHILDREN; CONCEPTIONS; POLITICS
AB Unprecedented global temperatures have brought the question of how to teach sensitive issues of climate change to the fore. In this paper we suggest that a refocusing on adaptation productively shifts the debate to climate justice and practical solutions to building community resilience. The paper examines a practice-led project that sought to innovate and test the use of participatory storytelling with young people to explore climate adaptation. Our insights relate to two areas: first, the benefits of mutual learning through engaging in dialogue with frontline communities; second, how participatory storytelling supports emotionally intelligent sensemaking, agency and leadership by providing both 'connections' and 'containers' for engaging with climate.
C1 [Heinemeyer, Catherine; Reason, Matthew; Quatermass, Natalie; Wood, Natalie; Adekola, Olalekan] York St John Univ, Lord Mayors Walk, York YO31 7EX, England.
C3 York Saint John University
RP Heinemeyer, C (corresponding author), York St John Univ, Lord Mayors Walk, York YO31 7EX, England.
EM c.heinemeyer@yorksj.ac.uk
OI Heinemeyer, Catherine/0000-0001-6300-5544
FU Natural Environment Research Council
FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for
   the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This
   submission is based on a Natural Environment Research Council funded
   Creative Climate Connections public engagement project titled 'Suitcase
   Stories: Exploring Climate Education through Participatory
   Storytelling.'
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NR 52
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 6
U2 7
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0034-5237
EI 2050-4608
J9 RES EDUC
JI Res. Educ.
PD MAY
PY 2024
VL 118
IS 1
SI SI
BP 87
EP 107
DI 10.1177/00345237241236191
EA MAR 2024
PG 21
WC Education & Educational Research
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Education & Educational Research
GA MZ9R1
UT WOS:001176643500001
OA Green Accepted, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Eubanks, B
   Friedman, G
AF Eubanks, Brent
   Friedman, Glenn
TI Climate-Adapted Design <i>For California School</i>
SO ASHRAE JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
C1 [Eubanks, Brent; Friedman, Glenn] Taylor Engn, Alameda, CA 94501 USA.
RP Eubanks, B (corresponding author), Taylor Engn, Alameda, CA 94501 USA.
NR 0
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU AMER SOC HEATING REFRIGERATING AIR-CONDITIONING ENG, INC,
PI ATLANTA
PA 1791 TULLIE CIRCLE NE, ATLANTA, GA 30329 USA
SN 0001-2491
EI 1943-6637
J9 ASHRAE J
JI ASHRAE J.
PD MAY
PY 2014
VL 56
IS 5
BP 72
EP 80
PG 9
WC Thermodynamics; Construction & Building Technology; Engineering,
   Mechanical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Thermodynamics; Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA AH2DJ
UT WOS:000335930600009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Brandt, M
   Gominski, D
   Reiner, F
   Kariryaa, A
   Guthula, VB
   Ciais, P
   Tong, XY
   Zhang, WM
   Govindarajulu, D
   Ortiz-Gonzalo, D
   Fensholt, R
AF Brandt, Martin
   Gominski, Dimitri
   Reiner, Florian
   Kariryaa, Ankit
   Guthula, Venkanna Babu
   Ciais, Philippe
   Tong, Xiaoye
   Zhang, Wenmin
   Govindarajulu, Dhanapal
   Ortiz-Gonzalo, Daniel
   Fensholt, Rasmus
TI Severe decline in large farmland trees in India over the past decade
SO NATURE SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
AB Agroforestry practices that include the integration of multifunctional trees within agricultural lands can generate multiple socioecological benefits, in addition to being a natural climate solution due to the associated carbon sequestration potential. Such agroforestry trees represent a vital part of India's landscapes. However, despite their importance, a current lack of robust monitoring mechanisms has contributed to an insufficient grasp of their distribution in relation to management practices, as well as their vulnerability to climate change and diseases. Here we map 0.6 billion farmland trees, excluding block plantations, in India and track them over the past decade. We show that around 11 +/- 2% of the large trees (about 96 m2 crown size) mapped in 2010/2011 had disappeared by 2018. Moreover, during the period 2018-2022, more than 5 million large farmland trees (about 67 m2 crown size) have vanished, due partly to altered cultivation practices, where trees within fields are perceived as detrimental to crop yields. These observations are particularly unsettling given the current emphasis on agroforestry as a pivotal natural climate solution, playing a crucial role in both climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies, in addition to being important for supporting agricultural livelihoods and improving biodiversity.
   Agroforestry practices represent important natural climate solutions, in addition to providing a variety of socioecological benefits. This study evaluates spatiotemporal agroforestry patterns in India by tracking the fate of large farmland trees over the past decade.
C1 [Brandt, Martin; Gominski, Dimitri; Reiner, Florian; Kariryaa, Ankit; Tong, Xiaoye; Zhang, Wenmin; Ortiz-Gonzalo, Daniel; Fensholt, Rasmus] Univ Copenhagen, Dept Geosci & Nat Resource Management, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Kariryaa, Ankit; Guthula, Venkanna Babu] Univ Copenhagen, Dept Comp Sci, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Ciais, Philippe] Univ Paris Saclay, Lab Sci Climat & Environm, CEA CNRS UVSQ, Gif Sur Yvette, France.
   [Govindarajulu, Dhanapal] Univ Manchester, Global Dev Inst, Manchester, England.
C3 University of Copenhagen; University of Copenhagen; CEA; Universite
   Paris Saclay; University of Manchester
RP Brandt, M; Gominski, D; Reiner, F (corresponding author), Univ Copenhagen, Dept Geosci & Nat Resource Management, Copenhagen, Denmark.
EM mabr@ign.ku.dk; dg@ign.ku.dk; fr@ign.ku.dk
RI Zhang, Wenmin/AFV-0369-2022; Ortiz-Gonzalo, Daniel/AAC-4143-2022;
   Brandt, Martin/E-4598-2015
OI Brandt, Martin/0000-0001-9531-1239; Gominski,
   Dimitri/0000-0002-8135-1341; Reiner, Florian/0000-0003-1299-1983;
   Kariryaa, Ankit/0000-0001-9284-7847; Tong, Xiaoye/0000-0002-9709-0633;
   Guthula, Venkanna Babu/0000-0001-5902-5905; Govindarajulu,
   Dhanapal/0000-0003-3951-1281; Zhang, Wenmin/0000-0001-6520-9559
FU European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [947757
   TOFDRY]; DFF Sapere Aude grant [9064-00049B]; Villum Fonden through the
   project Deep Learning and Remote Sensing for Unlocking Global Ecosystem
   Resource Dynamics (DeReEco)
FX M.B., F.R., W.Z. and X.T. are supported by the European Research Council
   (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation
   programme (grant agreement no. 947757 TOFDRY). M.B. also acknowledges
   funding from a DFF Sapere Aude grant (no. 9064-00049B). A.K. and R.F.
   acknowledge support by the Villum Fonden through the project Deep
   Learning and Remote Sensing for Unlocking Global Ecosystem Resource
   Dynamics (DeReEco).
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NR 44
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 16
U2 25
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2398-9629
J9 NAT SUSTAIN
JI Nat. Sustain.
PD JUL
PY 2024
VL 7
IS 7
DI 10.1038/s41893-024-01356-0
EA MAY 2024
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZO6Q0
UT WOS:001223446400001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ruiz, I
   Pompeu, J
   Ruano, A
   Franco, P
   Balbi, S
   Sanz, MJ
AF Ruiz, Itxaso
   Pompeu, Joao
   Ruano, Antonio
   Franco, Paloma
   Balbi, Stefano
   Sanz, Maria J.
TI Combined artificial intelligence, sustainable land management, and
   stakeholder engagement for integrated landscape management in
   Mediterranean watersheds
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Interdisciplinary approach; Climate change adaptation; Ecosystem
   services; Sustainable Land Management scenarios
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-MANAGEMENT; PARTICIPATION
AB In the context of water scarcity, soil erosion, and biodiversity decline, the Mediterranean basin urges to manage its nearly hundred coastal watersheds in a coordinated manner. To this end, we propose an integrated approach to model socio-ecologic scenarios with Sustainable Land Management (SLM) options at the watershed scale to strengthen the functioning of multiple Ecosystem Services (ES). This is tested in the Mijares watershed in eastern Spain. As a first step, we propose using integrated modeling technology to quickly assess areas of ecosystem goods and services supply and demand within the case study. To this end, we applied ARIES, an AI-driven online modeling platform widely used in the ES community. Then, we use this information to identify suitable SLM options documented in the WOCAT global database for providing the identified ES. Lastly, to adjust the results to the social-ecological context, we carry out consulting and participatory processes with key stakeholders to incorporate local knowledge of ES and capabilities to adopt SLM measures into the final proposal. As a result of this work, we can model various SLM scenarios, easing decision-making toward more integrated and sustainable land management in the watershed. Given the reproducibility of the used methodologies, our approach can be adopted in other Mediterranean contexts.
C1 [Ruiz, Itxaso; Pompeu, Joao; Ruano, Antonio; Franco, Paloma; Balbi, Stefano; Sanz, Maria J.] Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Sci Campus UPV-EHU,Sede Bldg 1,1st Floor,B Sarrie, Leioa 48940, Bizkaia, Spain.
   [Balbi, Stefano; Sanz, Maria J.] Ikerbasque, Basque Fdn Sci, Bilbao 48009, Spain.
C3 Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3); Basque Foundation for Science
RP Ruiz, I (corresponding author), Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Sci Campus UPV-EHU,Sede Bldg 1,1st Floor,B Sarrie, Leioa 48940, Bizkaia, Spain.
EM itxaso.ruiz@bc3research.org
RI Ruiz, Itxaso/F-2833-2017; Pompeu, João/AFV-5769-2022; Sastre,
   Antonio/AAB-7310-2021; BALBI, STEFANO/M-5740-2013; Jordán,
   María/T-1175-2019
OI Ruiz, Itxaso/0000-0002-6250-3151; Pompeu, Joao/0000-0001-9126-8229
FU Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge,
   through the Biodiversity Foundation; Maria de Maeztu excellence
   accreditation;  [MDM-2017-0714]
FX The authors would like to thank M. Brugnach for her guidance in
   stakeholder analysis, as well as the editor and two anonymous reviewers
   whose comments helped improving this work. This research is supported by
   the Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic
   Challenge, through the Biodiversity Foundation; and by the Maria de
   Maeztu excellence accreditation 2018-2022 (Ref. MDM-2017-0714) ,
   MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/.
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NR 66
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 11
U2 26
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD JUL
PY 2023
VL 145
BP 217
EP 227
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2023.04.011
EA APR 2023
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA F9BZ6
UT WOS:000985240200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU MacKinnon, M
   Zari, MP
   Brown, DK
   Benavidez, R
   Jackson, B
AF MacKinnon, Maggie
   Zari, Maibritt Pedersen
   Brown, Daniel K.
   Benavidez, Rubianca
   Jackson, Bethanna
TI Urban Biomimicry for Flood Mitigation Using an Ecosystem Service
   Assessment Tool in Central Wellington, New Zealand
SO BIOMIMETICS
LA English
DT Article
DE urban biomimicry; ecosystem services; flood mitigation; green
   infrastructure; green roofs; simulation; urban design; climate change
   adaptation; nature-based solutions
ID GREEN ROOFS
AB Many cities are vulnerable to flooding due to their high proportion of impervious surfaces and lack of vegetated land cover. This vulnerability will often be exacerbated by changing rainfall and storm patterns due to climate change. Using the principles of urban biomimicry, this study aims to show an ecosystem service-based approach to designing an urban green infrastructure network for stormwater management in densely built areas that more closely emulates natural hydrology processes. Nature Braid (next-generation LUCI) is an ecosystem services assessment tool that was used to simulate flood mitigation ecosystem services in a 13.7 km(2) urban water catchment in Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand. The simulation results revealed that 59% of the catchment does not contain or benefit from flood-mitigating land cover features. Adding 0.6 km(2) (4% of the catchment) of green roofs alongside major stormwater flow paths resulted in a nearly three-fold decrease (11%) in the unmitigated flooding area. These results suggest that green roofs could help manage stormwater and mitigate flooding in the densely built areas of the catchment. Using ecosystem service assessment tools, like Nature Braid, can inform the design of more regenerative and resilient urban green infrastructure networks that help mitigate climate change impacts on urban residents.
C1 [MacKinnon, Maggie; Brown, Daniel K.] Te Herenga Waka Victoria Univ Wellington, Wellington Fac Architecture & Design Innovat, Wellington Sch Architecture, Wellington 6011, New Zealand.
   [Zari, Maibritt Pedersen] Te Wananga Aronui Tamaki Makau Rau Auckland Univ T, Fac Design & Creat Technol, Sch Future Environm, Auckland 1010, New Zealand.
   [Benavidez, Rubianca; Jackson, Bethanna] Te Herenga Waka Victoria Univ Wellington, Sch Geog Environm & Earth Sci, Wellington 6011, New Zealand.
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RP MacKinnon, M (corresponding author), Te Herenga Waka Victoria Univ Wellington, Wellington Fac Architecture & Design Innovat, Wellington Sch Architecture, Wellington 6011, New Zealand.
EM maggie.mackinnon@vuw.ac.nz
RI MacKinnon, Maggie/HNJ-6258-2023
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   Maggie/0000-0003-0613-1530
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NR 60
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 13
U2 35
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2313-7673
J9 BIOMIMETICS-BASEL
JI Biomimetics
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 8
IS 1
AR 9
DI 10.3390/biomimetics8010009
PG 15
WC Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Materials Science, Biomaterials
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Materials Science
GA D4NF4
UT WOS:000968507900001
PM 36648795
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Cartalis, C
   Kotroni, V
   Lavouvardos, K
   Polydoros, A
   Agathangelidis, I
   Saliari, M
   Giannaros, C
   Galanaki, E
   Goniadi, M
AF Cartalis, Constantinos
   Kotroni, Vassiliki
   Lavouvardos, Konstantinos
   Polydoros, Anastasios
   Agathangelidis, Ilias
   Saliari, Maria
   Giannaros, Christos
   Galanaki, Elissavet
   Goniadi, Maria
BE Rajagopalan, P
   Soebarto, V
   Akbari, H
TI Multi-scale modelling at various spatial scales for the assessment of
   the potential of adaptation measures to mitigate urban heat in future
   climate conditions
SO 6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON COUNTERMEASURES TO URBAN HEAT ISLANDS,
   UHI 2023
SE International Conference on Countermeasures to Urban Heat Islands
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 6th International Conference on Countermeasures to Urban Heat Islands
   (IC2UHI)
CY DEC 04-07, 2023
CL RMIT Univ, Sch Property Construct & Project Management, Melbourne,
   AUSTRALIA
SP RMIT Univ, Sustainable Bldg Innovat Lab, Cool Roof Rating Council
HO RMIT Univ, Sch Property Construct & Project Management
DE urban climate; vulnerability; adaptation measures
AB Urbanization is a substantial contributor to anthropogenic environmental change, and often occurs at a rapid pace that demands frequent and accurate monitoring and analysis. In the process of urbanization, urban climate is modified, leading to the degradation of the urban thermal environment, manifested as overheating. In this study, a multi-scale numerical modeling system is used to analyze the urban climate in the Athens urban area (AUA) which consists of the Weather Research and Forecasting model (WRF) and an urban microclimate model (ENVI-met), while incorporating a proposed Urban Thermal Climate Zone (UTCZ) classification scheme. The goal of the proposed classification scheme is to distinguish homogeneous areas that exhibit similar characteristics regarding their thermal environment. Based on the above system, we also evaluate the efficiency of climate change adaptation measures under the present and future climate conditions for he most vulnerable areas of the city. The system's validation results demonstrated a robust modeling set-up, characterized by high capability in capturing the observed magnitude and diurnal variation of the urban meteorological conditions. Results of the microclimatic simulations showed that adaptation strategies led to a decrease in near air surface temperature of up to 1.5 degrees C; the necessity of tailor-made solutions per urban district to maximize the cooling efficacy was also demonstrated.
C1 [Cartalis, Constantinos; Polydoros, Anastasios; Agathangelidis, Ilias; Saliari, Maria; Goniadi, Maria] Natl & Kapodistrian Univ Athens, Dept Phys, Athens, Greece.
   [Kotroni, Vassiliki; Lavouvardos, Konstantinos; Giannaros, Christos; Galanaki, Elissavet] Natl Observ Athens, Inst Environm Res & Sustainable Dev, Athens, Greece.
C3 National & Kapodistrian University of Athens; National Observatory of
   Athens
RP Cartalis, C (corresponding author), Natl & Kapodistrian Univ Athens, Dept Phys, Athens, Greece.
EM ckartali@phys.uoa.gr
RI Galanaki, Elissavet/ABC-5797-2021; Kotroni, Vassiliki/D-5336-2014;
   Saliari, Maria/JWO-1780-2024; Agathangelidis, Ilias/KZU-5457-2024
FU European Regional Development Fund of the European Union; Greek national
   funds through the Operational Program Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship
   and Innovation 2014-2020, under the call RESEARCH - CREATE - INNOVATE
   (Adapt2CC) [T2EDK-02881]
FX This research has been co-financed by the European Regional Development
   Fund of the European Union and Greek national funds through the
   Operational Program Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship and Innovation
   2014-2020, under the call RESEARCH - CREATE - INNOVATE (Adapt2CC,
   project code:T2EDK-02881).
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NR 17
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU RMIT PUBLISHING
PI MELBOURNE
PA DIVISION RMIT TRAINING PTY LTD ACN 006 067 349, PO BOX 12058 A BECKETT
   STREET, MELBOURNE, VICTORIA 8006, AUSTRALIA
BN 978-0-646-88538-4
J9 Int Con Urban Heat I
PY 2023
BP 976
EP 985
PG 10
WC Engineering, Civil; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Engineering; Public Administration
GA BX7QQ
UT WOS:001324886100098
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Joseph, DD
   Doon, RA
AF Joseph, Debra D.
   Doon, Roshnie A.
BE Joseph, DD
   Doon, RA
TI The Social and Economic Inequalities of Climate Change Events on the
   Elderly, Disabled and Homeless Societies in the Caribbean
SO IMPACT OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON VULNERABLE POPULATIONS: Social Responses to
   a Changing Environment
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID EXPERIENCING HOMELESSNESS; HEALTH; TEMPERATURE; OUTCOMES; PEOPLE
AB The are several vulnerable populations experiencing climate change events around the world that continue to threaten the health and well-being of some of the most susceptible populations in our society, such as, the elderly, the disabled, and the homeless. Although there are 100 million homeless people globally, overall, 1.6 billion people live without proper housing. Such hardship implies that this population group might be unable to effectively prepare, respond, and recover from climate change events. In the Caribbean, this group of people is at risk because of the volatile nature of climate change, such as, changing temperatures and catastrophic weather events, which may not be included in the design of mitigation plans. This presents a significant gap, as there is limited information in the literature that highlights the impact that climate change may have on these vulnerable groups existing in the Caribbean. This chapter seeks to fill this gap by discussing the social and economic inequalities that climate change events pose to elderly, disabled, and homeless individuals. By implementing a secondary research methodology, this study finds that in the Caribbean, these groups tend to lack financial and physical resources to respond and recover from climate change events due to their low income and the inequitable and inefficient dissemination of information on climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies.
C1 [Joseph, Debra D.] Univ West Indies, Social Work, Cave Hill, Barbados.
   [Joseph, Debra D.] Univ Huddersfield, Ctr Ni3, Huddersfield, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Doon, Roshnie A.] Global Labor Org GLO, Essen, Germany.
   [Doon, Roshnie A.] Caribbean Acad Sci CAS, Champs Fleur, Trinidad Tobago.
C3 University West Indies Mona Jamaica; University West Indies Cave Hill
   Campus; University of Huddersfield
RP Joseph, DD (corresponding author), Univ West Indies, Social Work, Cave Hill, Barbados.
RI Doon, Roshnie/LFR-6056-2024
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NR 55
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST. ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, BASEL, CH-4052, SWITZERLAND
BN 978-3-0365-5503-4; 978-3-0365-5504-1
PY 2023
BP 5
EP 24
D2 10.3390/books978-3-0365-5503-4
PG 20
WC Environmental Studies; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health;
   Sociology
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Sociology
GA BW9OE
UT WOS:001216317700004
OA Green Published, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Will, S
   Vangheluwe, N
   Krause, D
   Fischer, ARH
   Jorasch, P
   Kohl, C
   Nair, A
   Nanda, AK
   Wilhelm, R
AF Will, Sabine
   Vangheluwe, Nick
   Krause, Dorthe
   Fischer, Arnout R. H.
   Jorasch, Petra
   Kohl, Christian
   Nair, Abhishek
   Nanda, Amrit K.
   Wilhelm, Ralf
TI Communicating about plant breeding and genome editing in plants:
   Assessment of European stakeholders, sources, channels and content
SO FOOD AND ENERGY SECURITY
LA English
DT Article
DE communication; controversial; controversy; discourse; genome editing;
   new plant breeding techniques
ID SAFETY; TRUST; FOOD
AB Genome editing helps to develop plant varieties that address future agricultural challenges such as climate change adaptation, resource efficiency and sustainable productivity. Nevertheless, associated aspects relating, besides others, to the regulation of genome editing, intellectual property rights and potential environmental and health aspects lead to fierce discussions within the European Union. In these discussions, values and moral aspects play a decisive role. To support and set the stage for an open-minded dialogue, the communication behaviour and needs of specific stakeholder groups has been analysed by means of two online surveys. The surveys considered sources and channels used for information sourcing and dissemination, conveyed content and relevant target audiences. In addition, the degree of trust of stakeholders in different information sources was assessed. Stakeholders included representatives from academia, civil society organisations (including environmental and consumer organisations), journalists, the farming community, the seed and plant breeding sector and policymakers across Europe. Our analysis suggests that, in general, a high level of trust is associated with representatives from academia, and that safety-related aspects, transparency and sustainability are considered very important topics across the different stakeholder groups. In addition, social media seem to play a subordinate role for inter-stakeholder communication but is of higher relevance for reaching out to the public.
C1 [Will, Sabine; Krause, Dorthe; Kohl, Christian; Wilhelm, Ralf] Julius Kuhn Inst, Fed Res Ctr Cultivated Plants, D-06484 Quedlinburg, Germany.
   [Vangheluwe, Nick; Jorasch, Petra] Euroseeds, Brussels, Belgium.
   [Vangheluwe, Nick; Nanda, Amrit K.] Plants Future European Technol Platform, Brussels, Belgium.
   [Fischer, Arnout R. H.; Nair, Abhishek] Wageningen Univ, Mkt & Consumer Behav Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Julius Kuhn-Institut; Wageningen University & Research
RP Kohl, C (corresponding author), Julius Kuhn Inst, Fed Res Ctr Cultivated Plants, D-06484 Quedlinburg, Germany.
EM christian.kohl@julius-kuehn.de
RI Fischer, Arnout/B-9589-2009; Vangheluwe, Nick/HGD-3825-2022; Nair,
   Abhishek/JAX-3395-2023
OI Nair, Abhishek/0000-0002-1764-8212; Fischer, Arnout
   R.H./0000-0003-0474-5336; Wilhelm, Ralf/0000-0001-9045-8792; Vangheluwe,
   Nick/0000-0002-4885-6161
FU European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme [817690]
FX European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme,
   Grant/Award Number: 817690
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NR 26
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 8
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 2048-3694
J9 FOOD ENERGY SECUR
JI Food Energy Secur.
PD JAN
PY 2023
VL 12
IS 1
AR e415
DI 10.1002/fes3.415
EA AUG 2022
PG 19
WC Agronomy; Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Food Science & Technology
GA 8P4FR
UT WOS:000840717300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hunt, JD
   Nascimento, A
   Guzman, OJR
   Furtado, GCD
   Ten Caten, CS
   Tomé, FMC
   Leal, WL
   Durin, B
   Lopes, M
   Wada, Y
AF Hunt, Julian David
   Nascimento, Andreas
   Romero Guzman, Oldrich Joel
   de Andrade Furtado, Gilton Carlos
   ten Caten, Carla Schwengber
   Caputo Tome, Fernanda Munari
   Leal Filho, Walter
   Durin, Bojan
   Lopes, Mauricio
   Wada, Yoshihide
TI Sedimentary Basin Water and Energy Storage: A Low Environmental Impact
   Option for the Bananal Basin
SO ENERGIES
LA English
DT Article
DE water management; hydropower; energy storage; renewable energies;
   sedimentary basin; water
ID SEASONAL PUMPED-STORAGE; CONVENTIONAL RESERVOIR; ARAGUAIA RIVER; DAMS;
   OPERATION; CAPACITY; CASCADE; SYSTEM; WIND
AB Groundwater storage is an important water management solution that is overlooked by several countries worldwide. This paper evaluates the potential for storing water in the Bananal sedimentary basin and proposes the construction of canals to reduce sediment obstructions in the river flow and harmful flood events. This would allow for better control of the water level. The water stored in the sedimentary basin can be used as a climate change adaptation measure to ensure that the level of the flood plain is maintained high during a drought or low during an intense flood event. Additionally, the flood plain will function as a water reservoir, regulate the river flow downstream from the flood plain, and enhance hydropower generation. A significantly smaller reservoir area is expected to store water, as the water will be stored as groundwater in the sedimentary basin. Results show that the Bananal basin has the potential to store up to 49 km(3) of water, which can add up to 11.7 TWh of energy storage to the Brazilian energy matrix for a CAPEX energy storage cost of 0.095 USD/kWh. This is an interesting solution for the Araguaia basin and several other basins worldwide.
C1 [Hunt, Julian David; Nascimento, Andreas; Romero Guzman, Oldrich Joel] Univ Fed Espirito Santo, Dept Engn & Technol, BR-29075910 Vitoria, ES, Brazil.
   [Hunt, Julian David; Wada, Yoshihide] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
   [de Andrade Furtado, Gilton Carlos] Fed Univ Para, Amazonian Dev Ctr Engn, BR-66075110 Belem, Para, Brazil.
   [ten Caten, Carla Schwengber] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Engn Sch, BR-90010150 Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil.
   [Caputo Tome, Fernanda Munari] Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Inst Energy & Environm, BR-04021001 Sao Paulo, Brazil.
   [Leal Filho, Walter] Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, D-20099 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Durin, Bojan] Univ North, Dept Civil Engn, Varazhdin 42000, Croatia.
   [Lopes, Mauricio] Brazilian Agr Res Corp Embrapa, BR-70000000 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
C3 Universidade Federal do Espirito Santo; International Institute for
   Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); Universidade Federal do Para;
   Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; Universidade Federal de Sao
   Paulo (UNIFESP); Hochschule Angewandte Wissenschaft Hamburg; University
   North - Croatia; Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuaria (EMBRAPA)
RP Hunt, JD (corresponding author), Univ Fed Espirito Santo, Dept Engn & Technol, BR-29075910 Vitoria, ES, Brazil.; Hunt, JD (corresponding author), Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
EM hunt@iiasa.ac.at; andreas.nascimento@ufes.br; oldrich.guzman@ufes.br;
   gilton.furtado@itec.ufpa.br; carlacaten@gmail.com;
   fernanda.tome@ambarenergia.com.br; walter.leal2@haw-hamburg.de;
   bdjurin@unin.hr; mauricio.lopes@embrapa.br; wada@iiasa.ac.at
RI Carlos, Gilton/ABH-2152-2020; Đurin, Bojan/AAW-6282-2021; Leal,
   Walter/ACX-9082-2022; Hunt, Julian/E-4028-2018; Durin, Bojan/W-1782-2017
OI Romero, Oldrich Joel/0000-0001-5774-6987; Leal Filho,
   Walter/0000-0002-1241-5225; Hunt, Julian/0000-0002-1840-7277; Lopes,
   Mauricio/0000-0003-0671-9940; Durin, Bojan/0000-0002-2361-8036; ,
   Gilton/0000-0001-7821-0110
FU National Agency of Petroleum, Natural Gas and Biofuels (ANP); Financier
   of Studies and Projects (FINEP); Ministry of Science, Technology and
   Innovation (MCTI) through the ANP Human Resources Program for the Oil
   and Gas Sector GasPRH-ANP/MCTI; PRH-ANP 53.1 UFES
FX This research was funded by the National Agency of Petroleum, Natural
   Gas and Biofuels (ANP), the Financier of Studies and Projects (FINEP)
   and the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MCTI) through
   the ANP Human Resources Program for the Oil and Gas Sector
   GasPRH-ANP/MCTI, in particular PRH-ANP 53.1 UFES, for all the financial
   support received through the grant.
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NR 52
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 7
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1996-1073
J9 ENERGIES
JI Energies
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 15
IS 12
AR 4498
DI 10.3390/en15124498
PG 18
WC Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Energy & Fuels
GA 2L3VT
UT WOS:000816947200001
OA Green Published, Green Accepted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kapetanakis, D
   Georgopoulou, E
   Mirasgedis, S
   Sarafidis, Y
AF Kapetanakis, Dimitrios
   Georgopoulou, Elena
   Mirasgedis, Sevastianos
   Sarafidis, Yannis
TI Weather Preferences for Urban Tourism: An Empirical Study in the Greek
   Capital of Athens, Greece
SO ATMOSPHERE
LA English
DT Article
DE urban tourism; climate; climate change; tourist comfort indices;
   empirical survey
ID OUTDOOR THERMAL COMFORT; CLIMATE-CHANGE; INDEX; ADAPTATION; PERCEPTION;
   RECREATION; RESOURCES; DEMAND; PLACE; HOT
AB Several climate indices have been developed to analyze the relationship between climatic variables and tourist comfort at different destinations, although, none of the indices applied so far in cities have been informed by empirical data collected exclusively at urban tourist destinations. The present paper aims to cover this gap by developing an "Urban Climate Comfort Index" (UCCI) that integrates critical climate variables for urban tourism and is informed by empirical data from an in-situ survey conducted in southern Europe, namely, in close proximity to the Acropolis Museum in Athens, Greece. The survey provided input on the ideal and unacceptable climatic conditions as perceived by urban tourists and on the relevant weight of the selected climatic parameters. Tourist preferences were then translated into a numerical scale by assigning utility scores of 0% and 100% to the "unacceptable" and "ideal" values while using a linear change for the intermediate values. Hence, a best-fitting utility function for each climatic variable was created, and all utility functions were then aggregated through their relative weights to form the UCCI index. The new index can be applied to other similar urban tourist destinations and assist impact assessment studies and tourism management measures, including climate change adaptation.
C1 [Kapetanakis, Dimitrios; Georgopoulou, Elena; Mirasgedis, Sevastianos; Sarafidis, Yannis] Natl Observ Athens, Inst Environm Res & Sustainable Dev, Penteli 15236, Greece.
   [Kapetanakis, Dimitrios] FACE3TS SA, Athens 11471, Greece.
C3 National Observatory of Athens
RP Kapetanakis, D (corresponding author), Natl Observ Athens, Inst Environm Res & Sustainable Dev, Penteli 15236, Greece.; Kapetanakis, D (corresponding author), FACE3TS SA, Athens 11471, Greece.
EM dkapetan@noa.gr; elenag@noa.gr; seba@noa.gr; sara@noa.gr
RI Georgopoulou, Elena/JVZ-5147-2024; Mirasgedis, Sebastian/ABC-5691-2021
OI Georgopoulou, Elena/0000-0001-9388-5124; Kapetanakis,
   Dimitrios/0000-0003-1262-9669
FU research program 'THESPIA II' (Development of tools and methodologies
   for the analysis of future climate projections in Europe/the
   Mediterranean Basin, the estimation of the impacts of climate change and
   the assessment of adaptation and mitigation strategi
FX The present study was partly funded by the research program 'THESPIA II'
   (Development of tools and methodologies for the analysis of future
   climate projections in Europe/the Mediterranean Basin, the estimation of
   the impacts of climate change and the assessment of adaptation and
   mitigation strategies) realized by the Institute for Environmental
   Research and Sustainable Development (Athens, Greece) of the National
   Observatory of Athens (NOA), Greece.
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NR 65
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 3
U2 24
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4433
J9 ATMOSPHERE-BASEL
JI Atmosphere
PD FEB
PY 2022
VL 13
IS 2
AR 282
DI 10.3390/atmos13020282
PG 25
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA ZQ4BM
UT WOS:000767052000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Otsuka, N
   Abe, H
   Isehara, Y
   Miyagawa, T
AF Otsuka, Noriko
   Abe, Hirokazu
   Isehara, Yuto
   Miyagawa, Tomoko
TI The potential use of green infrastructure in the regeneration of
   brownfield sites: three case studies from Japan's Osaka Bay Area
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE green infrastructure; brownfield regeneration; post-industrial sites;
   Osaka Bay Area; green space
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; URBAN; CITIES; HEALTH; SPACE; ENVIRONMENTS; POLICY
AB The role of green infrastructure (GI) in regenerating brownfield sites has not yet been widely recognised in Japan. In contrast, post-industrial countries in Europe and North America have introduced a number of good practices for GI-led brownfield regeneration. Using GI to revitalise post-industrial areas offers multiple benefits, ranging from ecosystem restoration and increased property values, to improvements in personal well-being, and can serve as an effective climate change adaptation solution. In Japan, nature has traditionally been used to protect the built environment from disaster; for example, preserving forests to prevent landslides, or sand or wind erosion on the coast. Although the application of GI is not a new idea in Japan, its role in revitalising brownfields and building communities has not been widely discussed. This paper explores the potential role of GI-led brownfield regeneration in Japan. Key barriers and drivers in revitalising post-industrial sites through the use of GI are identified using three case studies from the Osaka Bay Area, home to some of Japan's largest brownfield sites. The paper concludes with highlighting opportunities and challenges for disseminating the concept of GI-led regeneration in the Japanese context.
C1 [Otsuka, Noriko] ILS Res Inst Reg & Urban Dev, Dortmund, Germany.
   [Otsuka, Noriko; Abe, Hirokazu; Isehara, Yuto] Osaka Univ, Cybermedia Ctr, Grad Sch Engn, Osaka, Japan.
   [Miyagawa, Tomoko] Wakayama Univ, Fac Syst Engn, Wakayama, Japan.
C3 Osaka University; Wakayama University
RP Otsuka, N (corresponding author), ILS Res Inst Reg & Urban Dev gGmbH, Res Grp Mobil & Space, Bruderweg 22-24, D-44135 Dortmund, Germany.
EM noriko.otsuka@ils-forschung.de
OI Otsuka, Noriko/0000-0001-5171-5434
FU JSPS KAKENHI [JP6H04474]
FX This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number JP6H04474.
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NR 62
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 10
U2 60
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PD NOV 2
PY 2021
VL 26
IS 11
BP 1346
EP 1363
DI 10.1080/13549839.2021.1983791
EA OCT 2021
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA WN3PQ
UT WOS:000704549700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Muroyiwa, B
   Masinda, N
   Mushunje, A
AF Muroyiwa, Brian
   Masinda, Nasiphi
   Mushunje, Abyssinia
TI Smallholder farmers' adaptation strategies to mitigate the effect of
   drought on maize production in OR Tambo District municipality
SO AFRICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION & DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE smallholder farmers; drought adaptation strategies; mitigation;
   agricultural production; South Africa
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; PERCEPTION; ADOPTION; MODELS
AB There is evidence that climate variability has affected agriculture and the expectation is that the situation will get worse over time. This study examined smallholder farmers' adaptation strategies to mitigate the effects of drought on maize production in OR Tambo District in South Africa. A questionnaire was used to collect primary data from 200 farmers, which was then analyzed using descriptive statistics, the adaptation strategy index and the double hurdle model. The study utilized the adaptation strategy index to establish the relationship between adopting adaptation strategies and maize production. The farmers ranked the adaptation strategies in terms of their usefulness in adapting to drought and successfully alleviating a decline in maize production. The farmers ranked shifting of planting date, reduction of maize cultivated area, planting drought resistant varieties, crop diversification and intercropping as the most useful adaptation strategies. The study utilized the double hurdle model to identify the factors affecting the farmers' adoption of drought adaptation strategies. The study found that gender of the household head, level of education of the household head, household size, extension services and land ownership influence farmers' choice of adaptation strategies. Training of woman who head households and poor farmers on climate change adaption strategies options available is necessary.
C1 [Muroyiwa, Brian] Natl Univ Lesotho, Dept Agr Econ & Extens, Maseru, Lesotho.
   [Masinda, Nasiphi; Mushunje, Abyssinia] Univ Ft Hare, Dept Agr Econ & Extens, Alice, South Africa.
C3 University of Fort Hare
RP Muroyiwa, B (corresponding author), Natl Univ Lesotho, Dept Agr Econ & Extens, Maseru, Lesotho.
EM b.muroyiwa@nul.ls
OI Mushunje, Abbyssinia/0000-0002-2183-785X
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NR 85
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 2
U2 12
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 2042-1338
EI 2042-1346
J9 AFR J SCI TECHNOL IN
JI Afr. J. Sci. Technol. Innov. Dev.
PD FEB 23
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 2
BP 459
EP 471
DI 10.1080/20421338.2020.1847385
EA JAN 2021
PG 13
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 0G1XR
UT WOS:000611594600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Joshua, MDK
   Stathers, T
   Chirwa, RK
   Ngongondo, C
   Lamboll, R
   Monjerezi, M
   Mwathunga, E
   Kasei, R
   Chipungu, FP
   Liwenga, ET
AF Joshua, Miriam Dalitso Kalanda
   Stathers, Tanya
   Chirwa, Ruth Kalinga
   Ngongondo, Cosmo
   Lamboll, Richard
   Monjerezi, Maurice
   Mwathunga, Evance
   Kasei, Raymond
   Chipungu, Felistus Patience
   Liwenga, Emma Teresa
BE Nhamo, G
   Chikodzi, D
TI A Comparative Study of the Impacts of Flooding on Food Security of Urban
   and Rural Households in Blantyre City and Chikwawa, Malawi
SO CYCLONES IN SOUTHERN AFRICA, VOL. 3: Implications for the Sustainable
   Development Goals
SE Sustainable Development Goals Series
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Urban food systems; Climate change adaptation; Extreme events;
   Urban-rural linkages
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; RAINFALL EXTREMES
AB The impacts of climate-related risks on rural-urban linkages and the food systems on which urban settlements depend are poorly understood. This study analysed (i) the climate trends for Blantyre City and rural Chikwawa district in Malawi, (ii) the sources of foods typically consumed in these locations, (iii) the implications of flooding following Tropical Cyclone Idai on urban and rural households' interconnected agri-food systems and food security. Although floods were reported to cause both positive and negative effects on food production; food flows between rural and urban areas; and household food security, the negative effects (i.e. destruction of crops, homes and transport routes; higher food prices) outweighed the positives. In both rural and urban areas, poorer households were disproportionately affected resulting in reduced dietary diversity and food intake, shifts to consumption of cheaper foods, and requests for emergency food donations. Given the rapid rate of urbanisation, better understanding of food security amongst urban households is required. Following extreme events such as flooding, special attention needs to be directed to assessing and addressing food availability, access and consumption challenges in both urban and rural areas reliant on interconnected agricultural and food flows, and particularly in poor households.
C1 [Joshua, Miriam Dalitso Kalanda; Chirwa, Ruth Kalinga; Ngongondo, Cosmo; Mwathunga, Evance] Univ Malawi, Dept Geog & Earth Sci, Chancellor Coll, Zomba, Malawi.
   [Stathers, Tanya; Lamboll, Richard] Univ Greenwich, Nat Resources Inst NRI, Greenwich, England.
   [Monjerezi, Maurice] Univ Malawi, Dept Chem, Chancellor Coll, Zomba, Malawi.
   [Kasei, Raymond] Univ Dev Studies, Climate Change & Food Secur Dept, Tamale, Ghana.
   [Chipungu, Felistus Patience] Bvumbwe Agr Res Stn, CGIAR, Limbe, Malawi.
   [Liwenga, Emma Teresa] Univ Dar Es Salaam, Inst Resource Assessment, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
C3 University of Malawi; University of Greenwich; University of Malawi;
   University for Development Studies; University of Dar es Salaam
RP Joshua, MDK (corresponding author), Univ Malawi, Dept Geog & Earth Sci, Chancellor Coll, Zomba, Malawi.
EM t.e.stathers@gre.ac.uk; cngongondo@cc.ac.mw; r.i.lamboll@gre.ac.uk;
   mmonjerezi@cc.ac.mw; emwathunga@cc.ac.mw; liwenga@ira.udsm.tz
RI /ABD-4119-2020; Monjerezi, Maurice/HHR-9470-2022; Ngongondo,
   Cosmo/LBH-8357-2024; LIWENGA, EMMA/IWD-9972-2023
OI Ngongondo, Cosmo/0000-0003-3282-1260; Monjerezi,
   Maurice/0000-0003-1136-0653; LIWENGA, EMMA/0000-0003-1731-3428
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NR 54
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2523-3084
EI 2523-3092
BN 978-3-030-74303-1; 978-3-030-74302-4
J9 SUSTAIN DEV GOAL SER
PY 2021
BP 35
EP 58
DI 10.1007/978-3-030-74303-1_3
D2 10.1007/978-3-030-74303-1
PG 24
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies; Management
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business &
   Economics
GA BV7PE
UT WOS:001070374600004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Endalamaw, TB
   Darr, D
AF Endalamaw, Tefera Belay
   Darr, Dietrich
TI Institutional and technological innovation for the bamboo sector as an
   instrument for development and climate change resilience in Ethiopia
SO AFRICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION & DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE bamboo; climate change; enterprise; indigenous knowledge; innovation;
   institution
ID LIFE-CYCLE ASSESSMENT; ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS; ABSORPTIVE-CAPACITY;
   KNOWLEDGE; CAPABILITIES; PERSPECTIVE; SYSTEMS
AB Given a huge resource base, numerous product and service functions, bamboo can top many of the species recommended for integrated rural development in the context of climate change. Despite this potential, there is gap in knowledge and innovation to make optimum use of this resource. This study provides insights into the need for and processes of institutional and technological innovation to materialize bamboo's potential. The study is based on the theory of systems of innovation and empirical data collected from bamboo farmers, enterprises and 26 experts. The results demonstrate that traditional knowledge and technical skills in rural areas are key sources of knowledge for product innovation and climate change adaptation. The study reveals that enterprises have a primary role both in the generation of innovation and the production of value-added products. Institutional actors (GOs and NGOs) play an intermediary role in promoting bamboo sector innovation through training provision, policy development and stimulating social learning among actors. The study reveals that further effort is needed to upgrade the capacity of farmers and firms to produce globally competitive products. Therefore, development should be geared towards establishing and nurturing a bamboo sector innovation system which facilitates entry into the global value chain.
C1 [Endalamaw, Tefera Belay] Hawassa Univ, Wondo Genet Coll Forestry & Nat Resources, Awasa, Ethiopia.
   [Darr, Dietrich] Hsch Rhine Waal, Fac Life Sci, Kleve, Germany.
C3 Hawassa University
RP Endalamaw, TB (corresponding author), Hawassa Univ, Wondo Genet Coll Forestry & Nat Resources, Awasa, Ethiopia.
EM teferabelay@gmail.com
RI Darr, Dietrich/E-3010-2017
OI Darr, Dietrich/0000-0002-7235-0275
FU German Academic Exchange Service
FX This work was supported by German Academic Exchange Service.
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NR 73
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 11
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 2042-1338
EI 2042-1346
J9 AFR J SCI TECHNOL IN
JI Afr. J. Sci. Technol. Innov. Dev.
PD NOV 10
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 7
BP 817
EP 828
DI 10.1080/20421338.2020.1837447
EA DEC 2020
PG 12
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA XL8GS
UT WOS:000603995800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rahman, HMT
   Sherren, K
   van Proosdij, D
AF Rahman, H. M. Tuihedur
   Sherren, Kate
   van Proosdij, Danika
TI Institutional Innovation for Nature-Based Coastal Adaptation: Lessons
   from Salt Marsh Restoration in Nova Scotia, Canada
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE institutional entrepreneurship; polycentricity; bureaucratic autonomy;
   institutional inertia; sea-level rise
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE-ADAPTATION; PATH DEPENDENCE; ENTREPRENEURSHIP; FRAMEWORK;
   INFRASTRUCTURE; ORGANIZATION; LEGITIMACY; MANAGEMENT; INSIGHTS; INERTIA
AB Sea-levels have been rising at a faster rate than expected. Because of the maladaptive outcomes of engineering-based hard coastal protection infrastructure, policy makers are looking for alternative adaptation approaches to buffer against coastal flooding commonly known as nature-based coastal adaptation (NbCA). However, how to implement NbCA under an institutional structure demonstrating 'inertia' to alternative adaptation approaches is a question that seeks scientific attention. Building on a case study derived from a highly climate-vulnerable Canadian province, this study shows how the entrepreneurial use of scientific information and institutional opportunities helped institutional actors overcome the inertia. Drawing on secondary document analysis and primary qualitative data, this study offers five key lessons to institutional actors aiming at implementing NbCA: (i) develop knowledge networks to help avoid uncertainty; (ii) identify and utilize opportunities within existing institutions; (iii) distribute roles and responsibilities among actors based on their capacity to mobilize required resources; (iv) provide entrepreneurial actors with decision-making autonomy for developing agreed-upon rules and norms; and (v) facilitate repeated interactions among institutional actors to develop a collaborative network among them. This study, therefore, helps us to understand how to implement a relatively new adaptation option by building trust-based networks among diverse and relevant institutional actors.
C1 [Rahman, H. M. Tuihedur; Sherren, Kate] Dalhousie Univ, Sch Resource & Environm Studies, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada.
   [Rahman, H. M. Tuihedur; van Proosdij, Danika] St Marys Univ, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, Halifax, NS B3H 3C3, Canada.
C3 Dalhousie University; Saint Marys University - Canada
RP Rahman, HMT (corresponding author), Dalhousie Univ, Sch Resource & Environm Studies, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada.; Rahman, HMT (corresponding author), St Marys Univ, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, Halifax, NS B3H 3C3, Canada.
EM hm.rahman@mail.mcgill.ca; kate.sherren@dal.ca; dvanproo@smu.ca
RI ; Rahman, H.M. Tuihedur/B-4254-2019
OI Sherren, Kate/0000-0003-1576-9878; Rahman, H.M.
   Tuihedur/0000-0002-7308-3447
FU Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD); Natural
   Resources Canada (NRCan) of the Government of Canada
FX This research was funded by the Organization of Economic Co-operation
   and Development (OECD) and Natural Resources Canada (NRCan) of the
   Government of Canada (van Proosdij, PI).
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NR 100
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 0
U2 9
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD DEC
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 23
AR 6735
DI 10.3390/su11236735
PG 26
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KD9MV
UT WOS:000508186400207
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Matewos, T
   Tefera, T
AF Matewos, Tafesse
   Tefera, Tewodros
TI Local level rainfall and temperature variability in drought-prone
   districts of rural Sidama, central rift valley region of Ethiopia
SO PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Rainfall; temperature; drought-prone districts; rural sidama; central
   rift valley region; Ethiopia
ID BLUE NILE BASIN; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; CENTRAL HIGHLANDS;
   RIVER-BASIN; TRENDS; IMPACT; INDEXES
AB The purpose of this study is to examine local level spatiotemporal rainfall and temperature variability in drought-prone districts of rural Sidama, Central Rift Valley region of Ethiopia. The study used 129 gridded monthly rainfall and temperature data of 32 years (1983-2014). The gridded rainfall and temperature records were encoded into GIS software and evaluated through different statistical and geospatial techniques. Mann-Kendal rank test and F distribution tests were used to test temporal and spatial statistical significance, respectively, of the data. The analysis revealed that Belg and Kiremt are the main rainfall seasons, constituting 81% of the annual rainfall. Although annual, Kiremt, and Belg rainfall amounts appear to have decreased over time, the decreasing trend is statistically significant only for Belg rainfall records. On the other hand, rainfall standard anomaly results indicated seven droughts of different magnitudes: one extreme, two severe, and four moderate. The study also revealed increasing temperature trends over the years under consideration that are statistically significant. The findings of this study on rainfall contradict other findings obtained around the study area. Thus, climate change adaptations need to focus on location-specific climate data analysis so that the intended adaptive interventions can be successful.
C1 [Matewos, Tafesse] Hawassa Univ Ethiopia, IPDR, Awasa, Ethiopia.
   [Matewos, Tafesse] NMBU, As, Norway.
   [Tefera, Tewodros] Hawassa Univ, SEGDS, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
C3 Hawassa University; Norwegian University of Life Sciences; Hawassa
   University
RP Matewos, T (corresponding author), Hawassa Univ Ethiopia, IPDR, Awasa, Ethiopia.; Matewos, T (corresponding author), NMBU, As, Norway.
EM tafessemk@gmail.com
RI Tefera, Tewodros/HTN-6403-2023
FU NORHED DEG project of NORAD
FX This work was supported by the NORHED DEG project of NORAD [1].
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NR 36
TC 23
Z9 23
U1 1
U2 6
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0272-3646
EI 1930-0557
J9 PHYS GEOGR
JI Phys. Geogr.
PD JAN 2
PY 2020
VL 41
IS 1
BP 36
EP 53
DI 10.1080/02723646.2019.1625850
EA JUN 2019
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Geography, Physical; Geosciences,
   Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography; Geology;
   Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA KE9HY
UT WOS:000472293400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Webber, H
   Hoffmann, M
   Rezaei, EE
AF Webber, Heidi
   Hoffmann, Munir
   Rezaei, Ehsan Eyshi
BE Hatfield, JL
   Sivakumar, MVK
   Prueger, JH
TI Crop Models as Tools for Agroclimatology
SO AGROCLIMATOLOGY: LINKING AGRICULTURE TO CLIMATE
SE Agronomy Monograph
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID TEMPERATURE RESPONSE FUNCTIONS; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; AIR CO2
   ENRICHMENT; HEAT-STRESS; CANOPY-TEMPERATURE; SIMULATION-MODELS; PLANT
   RESPIRATION; WHEAT YIELDS; DROUGHT TOLERANCE; DATA AGGREGATION
AB Climate changes will bring average warmer temperatures, elevated atmospheric CO2 and more frequent extreme weather events. These are expected to result in impacts on crop growth and cropping systems. However, traditional field and controlled environment experiments are limited in studying climate change impacts on crops due to the very large number of combinations of precipitation, CO2 and temperature changes possible. As such, crop models are the main tool to study climate change impacts on crops, overcoming the limitations of field experimentation. However, given the complexity and scientific uncertainty around crop response to multiple stressors expected to prevail under elevated CO2 and climate change, crop model projections still contain many uncertainties limiting their utility in risk assessments or informing adaptations. Model improvement is needed to represent processes driving responses to multiple stressors. Methodological advances are also required to assess the adequacy of using field-based models with aggregate climate, soil, and crop management data over large areas in impact assessments. Despite these limitations in assessing risks of climate change to cropping systems, process-based crop models do offer capacity to aid in understanding crop responses observed in field conditions as they can be used to test hypotheses about which processes drive observed responses and can aid in helping inform experimental design.
C1 [Webber, Heidi; Hoffmann, Munir] Leibniz Ctr Agr Landscape Res ZALF, 15374 Muncheberg, D-15374 Muncheberg, Germany.
   [Rezaei, Ehsan Eyshi] Univ Gottingen, Dept Crop Sci, D-37075 Gottingen, Germany.
C3 Leibniz Association; Leibniz Zentrum fur Agrarlandschaftsforschung
   (ZALF); University of Gottingen
RP Webber, H (corresponding author), Leibniz Ctr Agr Landscape Res ZALF, 15374 Muncheberg, D-15374 Muncheberg, Germany.
EM webber@zalf.de
RI Hoffmann, Munir/AAB-6221-2019; Rezaei, Ehsan/AAB-5250-2020
OI Webber, Heidi/0000-0001-8301-5424; Eyshi Rezaei,
   Ehsan/0000-0003-2603-8034
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NR 194
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 2
U2 9
PU AMER SOC AGRONOMY
PI MADISON
PA 677 SOUTH SEGOE RD, MADISON, WI 53711 USA
SN 2156-3276
BN 978-0-89118-357-0; 978-0-89118-358-7
J9 AGRON MONOGR
PY 2019
VL 60
BP 519
EP 546
DI 10.2134/agronmonogr60.2016.0025
D2 10.2134/agronmonogr60
PG 28
WC Agronomy; Environmental Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BR7IX
UT WOS:000667934200020
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Seebauer, S
   Babcicky, P
AF Seebauer, S.
   Babcicky, P.
TI Trust and the communication of flood risks: comparing the roles of local
   governments, volunteers in emergency services, and neighbours
SO JOURNAL OF FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; information source; private flood
   preparedness; risk communication; trust
ID SALIENT VALUE SIMILARITY; SOCIAL TRUST; EMPIRICAL-RESEARCH; PERCEIVED
   RISK; CLIMATE-CHANGE; INFORMATION; PERCEPTION; BEHAVIOR; CONFIDENCE;
   FOOD
AB Risk information need to be communicated by trusted groups, in order to promote attitude and behaviour change. We compare different levels of trust in local governments, volunteers in emergency and relief services, and neighbours, and how trust in these groups shapes citizens' perceptions and actions relating to flood risks. Structural equation modelling is applied to a sample of 2007 flood-prone households in Austria. A series of cognitive and behavioural responses to flood risks is regressed on trust shown to the three groups. Our findings show that citizens show great trust and attribute high competence to volunteers, which increases risk perception and reduces denial and wishful thinking. Trust in local government downplays risks, makes citizens rely on external help, and promotes fatalism and wishful thinking. Trust in neighbours increases reliance on social support and reinforces wishful thinking. These trust effects reflect the roles and risk narratives of the respective groups. To stimulate specific actions of citizens in flood risk management, the group which addresses the desired actions within its narrative should act as risk communicator. Risk communication could be introduced as a complementary activity in voluntary emergency and relief services, wherein older, retired volunteers seem particularly qualified as risk communicators.
C1 [Seebauer, S.] Joanneum Res Forschungsgesell Mbh, LIFE Ctr Climate Energy & Soc, Waagner Biro Str 100, A-8020 Graz, Austria.
   [Seebauer, S.; Babcicky, P.] Karl Franzens Univ Graz, Wegener Ctr Climate & Global Change, Graz, Austria.
   [Babcicky, P.] Karl Franzens Univ Graz, FWF DK Climate Change, Graz, Austria.
C3 University of Graz; University of Graz
RP Seebauer, S (corresponding author), Joanneum Res Forschungsgesell Mbh, LIFE Ctr Climate Energy & Soc, Waagner Biro Str 100, A-8020 Graz, Austria.
EM sebastian.seebauer@joanneum.at
OI Babcicky, Philipp/0000-0002-5616-4958; Seebauer,
   Sebastian/0000-0003-4592-9529
FU Austrian Climate and Energy Fund; Austrian Climate Research Program
   [B286284]; Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [W1256-G15]
FX This research was funded by the Austrian Climate and Energy Fund and was
   carried out within the Austrian Climate Research Program (project
   number: B286284). Publication fees were covered by the Austrian Science
   Fund (FWF) under research grant W1256-G15 (Doctoral Program Climate
   Change - Uncertainties, Thresholds and Coping Strategies).
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NR 65
TC 46
Z9 46
U1 2
U2 48
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1753-318X
J9 J FLOOD RISK MANAG
JI J. Flood Risk Manag.
PD SEP
PY 2018
VL 11
IS 3
BP 305
EP 316
DI 10.1111/jfr3.12313
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA GR1WQ
UT WOS:000442345600009
PM 32030096
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Ivanova, A
   Ramírez, E
   Martinez, A
AF Ivanova, A.
   Ramirez, E.
   Martinez, A.
BE Brebbia, CA
   Longhurst, J
   Marco, E
   Booth, C
TI ADAPTATION STRATEGY FOR THE MUNICIPALITY OF LA PAZ, MEXICO:
   MULTICRITERIA AND COST-BENEFIT ANALYSIS
SO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT STUDIES
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE adaptation strategy; cost-benefit analysis; mexico; multicriteria
   analysis; municipality of La Paz
AB This paper identifies climate change adaptation measures in the municipality of La Paz, Mexico, based on the results of previous vulnerability analysis. To prioritize the specified measures the GIZ methodology is used base don milticriteria and cost-benefit analysis. The study comprises the following stages, firstly policies and instruments suggested by the academic team, were discussed and slightly modified at a meeting with the representatives of La Paz Municipality. Secondly, a survey was applied to the main directors and employees according to the criteria provided by the GIZ methodology. Thirdly, a Public Consultation Forum was organized with the main stakeholders of La Paz municipality (NGO, Business, professional associations), where the adaptation measures were ranked by thematic and multicriteria approach. This stage complemented the multicriteria analysis and presented the measures that ranked in first places. The last step consisted in the cost-benefit analysis that provided a further ranking to the measures and specified the short-term adaptation strategy for the city of La Paz. The main areas of this strategy are the following: I. Hydric resources; II. Coasts and Tourism; III. Fisheries and biodiversity; IV: Urban Planning and Infrastructure; V. Environmental education and research. Finally, we present the adaptation strategy for La Paz municipality based on the prioritized adaptation measures.
C1 [Ivanova, A.; Ramirez, E.; Martinez, A.] Univ Autonoma Baja California Sur, La Paz, Mexico.
C3 Universidad Autonoma de Baja California
RP Ivanova, A (corresponding author), Univ Autonoma Baja California Sur, La Paz, Mexico.
RI Ivanova, Antonina/KWT-3691-2024
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NR 22
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU WIT PRESS
PI SOUTHAMPTON
PA ASHURST LODGE, SOUTHAMPTON SO40 7AA, ASHURST, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-78466-284-4; 978-1-78466-283-7
PY 2018
BP 71
EP 79
DI 10.2495/SDP-V13-N2-237-245
PG 9
WC Development Studies; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Development Studies; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA BP7NP
UT WOS:000562626000007
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Merlinsky, MG
AF Merlinsky, Maria Gabriela
TI Mists of the Riachuelo: River Basins and Climate Change in Buenos Aires
SO LATIN AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Cities; Environmental governability; Environmental
   justice
AB The long-standing lack of river basin management policies in Buenos Aires has impacted the development of strategies for facing climate change. This is a highly complex matter in a metropolis that has developed in a context of significant social and environmental inequality. An environmental justice perspective on the institutional changes in the wake of the Supreme Court's rulings in favor of citizens invoking the constitutional right to a healthy environment in the Matanza-Riachuelo Basin illustrates the challenges of environmental management in greater Buenos Aires and the obstacles and opportunities in the development of climate change adaptation policies in the medium term. El deficit historico en materia de politicas de gestion hidrica en Buenos Aires ha condicionado las estrategias de adaptacion al cambio climatico. Se trata de un asunto de alta complejidad en una metropolis que se ha desarrollado en presencia de fuertes desigualdades sociales y ambientales. Un enfoque de justicia ambiental centrado en los cambios institucionales a partir de la intervencion de la Corte Suprema de Justicia en favor de ciudadanos exigiendo su derecho constitucional a la recuperacion ambiental de la cuenca Matanza-Riachuelo identifica los desafios que enfrenta la gestion ambiental metropolitana y las oportunidades y barreras en materia de politicas de adaptacion al cambio climatico en el mediano plazo.
C1 [Merlinsky, Maria Gabriela] Univ Buenos Aires, RA-1053 Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
   [Merlinsky, Maria Gabriela] Inst Invest Gino Germani, CONICET, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
   [Merlinsky, Maria Gabriela] Penn State Univ, Schreyer Honors Coll, Acad Advising Program, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
   [Merlinsky, Maria Gabriela] Penn State Univ, Schreyer Honors Coll, Int Program, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
C3 University of Buenos Aires; Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones
   Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET); Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of
   Higher Education (PCSHE); Pennsylvania State University; Pennsylvania
   State University - University Park; Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of
   Higher Education (PCSHE); Pennsylvania State University; Pennsylvania
   State University - University Park
RP Merlinsky, MG (corresponding author), Univ Buenos Aires, RA-1053 Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.; Merlinsky, MG (corresponding author), Inst Invest Gino Germani, CONICET, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.; Merlinsky, MG (corresponding author), Penn State Univ, Schreyer Honors Coll, Acad Advising Program, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.; Merlinsky, MG (corresponding author), Penn State Univ, Schreyer Honors Coll, Int Program, University Pk, PA 16802 USA.
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NR 33
TC 3
Z9 4
U1 2
U2 42
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0094-582X
EI 1552-678X
J9 LAT AM PERSPECT
JI Lat. Am. Perspect.
PD JUL
PY 2016
VL 43
IS 4
BP 43
EP 55
DI 10.1177/0094582X15623764
PG 13
WC Area Studies; Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies; Government & Law
GA DQ0GD
UT WOS:000378876000004
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bonelli, S
   Vicuña, S
   Meza, FJ
   Gironás, J
   Barton, J
AF Bonelli, Sebastian
   Vicuna, Sebastian
   Meza, Francisco J.
   Gironas, Jorge
   Barton, Jonathan
TI Incorporating climate change adaptation strategies in urban water supply
   planning: the case of central Chile
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; Maipo basin; Santiago; water security
ID IMPACTS; DEMAND; RESOURCES; SNOWPACK; ANDES
AB Water management systems have been typically designed and operated under the assumption of stationarity. This assumption may no longer be valid under climate change scenarios. Water availability may change dramatically at some locations due mainly to possible impacts of changes in temperature and precipitation over streamflow volume and seasonality, adding pressure to water supply systems. It has been shown that snowmelt-dominated basins are particularly sensitive to such changes. Hence, human settlements and economic activities developed in such areas are particularly vulnerable. The Maipo river basin in Central Chile - where more than 6 million people live - is one of these areas. We used a calibrated water resources model of the Maipo river basin, in order to propose a general framework to evaluate adaptation options at the urban level. When comparing a mid-21st century period to a historic control period, results for three selected performance metrics showed a decrease in water system performance. Adaptation measures were evaluated in their capacity to maintain current water security standards. Two alternatives stand as highly effective options to this end: water rights purchases and improvements in water use efficiency. The political and economic costs of implementing these options, which could deem them unviable, are not considered here but are worthy of further research.
C1 [Bonelli, Sebastian; Vicuna, Sebastian; Meza, Francisco J.; Gironas, Jorge; Barton, Jonathan] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Ctr Interdisciplinario Cambio Global UC, Santiago, Chile.
   [Meza, Francisco J.] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Fac Agron & Ingn Forestal, Dept Ecosistemas & Med Ambiente, Santiago, Chile.
   [Gironas, Jorge] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Dept Ingn Hidraul & Ambiental, Santiago, Chile.
   [Barton, Jonathan] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Fac Arquitectura Diseno & Estudios Urbanos, Inst Estudios Urbanos & Terr UC, Santiago, Chile.
   [Gironas, Jorge; Barton, Jonathan] CONICYT FONDAP, Ctr Desarrollo Urbano Sustentable, Santiago, Chile.
C3 Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile; Pontificia Universidad
   Catolica de Chile; Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile; Pontificia
   Universidad Catolica de Chile
RP Bonelli, S (corresponding author), Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Ctr Interdisciplinario Cambio Global UC, Santiago, Chile.
EM sjbonell@uc.cl
RI Meza, Francisco/F-9297-2014; Gironás, Jorge/F-8297-2013; Barton,
   Jonathan/E-8512-2011; Vicuna, Sebastian/M-2747-2016
OI Barton, Jonathan/0000-0001-6250-8684; Meza,
   Francisco/0000-0002-9853-227X; Vicuna, Sebastian/0000-0001-6971-0068;
   Gironas, Jorge/0000-0002-6933-2658
FU Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI) SGP-HD [003];
   US National Science Foundation [GEO-0642841]; FONDECYT [1090393]; INNOVA
   CORFO [09CN14-5704]; CONICYT/FONDAP [15110020]; Directorate For
   Geosciences [1138881] Funding Source: National Science Foundation;
   Directorate For Geosciences; ICER [1128040] Funding Source: National
   Science Foundation
FX This work was carried out with the aid of a grant from the
   Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research (IAI) SGP-HD #003
   which is supported by the US National Science Foundation (grant no.
   GEO-0642841). We also acknowledge the support provided by FONDECYT grant
   no. 1090393, INNOVA CORFO through grant 09CN14-5704. We would like to
   thank Carlos Berroeta, Carlos Poblete and Paula Astudillo of the Aguas
   Andinas water utility company for kindly providing crucial data and
   understanding of the Maipo basin's water resources operations. Jorge
   Gironas and Jonathan Barton are grateful for the funding from the
   CONICYT/FONDAP, grant 15110020.
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NR 47
TC 26
Z9 29
U1 1
U2 54
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PY 2014
VL 5
IS 3
BP 357
EP 376
DI 10.2166/wcc.2014.037
PG 20
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA AQ9IR
UT WOS:000343165500008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Furunes, T
   Mykletun, RJ
AF Furunes, Trude
   Mykletun, Reidar J.
TI Frozen Adventure at Risk? A 7-year Follow-up Study of Norwegian Glacier
   Tourism
SO SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM
LA English
DT Article
DE glacier tourism; adventure tourism; guiding; 7-year follow-up;
   entrepreneurship; Norway; implicit climate change adaption
ID SUCCESS
AB This article aims at illuminating the contemporary glacier tourism scene, and does so by showing how glacier tourism in Norway has developed as an adventure tourism activity over the past 7 years. In total, 17 companies offered guided glacier activities for approximately 2030,000 visitors per year. Data were collected by repeated interviews, website studies, and participant observation. The product variety covers guided day tours, longer guided tours, and glacier instructor courses. There has been product development from traditional glacier surface walks and activities in the glacier-arm area as well as glacier lake kayaking, terminal face walks, and ice climbing. Glacier tourism can be seen as a mix between purchasable short-term holidays and gradually acquired life-time skill. This analysis focuses on five important preconditions for this adventure tourism niche, namely, natural resources, access, demand, entrepreneurship, and need for special competence. The study also provides insight into current and future challenges and perceived risks on three levels. Results indicate that glacier tourism is not dependent on large glaciers. Studying current companies' location shows there is room for expansion in terms of extensively using natural resources where there is demand. However, some entrepreneurs are sceptical of the industry's future as recent recession of the glaciers has made access more difficult.
C1 [Furunes, Trude; Mykletun, Reidar J.] Univ Stavanger, Norwegian Sch Hotel Management, Stavanger, Norway.
C3 Universitetet i Stavanger
RP Furunes, T (corresponding author), Univ Stavanger, Norwegian Sch Hotel Management, Stavanger, Norway.
EM trude.furunes@uis.no
OI Furunes, Trude/0000-0003-4864-7076
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NR 61
TC 44
Z9 49
U1 3
U2 41
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1502-2250
EI 1502-2269
J9 SCAND J HOSP TOUR
JI Scand. J. Hosp. Tour.
PY 2012
VL 12
IS 4
BP 324
EP 348
DI 10.1080/15022250.2012.748507
PG 25
WC Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism; Sociology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics; Sociology
GA 056IR
UT WOS:000312482100003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Williams, PA
   Ng'anga, SK
   Crespo, O
   Abu, M
AF Williams, Portia Adade
   Ng'anga, Stanley Karanja
   Crespo, Olivier
   Abu, Mumuni
TI Cost and benefit analysis of adopting climate adaptation practices among
   smallholders: The case of five selected practices in Ghana
SO CLIMATE SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Costs benefit analysis; Climate adaptation; Smallholders; Horticulture;
   Ghana
ID FARMING SYSTEMS; AFRICA; SEQUESTRATION; IMPACTS; OPTIONS
AB Smallholder farmers mostly depend on agriculture for their sustenance yet the sector is threatened by changing climate. It is essential for smallholders to adapt to reduce their vulnerability. Estimating the economic effectiveness of climate adaptation practices would enhance planning and actions among stakeholders and consequently impact policy. This study conducted an ex-ante in-depth empirical analysis of the costs and benefits of implementing five climate adaptation strategies identified among smallholder horticultural farmers in Ghana. A total of 180 smallholder households who have implemented the identified practices in two horticultural crop-growing municipalities were surveyed. Profitability indicators, evaluation of environmental and social externalities were employed to comparatively estimate the cost-effectiveness of the practices. The results indicated that, from private and public perspectives, implementing any of the five adaptation practices would yield positive benefits. However, considering the capital required, payback period for investments made and risks from implementation, two out of the five practices are particularly fitting choices for the smallholders. Institutional and policy support is desirable if all the practices are to be adopted. To broaden information on potential of climate adaptation vis-a-vis climatic effects with economic analysis, the study proposes integrating localized climate vulnerability and economic assessments for enhanced climate adaptation actions.
C1 [Williams, Portia Adade; Crespo, Olivier] Univ Cape Town, Environm & Geog Sci Dept, Climate Syst Anal Grp, ZA-7700 Rondebosch, South Africa.
   [Williams, Portia Adade] CSIR, Sci & Technol Policy Res Inst, Box CT 519, Accra, Ghana.
   [Ng'anga, Stanley Karanja] Int Ctr Trop Agr CIAT, Reg Off Africa Pan Africa Bean Res Alliance, Natl Agr Res Labs, POB 6247, Kampala, Uganda.
   [Abu, Mumuni] Univ Ghana, Reg Inst Populat Studies, Legon, Ghana.
C3 University of Cape Town; Alliance; International Center for Tropical
   Agriculture - CIAT; University of Ghana
RP Williams, PA (corresponding author), Univ Cape Town, Environm & Geog Sci Dept, Climate Syst Anal Grp, ZA-7700 Rondebosch, South Africa.; Williams, PA (corresponding author), CSIR, Sci & Technol Policy Res Inst, Box CT 519, Accra, Ghana.
EM adadeposh@gmail.com
RI Karanja, Stanley/AAI-4188-2021; Abu, Mumuni/Y-2583-2019; crespo,
   olivier/L-6398-2013
OI crespo, olivier/0000-0001-7320-9428; Abu, Mumuni/0000-0002-6455-0162
FU Organisation of Women in Science for the Developing World (OWSD)
   Fellowship Programme; Swedish International Development Cooperation
   Agency (Sida); Africa Climate Development Initiative (ACDI), University
   of Cape Town
FX This study received funding support from the Organisation of Women in
   Science for the Developing World (OWSD) Fellowship Programme and the
   Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida). The Africa
   Climate Development Initiative (ACDI), University of Cape Town, also
   supported the research with funding for data collection. Interpretation
   of the findings and conclusion drawn from the study are that of the
   authors and not on any part of OWSD, Sida or ACDI.
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NR 63
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 3
U2 12
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2405-8807
J9 CLIM SERV
JI Clim. Serv.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 20
AR 100198
DI 10.1016/j.cliser.2020.100198
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA PH1SK
UT WOS:000600201200006
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Feofilovs, M
   Romagnoli, F
AF Feofilovs, Maksims
   Romagnoli, Francesco
TI Assessment of Urban Resilience to Natural Disasters with a System
   Dynamics Tool: Case Study of Latvian Municipality
SO ENVIRONMENTAL AND CLIMATE TECHNOLOGIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; infrastructure; risk reduction; sustainability
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; MODEL; HAZARDS
AB Research focuses on linking climate adaptation and disaster risk reduction strategies. The aim of the research is to test an urban resilience assessment tool through a local case study. The tool is based on integrating two methods. Multi-criteria analysis and system dynamics model is used to create a dynamic Urban Resilience Index. For the case study a local medium sized town is chosen in Latvia that is subject to flood risk. The results of the model simulation show that the model is suitable for both short term and long term resilience assessment. Future studies must focus on the precision of such a tool, which in this study could not be evaluated. Overall, the tool presented can contribute to offsetting the existing knowledge gaps between climate adaptation and disaster risk reduction for better policy planning and strengthening urban resilience on the local level.
C1 [Feofilovs, Maksims; Romagnoli, Francesco] Riga Tech Univ, Inst Energy Syst & Environm, Azenes Iela 12-1, LV-1048 Riga, Latvia.
C3 Riga Technical University
RP Feofilovs, M (corresponding author), Riga Tech Univ, Inst Energy Syst & Environm, Azenes Iela 12-1, LV-1048 Riga, Latvia.
EM maksims.feofilovs@rtu.lv
OI Romagnoli, Francesco/0000-0003-1814-7310; Feofilovs,
   Maksims/0000-0002-0797-150X
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Z9 13
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U2 28
PU SCIENDO
PI WARSAW
PA BOGUMILA ZUGA 32A, WARSAW, MAZOVIA, POLAND
SN 1691-5208
EI 2255-8837
J9 ENVIRON CLIM TECHNOL
JI Environ. Clim. Technol.
PD NOV
PY 2020
VL 24
IS 3
SI SI
BP 249
EP 264
DI 10.2478/rtuect-2020-0101
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA PG2TY
UT WOS:000599594700021
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU van Buuren, A
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   Teisman, G
AF van Buuren, Arwin
   Nooteboom, Sibout
   Teisman, Geert
BE DeRoo, G
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   VanWezemael, J
TI Climate Adaptation in Complex Governance Systems: Governance Systems
   between Inertia and Adaptability
SO COMPLEXITY AND PLANNING: SYSTEMS, ASSEMBLAGES AND SIMULATIONS
SE New Directions in Planning Theory
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
C1 [van Buuren, Arwin; Nooteboom, Sibout; Teisman, Geert] Erasmus Univ, Dept Publ Adm, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
   [Nooteboom, Sibout] Minist Internal Affairs, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
   [Teisman, Geert] Erasmus Univ, NL-3000 DR Rotterdam, Netherlands.
C3 Erasmus University Rotterdam; Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl
   Erasmus MC; Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl Erasmus MC; Erasmus
   University Rotterdam
RP van Buuren, A (corresponding author), Erasmus Univ, Dept Publ Adm, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
RI Teisman, Geert/Q-3488-2019; Nooteboom, Sibout/B-4185-2014; van Buuren,
   Arwin/I-6240-2013
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NR 27
TC 2
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 0
PU ASHGATE PUBLISHING LTD
PI ALDERSHOT
PA GOWER HOUSE, CROFT ROAD, ALDERSHOT GU11 3HR, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-4094-0348-7; 978-1-4094-0347-0
J9 NEW DIRECT PLAN THEO
PY 2012
BP 221
EP 241
PG 21
WC Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Public Administration
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Geography; Public Administration
GA BB5BQ
UT WOS:000343657100010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Howlett, M
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AF Howlett, Michael
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   Fritzen, Scott A.
BE Keskitalo, ECH
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SO RESEARCH HANDBOOK ON CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION POLICY
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-POLICY; EXPERIMENTATION; STRATEGIES; INSIGHTS; DESIGN
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   [Fritzen, Scott A.] Univ Washington, Daniel J Evans Sch Publ Policy & Governance, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
C3 Simon Fraser University; Singapore Management University; University of
   Washington; University of Washington Seattle
RP Howlett, M (corresponding author), Simon Fraser Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
RI Howlett, Michael/W-7544-2019; Mukherjee, Ishani/AAE-3694-2021
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NR 38
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 3
PU EDWARD ELGAR PUBLISHING LTD
PI CHELTENHAM
PA THE LYPIATTS, 15 LANSDOWN RD, CHELTENHAM GL50 2JA, GLOS, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-78643-252-0; 978-1-78643-251-3
PY 2019
BP 50
EP 68
D2 10.4337/9781786432520
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Law
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Government & Law
GA BP8YZ
UT WOS:000568538000003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Li, YX
   Luo, XL
   Wang, MH
   Di, BF
   Li, YB
   Tan, CP
   Pan, YW
AF Li, Yuanxi
   Luo, Xiaolong
   Wang, Maohua
   Di, Baofeng
   Li, Yongbo
   Tan, Chunping
   Pan, Yiwen
TI Spatiotemporal variations and influencing factors of heatwaves in
   Chengdu, China
SO ECOLOGICAL INFORMATICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Heatwaves; Spatiotemporal variation; Influencing factors; Megacity
ID URBAN HEAT-ISLAND; YANGTZE-RIVER DELTA; SOIL-MOISTURE; RISK-ASSESSMENT;
   CLIMATE-CHANGE; HOT EXTREMES; TEMPERATURE; DATASET; PRECIPITATION;
   SUMMER
AB In the context of global warming and rapid urbanization, the impacts of heatwaves on urban residents and socioeconomic activities are becoming increasingly pronounced. This study examines the spatiotemporal variations and influencing factors of heatwaves in Chengdu from 1961 to 2019, utilizing methods such as trend analysis, gravity center movement, time series clustering, and GeoDetector. The findings reveal a significant increase in the frequency, duration, and intensity of heatwaves since 1994, with an average rise of 2.14 degrees C per decade, and a spatial distribution that decreases from east to west. Heatwave intensity is closely linked to temperature and elevation, as well as atmospheric factors such as the intensity of the Western Pacific Subtropical High and the Tibetan High. Notably, despite an increase in blue-green spaces in Chengdu over the past 10 years, heatwave intensity has intensified, indicating that at the city-wide scale, the effects of urbanization and global warming outweigh the climate regulation benefits of blue-green spaces. This research enhances the understanding of urban heatwaves in Chengdu and Southwest China, providing a scientific foundation for effective heatwave risk assessment and climate change adaptation strategies. Furthermore, it offers insights for other megacities confronting similar heatwave challenges.
C1 [Li, Yuanxi; Luo, Xiaolong; Di, Baofeng; Tan, Chunping; Pan, Yiwen] Sichuan Univ, Inst Disaster Management & Reconstruct, Chengdu 610207, Peoples R China.
   [Luo, Xiaolong; Di, Baofeng] Sichuan Univ, Sichuan Univ Ctr Archaeol Sci, Chengdu 610045, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Maohua] Sichuan Univ, Coll Life Sci, Chengdu 610064, Peoples R China.
   [Li, Yongbo] Ctr Sichuan Disaster Reduct, Dept Emergency Management Sichuan Prov, Chengdu 610041, Peoples R China.
C3 Sichuan University; Sichuan University; Sichuan University
RP Luo, XL (corresponding author), Sichuan Univ, Inst Disaster Management & Reconstruct, Chengdu 610207, Peoples R China.
EM disluoxiaolong@scu.edu.cn
RI pan, yiwen/IWV-3890-2023; Wang, Maohua/GNM-7506-2022
FU National Natural Science Foun-dation of China [42377168]; National Key
   Research and Development Program of China [2023YFE0121900]; Natural
   Science Foundation of Sichuan Province in China [24NSFSC1046]; Sichuan
   University postdoctoral Research Fund [2022SCU12125, 10822041A2148]
FX This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foun-dation
   of China (Grant No. 42377168) ; the National Key Research and
   Development Program of China (Grant No. 2023YFE0121900) ; the Natural
   Science Foundation of Sichuan Province in China (No.24NSFSC1046) and the
   Sichuan University postdoctoral Research Fund (2022SCU12125,
   10822041A2148) . The financial supports are highly appreciated.
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NR 130
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 6
U2 6
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1574-9541
EI 1878-0512
J9 ECOL INFORM
JI Ecol. Inform.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 84
AR 102924
DI 10.1016/j.ecoinf.2024.102924
PG 21
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA O8L6J
UT WOS:001373579100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU von Czettritz, HJ
   Uthes, S
   Schuler, J
   Steinhäufer, R
   Kersebaum, KC
   Zander, P
AF von Czettritz, Hannah Jona
   Uthes, Sandra
   Schuler, Johannes
   Steinhaeufer, Reimund
   Kersebaum, Kurt-Christian
   Zander, Peter
TI Classification of agricultural priority and reserved areas in
   Brandenburg under consideration of bio-economic climate simulations
SO RAUMFORSCHUNG UND RAUMORDNUNG-SPATIAL RESEARCH AND PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate resilient agriculture; spatial planning; regional planning;
   economic resilience; bioeconomicanalysis; peatland conservation
ID WHEAT PRODUCTION; DIVERSIFICATION; RESILIENCE; MANAGEMENT; IMPACTS
AB Ensuring a crisis-proof food supply has become a key political issue. In Germany, official spatial planning allows the use of priority and reserved areas to secure land for agricultural use and regional food supply. The focus should be particularly on climate-resilient areas that also have a stable yield potential in the future. This paper supplements widely used, static approaches for determining priority and reserved areas with a dynamic bio-economic analysis that takes future climate scenarios into account. The results for the German federal state of Brandenburg show a high area equivalence between the static and dynamic approaches. In the case of data gaps, for example, static approaches such as soil quality indices can serve as an adequate proxy for future yield potentials. However, not all climate-robust areas can be classified as potential reserved or priority areas. Furthermore, areas that show low yield potential under future conditions are not released for other land uses. Feedback from stakeholders involved in the study showed that the use of the dynamic approach and a target value using the results of a foodshed model lead to broad acceptance. The method developed here can make a valuable contribution to climate change adaptation in spatial planning instruments.
C1 [von Czettritz, Hannah Jona; Uthes, Sandra; Schuler, Johannes; Kersebaum, Kurt-Christian; Zander, Peter] Leibniz Zentrum Agrarlandschaftsforschu ZALF eV, Eberswalder Str 84, D-15374 Muncheberg, Germany.
   [Steinhaeufer, Reimund] LOSCON GmbH, Charlottenhof 20, D-15848 Beeskow, Germany.
RP von Czettritz, HJ (corresponding author), Leibniz Zentrum Agrarlandschaftsforschu ZALF eV, Eberswalder Str 84, D-15374 Muncheberg, Germany.
EM hannah.czettritz@zalf.de; uthes@zalf.de; schuler@zalf.de;
   schuler@zalf.de; ckersebaum@zalf.de; peter.zander@zalf.de
RI Kersebaum, Kurt Christian/A-7558-2010; Schuler, Johannes/U-3510-2017;
   Zander, Peter/C-9321-2015
OI Kersebaum, Kurt Christian/0000-0002-3679-8427; Schuler,
   Johannes/0000-0002-4944-9613; Zander, Peter/0000-0003-4905-2971
FU Regionale Planungsgemeinschaft Oderland-Spree
FX The research work is partly the result of a project funded by the
   Regionale Planungsgemeinschaft Oderland-Spree.
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NR 30
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU OEKOM VERLAG GMBH
PI MUNICH
PA WALTHERSTR 29, MUNICH, 80337, GERMANY
SN 0034-0111
EI 1869-4179
J9 RAUMFORSCH RAUMORDN
JI Raumforsch. Raumordn.
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 82
IS 4
BP 338
EP 351
DI 10.14512/rur.2247
PG 14
WC Geography
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geography
GA F2F6D
UT WOS:001308031100005
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Song, SY
   Yeh, SW
   Kim, H
   Holbrook, NJ
AF Song, Se-Yong
   Yeh, Sang-Wook
   Kim, Hyerim
   Holbrook, Neil J. J.
TI Arctic warming contributes to increase in Northeast Pacific marine
   heatwave days over the past decades
SO COMMUNICATIONS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID LONG-TERM; VARIABILITY; CLIMATE; AMPLIFICATION; IMPACTS; SEA; AUSTRALIA;
   SUMMER; FLUXES
AB The increase in marine heat wave days in the Northeast Pacific ocean over the past few decades is linked to Arctic warming and sea ice decline, according to analyses of satellite-derived and reanalysis data along with idealized coupled climate model experiments.
   The frequency and duration of marine heatwaves have been increasing with ocean warming due to climate change. In particular, the Northeast Pacific has experienced intense and extensive marine heatwaves since the late 1990s - characteristically called "the Blob". Here, an investigation of satellite-derived and reanalysis data supported by idealized coupled model experiments show that Arctic warming plays an important role in the increase in Northeast Pacific marine heatwave days during boreal summers. Strong Arctic warming has acted to change the atmospheric circulation pattern over the Northeast Pacific and reduce the low-level cloud fraction from late spring to early summer. We show that the enhancement of solar radiative heat fluxes and reduced latent heat loss over a relatively large area has favored an increase in sea surface temperatures and marine heatwave days. An idealized model experiment performed here, designed to isolate the impact of Arctic warming, supports this hypothesis. The projected changes of Arctic climate on the occurrence of marine heatwaves should be considered in climate change adaptation and mitigation plans.
C1 [Song, Se-Yong; Yeh, Sang-Wook] Hanyang Univ, Dept Marine Sci & Convergence Technol, Ansan, South Korea.
   [Holbrook, Neil J. J.] Univ Tasmania, Inst Marine & Antarctic Studies, Hobart, Tas, Australia.
   [Kim, Hyerim] Korea Univ, Inst Cyber Secur & Privacy, Seoul, South Korea.
   [Holbrook, Neil J. J.] Univ Tasmania, ARC Ctr Excellence Climate Extremes, Hobart, Tas, Australia.
C3 Hanyang University; University of Tasmania; Korea University; University
   of Tasmania
RP Yeh, SW (corresponding author), Hanyang Univ, Dept Marine Sci & Convergence Technol, Ansan, South Korea.
EM swyeh@hanyang.ac.kr
RI Yeh, Sang-Wook/G-3007-2014; Holbrook, Neil/M-7544-2013
OI Holbrook, Neil/0000-0002-3523-6254
FU project "Investigation and prediction system development of marine
   heatwave around the Korean Peninsula originated from the subarctic and
   western Pacific from the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries, Korea
   [20190344]; ARC Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes [CE170100023]
FX The authors acknowledge the valuable comments from three anonymous
   reviewers that significantly improved this manuscript. This work was
   funded by the project "Investigation and prediction system development
   of marine heatwave around the Korean Peninsula originated from the
   subarctic and western Pacific (20190344)" from the Ministry of Oceans
   and Fisheries, Korea. NJH acknowledges funding from the ARC Centre of
   Excellence for Climate Extremes (CE170100023).
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NR 64
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 5
U2 34
PU SPRINGERNATURE
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2662-4435
J9 COMMUN EARTH ENVIRON
JI Commun. Earth Environ.
PD FEB 7
PY 2023
VL 4
IS 1
AR 25
DI 10.1038/s43247-023-00683-y
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA 8T0FY
UT WOS:000928947000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cervená, T
   Jarsky, V
   Cerveny, L
   Palátová, P
   Sloup, R
AF Cervena, Tereza
   Jarsky, Vilem
   Cerveny, Lubos
   Palatova, Petra
   Sloup, Roman
TI Ecosystem Services in the Context of Agroforestry-Results of a Survey
   among Agricultural Land Users in the Czech Republic
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE agroforestry; ecosystem services of trees; trees outside forests;
   windbreaks; forest buffer strips; farmers; agroforestry systems;
   multifunctionality
ID CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE; SILVOARABLE SYSTEMS; VALUATION; STAKEHOLDERS;
   EXPERIENCES; HEDGEROWS; NORTHERN; LESSONS; QUALITY; EUROPE
AB Agroforestry, the use of trees at the interface between agricultural and forestry systems, is a key component of the multifunctional European landscape, where it provides a whole range of ecosystem services. Its main potential lies in the provision of services including increasing economic yield in agriculture and providing anti-erosion measures. The main objective of this research is to assess the perception of the providing ecosystem services of woody plants growing in agroforestry by farmers as key land users in the Czech Republic. Different aspects influencing farmers' subjective perceptions were identified, especially depending on conventional versus organic farming methods. Respondents' views were mapped using a structured questionnaire, which allowed for independently assessing the importance of windbreaks. Respondents considered regulatory ecosystem services the most important ones, in particular reducing soil erosion and flood risk, or increasing the resilience of the landscape to drought. Respondents perceived the physical obstruction of trees during mechanical tillage and the tenancy relationship with the land as the most significant problem with the introduction of agroforestry systems. The aim of this study is to promote innovative approaches in the national agricultural strategy in agroforestry as one of the tools for climate change adaptation towards sustainable agricultural production.
C1 [Cervena, Tereza; Jarsky, Vilem; Cerveny, Lubos; Palatova, Petra; Sloup, Roman] Czech Univ Life Sci Prague, Fac Forestry & Wood Sci, Kamycka 129, Praha Suchdol 16500, Czech Republic.
C3 Czech University of Life Sciences Prague
RP Sloup, R (corresponding author), Czech Univ Life Sci Prague, Fac Forestry & Wood Sci, Kamycka 129, Praha Suchdol 16500, Czech Republic.
EM sloup@fld.czu.cz
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NR 103
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 3
U2 33
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD JAN
PY 2023
VL 14
IS 1
AR 30
DI 10.3390/f14010030
PG 23
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 7Y7MV
UT WOS:000915059400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Abdeladhim, MA
   Fleskens, L
   Baartman, J
   Sghaier, M
   Ouessar, M
   Ritsema, CJ
AF Abdeladhim, Mohamed Arbi
   Fleskens, Luuk
   Baartman, Jantiene
   Sghaier, Mongi
   Ouessar, Mohamed
   Ritsema, Coen J.
TI Generation of Potential Sites for Sustainable Water Harvesting
   Techniques in Oum Zessar Watershed, South East Tunisia
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE GIS; rainwater harvesting; composite sustainability indicator; spatial
   multi-criteria analysis; Tunisia
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; RAINWATER; MANAGEMENT; POLICY; MODEL; VULNERABILITY;
   CONSERVATION; RESILIENCE; IMPACT; SOIL
AB Water harvesting techniques (WHTs) are important climate change adaptation measures to better manage rainwater for domestic and agricultural purposes, but which WHT to plan where is subject to sustainability considerations. Moreover, suitability of different WHTs varies from one location to another, depending on physical and socio-economic conditions. This study aimed to identify suitable sites for WHTs taking into account stakeholders' sustainability criteria. In a participatory assessment framework, Geographic Information Systems and the "Simple Multi-Attribute Rating Technique" were combined to generate suitability maps and to guide sustainable WHTs investments. Steps included the calculation of a sustainability index for a set of traditional and newly introduced WHTs from the perspective of two stakeholder groups, farmers and decision-makers, and its integration with layers of biophysical constraints. An application of the framework in the Oum Zessar watershed, southeast Tunisia, shows that traditional techniques are the most suitable and sustainable for farmers and fall within the highly suitable class in 76.4% of the total area, while decision-makers prefer innovative techniques that are highly suitable in 80.4% of the watershed. The framework offers a scalable transparent process for knowledge integration in support of WHT investment decisions that can be adapted to other dryland areas.
C1 [Abdeladhim, Mohamed Arbi] Higher Sch Agr Mograne, Zaghouan 1121, Tunisia.
   [Abdeladhim, Mohamed Arbi; Sghaier, Mongi; Ouessar, Mohamed] Inst Reg Arides, Route Djorf Km 22-5, Medenine 4119, Tunisia.
   [Fleskens, Luuk; Baartman, Jantiene; Ritsema, Coen J.] Wageningen Univ, Soil Phys & Land Management Grp, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Institut des Regions Arides; Wageningen University & Research
RP Abdeladhim, MA (corresponding author), Higher Sch Agr Mograne, Zaghouan 1121, Tunisia.; Abdeladhim, MA (corresponding author), Inst Reg Arides, Route Djorf Km 22-5, Medenine 4119, Tunisia.
EM medarbi.abdeladhim@esamo.ucar.tn; luuk.fleskens@wur.nl;
   jantiene.baartman@wur.nl; s.mongi@ira.rnrt.tn;
   ouessar.mohamed@ira.rnrt.tn; coen.ritsema@wur.nl
RI Fleskens, Luuk/B-4004-2009; OUESSAR, MOHAMED/J-3414-2019; Baartman,
   Jantiene/B-7599-2014; Ouessar, Mohamed/L-1390-2016
OI Baartman, Jantiene/0000-0001-6051-8619; Ouessar,
   Mohamed/0000-0001-5845-760X; Sghaier, Mongi/0000-0001-9226-7172;
   Fleskens, Luuk/0000-0001-6843-0910
FU European Union [265570]
FX This research received funding from the European Union Seventh Framework
   Programme under grant agreement no 265570 (WAHARA project).
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NR 61
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 5
U2 13
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAY
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 10
AR 5754
DI 10.3390/su14105754
PG 20
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 1T7AB
UT WOS:000804880000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Song, YI
   Lee, S
AF Song, Young-Il
   Lee, Seunghan
TI Climate change risk assessment for the Republic of Korea: developing a
   systematic assessment methodology
SO LANDSCAPE AND ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change ecological impact; Ecological risk assessment; Risk
   prioritisation; Risk categorisation; Adaptation policy
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION
AB Climate change risks have become a major concern of climate change adaptation, and a systematic risk assessment is required as the first step as well as a key principle of national adaptation policy processes. Although many countries conducted risk assessments, a debate over a systematic assessment process continues, and results of the risk assessment provide limited information to making adaptation policies. Based on a case study of South Korea, this research aims to establish a national-level risk assessment process which includes systematic methodologies given the current limited time/resource and insufficient climate change information. A four-step risk assessment process is proposed: (1) collecting scientific evidence, (2) making list of preliminary risks, (3) making lists of risks and prioritising the risks, (4) categorising the risks. Enough scientific evidence and data about climate change risks of Korea were retained through first two steps, and three components of risk (hazard, exposure, vulnerability) are systematically involved by assessing the magnitude and adaptive capacity of risks. As results of the risks assessment, 93 national-level climate change risks of Korea are identified, and most high priorities in risks have high risk magnitude but low adaptive capacity. This research provided insights for direction of national adaptation policy of each sector by categorising the risks into four categories.
C1 [Song, Young-Il] Korea Environm Inst, Korea Adaptat Ctr Climate Change, Sejong, South Korea.
   [Lee, Seunghan] Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Sustainabil Res Inst, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
C3 Korea Environment Institute (KEI); University of Leeds
RP Lee, S (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Sustainabil Res Inst, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
EM yisong@kei.re.kr; eeslee@leeds.ac.uk
OI Lee, Seunghan/0000-0002-1214-4808
FU Korea Environment Institute (KEI) [2019-005-02]; Korea Ministry of
   Environment (MOE) [2014001310006]
FX This paper is based on the results of the research work "Mainstreaming
   adaptation policies-Establishing a risk list considering the impact of
   climate change" (2019-005-02) conducted by the Korea Environment
   Institute (KEI) upon the request of the Korea Ministry of Environment
   and "Development of Integrated Model for Climate Change Adaptation"
   conducted by Korea Environment Institute (KEI) with the funding by the
   Korea Ministry of Environment (MOE) as "'Climate Change Correspondence
   Program (2014001310006)".
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PG 12
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 0A5HT
UT WOS:000731201500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cousiño, A
   Penha-Lopes, G
AF Cousino, Ana
   Penha-Lopes, Gil
TI Ecosystem Based Adaptation: Concept and Terminology in Strategic
   Adaptation Planning (Municipal and Inter-Municipal) in Portugal
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA); strategic planning of adaptation;
   climate change; biodiversity; ecosystem service; nature-based solution
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LOCAL-LEVEL; SERVICES; GREEN; RESILIENCE
AB Ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) is a nature-based solution that has gained importance in the context of international climate policy, such as in the EU Adaptation Strategy (2013), which explicitly encourages its adoption and which should continue in The European Green Deal. This study aims to analyze how the EbA concept has been adopted in strategic adaptation planning at the municipal and intermunicipal levels in Portugal after the publication of the European adaptation strategy in 2013. Thus, a quantitative content analysis was carried out, based on EbA keywords, of municipal strategies and intermunicipal plans in Portugal. The term "ecosystem-based" has not been transposed as an explicit objective at the municipal and intermunicipal levels. All strategies and plans have included indirect references to the underlying elements of the EbA concept. This study highlights that although the EU Adaptation Strategy explicitly encourages EbA, this does not mean that it is adopted as a preferred adaptation approach at the local level in Portugal. The EbA seems to be more widely understood by the research community than by municipal technicians or private companies. It is necessary to explore how the EbA concept can be more widely accepted through the generation of co-benefits and by synergies between topics.
C1 [Cousino, Ana; Penha-Lopes, Gil] Univ Lisbon, Fac Ciencias, Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes cE3c, Bloco C2,Piso 5, P-1749016 Lisbon, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Lisboa
RP Cousiño, A (corresponding author), Univ Lisbon, Fac Ciencias, Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes cE3c, Bloco C2,Piso 5, P-1749016 Lisbon, Portugal.
EM ana.rez.cousino@gmail.com; gppenha-lopes@fc.ul.pt
RI Penha-Lopes, Gil/N-1475-2015
OI Penha-Lopes, Gil/0000-0002-1024-1954; Cousino, Ana/0000-0002-4262-890X
FU Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia [IF/00940/2015]; cE3c FCT Unit
   [UIDB/00329/2020]
FX We would like to thank Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia for
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   APC was funded by the cE3c FCT Unit funding UIDB/00329/2020.
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PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
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J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUN
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 11
AR 6145
DI 10.3390/su13116145
PG 13
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SR0TP
UT WOS:000660758600001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rubio, I
   Hileman, J
   Ojea, E
AF Rubio, Iratxe
   Hileman, Jacob
   Ojea, Elena
TI Social connectivity and adaptive capacity strategies in large-scale
   fisheries
SO ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptative capacity; global climate change; governance; social network
   analysis; tropical tunas
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; COMANAGEMENT; GOVERNANCE; MANAGEMENT; PARTICIPATION;
   ADAPTATION; FRAMEWORK; NETWORKS; INSIGHTS; TOOLS
AB Large-scale fisheries are important social-ecological systems that are increasingly being threatened by global climate change. Adaptive capacity is key for moving fisheries onto climate resilient pathways, however, implementing policies to improve adaptive capacity is challenging given the many diverse stakeholders involved in fisheries. Previous research suggests social networks are integral to adaptive capacity because social connectivity can enable, or constrain, knowledge and information sharing. We examine the network of communication among stakeholders in the Basque tropical tuna freezer purse seine fishery in the eastern Atlantic Ocean. We use cluster analysis, descriptive statistics, and exponential random graph models to assess whether different types of actors, occupying different network positions, value similar adaptive capacity strategies. The results indicate that many actor types are frequently connected within the fishery. Preferences for adaptive capacity strategies vary within and across actor types, and the preferences of highly central actors are generally more homogeneous and narrowly focused. All actors agree on the importance of the social organization domain from adaptive capacity, while fishing industry representatives tend to have the most holistic perspective on adaptive capacity overall. We discuss the implications of these findings as they relate to policies for supporting adaptive capacity and climate resilient fisheries.
C1 [Rubio, Iratxe] Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Leioa, Spain.
   [Rubio, Iratxe; Ojea, Elena] Univ Vigo, Future Oc Ans Lab, CIM, Vigo, Spain.
   [Hileman, Jacob] Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3); Universidade de Vigo; Stockholm
   University
RP Rubio, I (corresponding author), Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Leioa, Spain.
RI Hileman, Jacob/JQH-9516-2023; Rubio, Iratxe/P-6902-2016; ojea,
   elena/D-3709-2018
OI Rubio, Iratxe/0000-0002-7025-006X; Hileman, Jacob/0000-0002-5617-6318;
   ojea, elena/0000-0003-4991-8077
FU project CLOCK, under the European Horizon 2020 Program, ERC Starting
   Grant - European Research Council [679812]; Basque Government through
   the BERC 2018-2021 program; Spanish Ministry of Economy and
   Competitiveness MINECO through the BC3 Maria de Maeztu excellence
   accreditation [MDM-2017-0714]
FX This research was supported by the project CLOCK, under the European
   Horizon 2020 Program, ERC Starting Grant Agreement n degrees 679812
   funded by the European Research Council. It is also supported by the
   Basque Government through the BERC 2018-2021 program and by the Spanish
   Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness MINECO through the BC3 Maria de
   Maeztu excellence accreditation MDM-2017-0714. We thank, without
   implicating, O. Bodin, I. Fetzer, and J.Rocha for scientific advice, and
   all the participants of the study who made it possible.
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J9 ECOL SOC
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PD JUN
PY 2021
VL 26
IS 2
AR 42
DI 10.5751/ES-12395-260242
PG 18
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SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TB8TT
UT WOS:000668219400028
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Elrick-Barr, CE
   Smith, TF
AF Elrick-Barr, Carmen E.
   Smith, Timothy F.
TI Policy is rarely intentional or substantial for coastal issues in
   Australia
SO OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Coastal management; Governance; Climate change; Environmental
   management; Law; Policy
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT; VULNERABILITY; INDICATORS;
   FRAMEWORK; RESPONSES; PROGRESS; AREAS
AB The condition of coastal areas around the world continues to decline despite over 50 years of integrated coastal management efforts. A myriad of institutional instruments such as legislation, policies and plans influence decisions made in the coastal zone. Despite this, there is limited comprehensive analysis of the degree to which institutional arrangements are focused on coastal issues and able to progress coastal management objectives. To address this gap we developed and applied an intentionality and substantiality framework to analyse 92 instruments with a role in coastal management at State, regional and local scales in Australia. We found that: (i) threats to Australia's coast are not adequately identified or managed via institutional instruments; (ii) institutional instruments do not make a contribution to coastal management unless intentionally designed to do so; and (iii) even in the presence of intention, comprehensiveness in the proposed actions is limited. The lack of comprehensive action is particularly evident in instruments operating at the local scale. Consequently, a reliance on local scale support to meet coastal management objectives in isolation is misplaced. While some States have recently implemented coastal reforms, the findings show that the decline in coastal condition is unlikely to be comprehensively addressed through current institutional arrangements.
C1 [Elrick-Barr, Carmen E.; Smith, Timothy F.] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sch Law & Soc, Sustainabil Res Ctr, Locked Bag 4, Maroochydore, Qld 4558, Australia.
   [Smith, Timothy F.] Brock Univ, Environm Sustainabil Res Ctr, 1812 Sir Isaac Brock Way, St Catharines, ON L2S 3A1, Canada.
   [Smith, Timothy F.] Uppsala Univ, SWEDESD, Campus Gotland, SE-62167 Visby, Sweden.
C3 University of the Sunshine Coast; Brock University; Uppsala University
RP Elrick-Barr, CE (corresponding author), Univ Sunshine Coast, Sch Law & Soc, Sustainabil Res Ctr, Locked Bag 4, Maroochydore, Qld 4558, Australia.
EM celrick@usc.edu.au
RI Elrick-Barr, Carmen/Q-9861-2019
OI Elrick-Barr, Carmen/0000-0001-6868-1373; Smith,
   Timothy/0000-0002-3991-5211
FU Australian Government through the Australian Research Council
   [FT180100652]; Australian Research Council [FT180100652] Funding Source:
   Australian Research Council
FX This research was supported by the Australian Government through the
   Australian Research Council's Discovery Projects Funding Scheme (Project
   FT180100652) . The views expressed herein are those of the authors and
   are not necessarily those of the Australian Government or Australian
   Research Council. This work contributes to Future Earth Coasts, a Global
   Research Project of Future Earth.
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   Stojanovic T, 2004, OCEAN COAST MANAGE, V47, P273, DOI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2004.08.001
   Turner CK, 2017, FRONT PSYCHOL, V8, DOI 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00137
   Turner RK, 2000, J MARINE SYST, V25, P447, DOI 10.1016/S0924-7963(00)00033-6
   Uiterwyk K, 2019, OCEAN COAST MANAGE, V168, P177, DOI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2018.10.028
   Vogel B, 2015, GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG, V31, P110, DOI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.01.001
   Wescott G, 2009, COAST MANAGE, V37, P501, DOI 10.1080/08920750903044824
   Wurzel RudigerK.W., 2013, Environmental Governance in Europe: A Comparative Analysis of New Environmental Policy Instruments
NR 45
TC 21
Z9 22
U1 1
U2 4
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-5691
EI 1873-524X
J9 OCEAN COAST MANAGE
JI Ocean Coastal Manage.
PD JUN 15
PY 2021
VL 207
AR 105609
DI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2021.105609
EA MAR 2021
PG 11
WC Oceanography; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Oceanography; Water Resources
GA SU7WP
UT WOS:000663343000002
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Dodoo, A
AF Dodoo, Ambrose
BE Kurnitski, J
   Kalamees, T
TI Energy and indoor thermal comfort performance of a Swedish residential
   building under future climate change conditions
SO 12TH NORDIC SYMPOSIUM ON BUILDING PHYSICS (NSB 2020)
SE E3S Web of Conferences
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 12th Nordic Symposium on Building Physics (NSB)
CY SEP 06-09, 2020
CL Tallinn, ESTONIA
ID OVERHEATING RISK; INPUT PARAMETERS; DEMAND; ASSUMPTIONS; IMPACTS;
   BALANCE; SWEDEN; STOCK; UK
AB The latest climate change projections for Sweden suggest mean annual temperature increase of up to 5.5 degrees C by 2100, compared to 1961-1990 levels. In this study we investigate the potential impacts of climate change on the energy demand for space conditioning, overheating risk and indoor thermal comfort of a modern multi-storey residential building in Sweden. We explore climate change adaptation strategies to improve the building's performance under the climate change conditions, including increased ventilation, solar shading, improved windows and mechanical cooling. The building is analysed under future climate projections for the 2050-2059 time frame, with representative concentration pathway (RCP) 2.6, 4.5 and 8.5 scenarios. The building's performances under these future climates are compared to those under the historical climate of 1961-1990 and recent climate of 1981-2010. The results suggest that climate change will significantly influence energy performance and indoor comfort conditions of buildings in the Swedish context. Overheating hours and Predicted Percentage of Dissatisfied (PPD) increased significantly under the future climate scenarios. Furthermore space heating demand is reduced and cooling demand is increased for the studied building. However, effective adaptation strategies significantly improved the buildings' energy and indoor climate performances under both current and future climate conditions.
C1 [Dodoo, Ambrose] Linnaeus Univ, Dept Bldg Technol, Vaxjo, Sweden.
C3 Linnaeus University
RP Dodoo, A (corresponding author), Linnaeus Univ, Dept Bldg Technol, Vaxjo, Sweden.
EM ambrose.dodoo@lnu.se
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   [Anonymous], 2006, Ergonomics of the Thermal EnvironmentAnalytical Determination and Interpretation of Thermal Comfort Using Calculation of the PMV and PPD Indices and Local Thermal Comfort Criteria
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   Camfil, 2017, CIT POLL AIRMAIL
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   Dodoo A, 2014, ENRGY PROCED, V61, P1179, DOI 10.1016/j.egypro.2014.11.1048
   Dodoo A, 2016, ENERGY, V97, P534, DOI 10.1016/j.energy.2015.12.086
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NR 35
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 6
PU E D P SCIENCES
PI CEDEX A
PA 17 AVE DU HOGGAR PARC D ACTIVITES COUTABOEUF BP 112, F-91944 CEDEX A,
   FRANCE
SN 2267-1242
J9 E3S WEB CONF
PY 2020
VL 172
AR 02001
DI 10.1051/e3sconf/202017202001
PG 8
WC Architecture; Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable
   Science & Technology; Engineering, Civil; Physics, Applied
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Architecture; Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology -
   Other Topics; Engineering; Physics
GA BQ4RB
UT WOS:000594033400010
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Singh, AK
   Das, B
   Mali, SS
   Bhavana, P
   Shinde, R
   Bhatt, BP
AF Singh, A. K.
   Das, Bikash
   Mali, S. S.
   Bhavana, P.
   Shinde, Reshma
   Bhatt, B. P.
TI Intensification of rice-fallow cropping systems in the Eastern Plateau
   region of India: diversifying cropping systems and climate risk
   mitigation
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Rice-fallow; crop intensification; direct-seeded rice;
   water-productivity; participatory research; climate change adaptation
ID IMPROVED LIVELIHOODS; FOOD SECURITY; MANAGEMENT; ADAPTATION; IRRIGATION;
   IMPACT; LEVEL
AB This article reports research from 2013 to 2016 with tribal smallholders, which evaluated technological interventions, aimed to diversify and intensify cropping systems and improve the climate resilience of the farming systems using modelling and participatory evaluation process. The options on providing access to irrigation water, strategic use of irrigation, and better crop husbandry practices were evaluated for their potential to impart climate resilience in farming systems. Irrigation trials revealed that, in the event of delayed rainfall, irrigation of 229-267 mm ensured timely transplanting and resulted in higher paddy yields (7.0 t ha(-1)). Supplemental irrigation during a mid-season dry spell increased paddy yield to from 0.64 to 6.1 t ha(-1). Better vegetable cultivation practices viz. drip irrigation, polythene mulch, nursery raising in seedling trays and raised bed cultivation exhibited great potential to build climate resilience in the farming systems of the region. The study highlights the need for investments in small water harvesting structures and the promotion of alternative ways of cultivating and irrigating paddy during different climatic situations. The study suggests effective ways of engaging communities coupled with appropriate technological interventions to understand climate change and adaptation needs of the rice-fallow ecosystems in eastern India.
C1 [Singh, A. K.; Das, Bikash; Mali, S. S.; Bhavana, P.; Shinde, Reshma] ICAR Res Complex Eastern Reg, Farming Syst Res Ctr Hill & Plateau Reg, Ranchi 834010, Jharkhand, India.
   [Bhatt, B. P.] ICAR Res Complex Eastern Reg, Patna, Bihar, India.
C3 Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR); ICAR - ICAR Research
   Complex for Eastern Region; Indian Council of Agricultural Research
   (ICAR); ICAR - ICAR Research Complex for Eastern Region
RP Mali, SS (corresponding author), ICAR Res Complex Eastern Reg, Farming Syst Res Ctr Hill & Plateau Reg, Ranchi 834010, Jharkhand, India.
EM santosh.icar@gmail.com
RI Shinde, Reshma/ABD-1134-2020; Das, Bikash/AAZ-2525-2020; mali,
   santosh/I-1602-2014; Bhatt, B P/R-3856-2016
OI Das, Bikash/0000-0002-7502-4387; Shinde, Reshma/0000-0001-8903-9670;
   Mali, Santosh/0000-0001-9058-9311; Bhatt, B P/0000-0002-2575-6619
FU Indian Council of Agricultural Research [ICAR-RCER/RCRanchi/2014/149]
FX This work was supported by Indian Council of Agricultural Research:
   [Grant Number ICAR-RCER/RCRanchi/2014/149].
CR Agarwal B.K., 2010, SOIL RESOURCE INVENTORY OF JHARJHAND
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NR 26
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 1
U2 13
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD OCT 20
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 9
BP 791
EP 800
DI 10.1080/17565529.2019.1696735
EA DEC 2019
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA OS8DZ
UT WOS:000501119500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Groulx, M
AF Groulx, Mark
TI "Other people's initiatives": exploring mediation and appropriation of
   place as barriers to community-based climate change adaptation
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; sense of place; adaptation planning; community planning;
   resilience
ID PRO-ENVIRONMENTAL BEHAVIORS; SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY;
   HUDSON-BAY; ATTACHMENT; SENSE; CHURCHILL; DIMENSIONALITY;
   IDENTIFICATION; PERCEPTIONS
AB Adaptation planning at the community level takes on various forms. It generally involves a process of defining climate impacts, vulnerabilities, and actions that can build community resilience. Typically, these processes rely on climate experts and policy-makers to define what is at risk, and therefore what is worthy of investment and protection. Emerging approaches to community-based adaptation-planning advocate for stronger community control over these processes. Drawing on a place-based approach to adaptation, this paper examines place meaning as a co-constructed process. It explores how this process shapes opportunities for community-based climate action in Churchill, Canada. Results indicate that community members acknowledge many competing threats to their sense of place, and suggest that this competition may reduce the perceived need to prioritise climate action to protect connections to place. Results also reveal a concern among community members that local place identity has been appropriated for economic gain, which may further reduce the drive to act in protection of an already exploited sense of place. Overall, findings support calls to adopt place-based perspectives to enhance the capacity of adaptation planning to understand local needs, values, and levers for action.
C1 [Groulx, Mark] Univ Northern British Columbia, Sch Environm Planning, 3333 Univ Way, Prince George, BC V2N 4Z9, Canada.
C3 University of Northern British Columbia
RP Groulx, M (corresponding author), Univ Northern British Columbia, Sch Environm Planning, 3333 Univ Way, Prince George, BC V2N 4Z9, Canada.
EM mark.groulx@unbc.ca
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NR 75
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 14
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PY 2017
VL 22
IS 11
BP 1378
EP 1393
DI 10.1080/13549839.2017.1348343
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA FQ6MD
UT WOS:000418477700005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Duncan, JMA
   Saikia, SD
   Gupta, N
   Biggs, EM
AF Duncan, J. M. A.
   Saikia, S. D.
   Gupta, N.
   Biggs, E. M.
TI Observing climate impacts on tea yield in Assam, India
SO APPLIED GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Tea productivity; Precipitation variability; Panel based
   model; Climate-smart agriculture; Assam
ID TEMPERATURE TRENDS; SUMMER MONSOON; DATA SET; RAINFALL; VARIABILITY;
   RESPONSES
AB Tea is an important cash crop for the economy in northeast India. It also supports the livelihoods of a large proportion of the population. At the same time, tea growth is sensitive to climatic conditions making it vulnerable to climate change and variability. Identifying the tea yield response to climatic variability in operational plantations, and identifying the most important climatic variables that impact tea yield is critical to assessing the vulnerability of the industry and informing adaptation. Here, we developed a garden level panel dataset and estimated statistical models to identify the causal effect of monthly temperature, monthly precipitation, drought intensity, and precipitation variability on tea yield. We found decreasing tea yield returns to warmer monthly average temperatures, and when monthly temperatures were above 26.6 degrees C warming had a negative effect. We found that drought intensity did not affect tea yield and that precipitation variability, and in particular precipitation intensity, negatively affect tea yield. An increase in average temperatures as expected with global warming will reduce the productivity of tea plantations, all else held equal. Further, interventions to reduce the sensitivity of tea plantations to warming and precipitation variability will have immediate pay-offs as well as providing climate change adaptation benefits. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Duncan, J. M. A.] Tufts Univ, Fletcher Sch, CIERP, Medford, MA 02155 USA.
   [Saikia, S. D.; Gupta, N.] Tocklai Tea Res Inst, Tea Res Assoc, Jorhat 785008, Assam, India.
   [Duncan, J. M. A.; Biggs, E. M.] Univ Western Australia, Sch Earth & Environm, Crawley, WA, Australia.
   [Duncan, J. M. A.; Biggs, E. M.] Univ Southampton, Geog & Environm, Southampton, Hants, England.
   [Saikia, S. D.] World Resources Inst, Bangalore, Karnataka, India.
C3 Tufts University; University of Western Australia; University of
   Southampton
RP Duncan, JMA (corresponding author), Univ Western Australia, Sch Earth & Environm, Crawley, WA, Australia.
EM John.Duncan@uwa.edu.au; sukanya.saikia.1990@gmail.com;
   n.gupta@tocklai.net; eloise.biggs@uwa.edu.au
RI Gupta, Niladri/AAY-5890-2021
OI Gupta, Niladri/0000-0001-5047-8350; Duncan, John/0000-0001-9752-1002;
   Biggs, Eloise/0000-0002-8380-0489
FU UKIERI-DST Programme; Department for Science and Technology, Government
   of India [DST/INT/UK/P-78/2014]; British Council [DST-2013-14/119]
FX This work was supported by the UKIERI-DST Programme, with joint funding
   from the Department for Science and Technology, Government of India
   [DST/INT/UK/P-78/2014, 2014]; British Council [DST-2013-14/119, 2014].
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NR 33
TC 62
Z9 64
U1 8
U2 71
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0143-6228
EI 1873-7730
J9 APPL GEOGR
JI Appl. Geogr.
PD DEC
PY 2016
VL 77
BP 64
EP 71
DI 10.1016/j.apgeog.2016.10.004
PG 8
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA ED8CG
UT WOS:000389098900006
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Huntjens, P
   Pahl-Wostl, C
   Rihoux, B
   Schlüter, M
   Flachner, Z
   Neto, S
   Koskova, R
   Dickens, C
   Kiti, IN
AF Huntjens, Patrick
   Pahl-Wostl, Claudia
   Rihoux, Benoit
   Schlueter, Maja
   Flachner, Zsuzsanna
   Neto, Susana
   Koskova, Romana
   Dickens, Chris
   Kiti, Isah Nabide
TI Adaptive Water Management and Policy Learning in a Changing Climate: a
   Formal Comparative Analysis of Eight Water Management Regimes in Europe,
   Africa and Asia
SO ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE policy learning; triple loop learning; adaptive and integrated water
   management; adaptive capacity; river basin management; climate change
   adaptation strategies; floods; droughts; formal comparative analysis;
   multi-value qualitative comparative analysis (mvQCA); complex adaptive
   systems
ID TRANSITIONS
AB This article provides an evidence-based and policy-relevant contribution to understanding the phenomenon of policy learning and its structural constraints in the field of river basin management, in particular related to coping with current and future climatic hazards such as floods and droughts. This has been done by a formal comparative analysis of eight water management regimes, by using multi-value qualitative comparative analysis, focusing on the relationship between regime characteristics (as explanatory variables) and different levels of policy learning (as output value). This research has revealed the importance of the socio-cognitive dimension, as an essential emerging property of complex adaptive governance systems. This socio-cognitive dimension depends on a specific set of structural conditions; in particular, better integrated cooperation structures in combination with advanced information management are the key factors leading towards higher levels of policy learning. Furthermore, this research highlights a number of significant positive correlations between different regime elements, thereby identifying a stabilizing mechanism in current management regimes, and this research also highlights the necessity of fine-tuning centralized control with bottom-up approaches. Copyright (C) 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment.
C1 [Huntjens, Patrick; Pahl-Wostl, Claudia] Univ Osnabruck, D-4500 Osnabruck, Germany.
   [Rihoux, Benoit] Catholic Univ Louvain, Unite Sci Polit & Relat Int SPRI, Ctr Polit Comparee, Louvain, Belgium.
   [Huntjens, Patrick] Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Schlueter, Maja] UFZ Helmholtz Ctr Environm Res, Helmholtz, Germany.
   [Flachner, Zsuzsanna] Hungarian Acad Sci RISSAC, Budapest, Hungary.
   [Neto, Susana] Univ Tecn Lisboa, Inst Super Tecn, Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Koskova, Romana] Academy Sci Czech Republ IHAS, Prague, Czech Republic.
C3 University Osnabruck; Universite Catholique Louvain; Wageningen
   University & Research; Helmholtz Association; Helmholtz Center for
   Environmental Research (UFZ); Universidade de Lisboa; Czech Academy of
   Sciences
RP Huntjens, P (corresponding author), Wageningen Univ & Res WUR, Publ Adm & Policy Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM patrickhuntjens@yahoo.com
RI Pahl-Wostl, Claudia/ABW-9068-2022; Dickens, Chris/P-7379-2019; Schlüter,
   Maja/C-2374-2015; Neto, Susana/T-5703-2019
OI Dickens, Chris/0000-0002-4251-7767; Rihoux, Benoit/0000-0001-9836-5056;
   Neto, Susana/0000-0001-5231-8633
CR [Anonymous], 2008, The role of adaptive and integrated water management (AIWM) in developing climate change adaptation strategies for dealing with floods and droughts: a formal comparative analysis of eight water management regimes in Europe, Asia, and Africa
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NR 57
TC 127
Z9 149
U1 4
U2 85
PU WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA ONE MONTGOMERY ST, SUITE 1200, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104 USA
SN 1756-932X
EI 1756-9338
J9 ENVIRON POLICY GOV
JI Environ. Policy Gov.
PD MAY-JUN
PY 2011
VL 21
IS 3
BP 145
EP 163
DI 10.1002/eet.571
PG 19
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 886TA
UT WOS:000299875600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wilson, E
   Nicol, F
   Nanayakkara, L
AF Wilson, Elizabeth
   Nicol, Fergus
   Nanayakkara, Leyon
TI Public Urban Open Space and Human Thermal Comfort: The Implications of
   Alternative Climate Change and Socio-economic Scenarios
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; socio-economic scenarios; adaptive capacity; public open
   space; human thermal comfort; social justice; Manchester
ID ADAPTATION
AB Climate change adaptation presents particular challenges in urban areas, where historic and current investment in fixed stock and infrastructure might constrain adaptation. This paper explores how two elements of adaptive capacity-building that capacity and delivering adaptation actions-are likely to be constrained by wider social and economic factors affecting urban societies. Public open space in urban areas, although having a vital role to play under conditions of climate change, is already a contested policy area. Using the field of outdoor thermal comfort as an example of current adaptive behaviour, the paper reports on a study that examined the perceptions of thermal comfort of different users of public spaces in Manchester. It considers the implications of climate change scenarios for the ability to maintain thermal comfort in open spaces and examines the scope for physical intervention, such as through urban and built form design, to build adaptive capacity. However, it also explores possible scenarios of urban life under conditions of climate change and concludes that socio-economic determinants of access to and management of open space are likely to be of critical significance in delivering adaptation options, which are accessible to all and meet objectives of social justice.
C1 [Wilson, Elizabeth; Nicol, Fergus; Nanayakkara, Leyon] Oxford Brookes Univ, Sch Built Environm, Oxford OX3 0BP, England.
C3 Oxford Brookes University
RP Wilson, E (corresponding author), Oxford Brookes Univ, Sch Built Environm, Gipsy Lane, Oxford OX3 0BP, England.
EM ebwilson@brookes.ac.uk
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NR 47
TC 30
Z9 35
U1 2
U2 42
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PY 2008
VL 10
IS 1
BP 31
EP 45
DI 10.1080/15239080701652615
PG 15
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA 451RU
UT WOS:000266488500002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lieberknecht, K
   Carlson, N
   Stephens, K
   Leite, F
   Acuna, F
   Lowell, J
AF Lieberknecht, Katherine
   Carlson, Nancy
   Stephens, Keri
   Leite, Fernanda
   Acuna, Frances
   Lowell, Jonathan
TI Closing the Climate Gap
SO JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN PLANNING ASSOCIATION
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation planning; climate trauma; community capacity; local
   knowledge; mental health
ID EMPIRICAL LITERATURE; CHANGE ADAPTATION; LOCAL KNOWLEDGE; JUSTICE;
   RESILIENCE; COMMUNITY; QUALITY; PARTICIPATION; VULNERABILITY; MITIGATION
AB Problem, research strategy, and findingsAlthough theory and practice contend that local knowledge improves climate adaptation planning, little research has documented the kinds of information shared by residents. Planners can use this information to assist in the creation of planning processes and tools, as well as investigate how local knowledge contributes-or does not contribute-to planning outcomes. We developed a provisional typology of how local knowledge has been used for adaptation planning and used a case study to ask: When compared with existing research, what information do residents share? How might this knowledge be useful for climate adaptation? In interviews, residents identified new ideas about local knowledge and climate adaptation planning: cascading harms and repeated trauma from-and mental health implications related to-climate events, lack of trust in municipalities, and how community capacity increases climate adaptation. Although these themes support existing research, to our knowledge, these findings are the first empirical data from studies focused on local knowledge in which frontline residents themselves identified the need for increased attention to mental health, community capacity, and trust building. Our findings contribute to larger conversations about climate adaptation planning as well as help inform the development of an adaptation tool in Austin (TX).Takeaway for practiceWe identified three takeaways for climate adaptation planning: increase acknowledgment of and attention to mental health effects, integrate local knowledge about community capacity, and consider incorporating local knowledge to build trust.
C1 [Lieberknecht, Katherine] Univ Texas Austin UTAustin, Sch Architecture, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
   [Carlson, Nancy; Lowell, Jonathan] UT Austin, Austin, TX USA.
   [Stephens, Keri] UT Austin, Moody Coll Commun, Austin, TX USA.
   [Leite, Fernanda] UT Austin, Cockrell Sch Engn, Austin, TX USA.
   [Acuna, Frances] Go Austin Vamos Austin, Austin, TX USA.
C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin; University of
   Texas System; University of Texas Austin; University of Texas System;
   University of Texas Austin
RP Lieberknecht, K (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin UTAustin, Sch Architecture, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
EM klieberknecht@utexas.edu; nancy.carl-son@austin.utexas.edu;
   keri.stephens@austin.utexas.edu; fernanda.leite@utexas.edu;
   frances@goaustinvamosaustin.org; jonathan.lowell@austin.utexas.edu
RI Leite, Fernanda/AAT-2099-2021
OI Leite, Fernanda/0000-0002-7789-4474; Lieberknecht,
   Katherine/0000-0002-4168-7457; Stephens, Keri/0000-0002-9526-2331
FU National Science Foundation
FX No Statement Available
CR Adaptation Clearinghouse, 2021, MAN RETR RIS SEAS CI
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NR 114
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 4
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0194-4363
EI 1939-0130
J9 J AM PLANN ASSOC
JI J. Am. Plan. Assoc.
PD OCT 1
PY 2024
VL 90
IS 4
BP 758
EP 773
DI 10.1080/01944363.2024.2318226
EA MAR 2024
PG 16
WC Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA J2Q1V
UT WOS:001194221400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Hoffmann, E
   Rupp, J
   Sander, K
AF Hoffmann, Esther
   Rupp, Johannes
   Sander, Kirsten
BE Filho, WL
   Jacob, D
TI What Do Users Expect from Climate Adaptation Services? Developing an
   Information Platform Based on User Surveys
SO HANDBOOK OF CLIMATE SERVICES
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID DECISION-SUPPORT; BARRIERS; LESSONS; TOOLS
AB We present the preparatory research for the German Climate Preparedness Portal (KLiVO-www.klivoportal.de)-a meta-portal of climate adaptation and climate information services initiated by the German Government. Our work focuses on user needs and expectations and we followed the four-step user integration process suggested by Swart et al. (2017), but added a fifth step, which involves continuing the exchange with users after implementation of the KLiVO Portal through developing a user-provider network. To analyze user needs we conducted two online surveys with a total of 972 participants and 55 qualitative interviews. The overarching research questions for our analysis were: What kind of adaptation services do users need? What are current deficits in addressing user needs? How can authoritative climate adaptation services be selected and presented on the KLiVO Portal? Even though 82% of the respondents deal with climate adaptation in their work, only a third were aware of the adaptation services presented and only one in ten had actually used them. Respondents reported that the services are difficult to find, not sufficiently specific, and of indeterminate quality. Demand, however, is high: half of the respondents reported a need for such adaptation services for assessing risks and for planning, assessing, and implementing adaptation measures. We used the results of our research to develop the KLiVO Portal and draw conclusions for climate adaptation services and meta-platforms in general: The landscape of climate adaptation services needs to be restructured; quality assurance would ensure reliability; communication between users and providers must be improved and must continue when services are on the market. We suggest further research on continuous user integration and an evaluation of climate adaptation services regarding their effectiveness.
C1 [Hoffmann, Esther; Rupp, Johannes] Inst Ecol Econ Res, Potsdamer Str 105, D-10785 Berlin, Germany.
   [Sander, Kirsten] German Environm Agcy, FG 116,Worlitzer Pl 1, D-06844 Dessau Roblau, Germany.
RP Hoffmann, E (corresponding author), Inst Ecol Econ Res, Potsdamer Str 105, D-10785 Berlin, Germany.
EM Esther.hoffmann@ioew.de; Johannes.rupp@ioew.de; kirsten.sander@uba.de
FU German Federal Environment Agency [3717 48 1010, 3714 48 102 0]
FX The research presented here was financed by the German Federal
   Environment Agency (Funding No. 3717 48 1010 and 3714 48 102 0). We are
   grateful to our colleagues at the Institute for Ecological
   EconomyResearch (IOW), especially Theresa Zimmermann, LeaKliem,
   andMarlen Ihm, and at the Federal Environment Agency, especially
   Sebastian Ebert and Dr. Achim Daschkeit. Moreover, we would like to
   thank our research partners, ecolo, namely Manfred Born, Claudia Korner
   and Lars Galwoschus, and Dr. Torsten Grothmann from Dr.
   Grothmann-research and consulting. We are also grateful to two anonymous
   reviewers for their constructive feedback and their suggestions how to
   improve the article.
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NR 35
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 1
U2 5
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-030-36875-3; 978-3-030-36874-6
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2020
BP 105
EP 134
DI 10.1007/978-3-030-36875-3_7
D2 10.1007/978-3-030-36875-3
PG 30
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA BR8WF
UT WOS:000674456500008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gaegane, L
AF Gaegane, Lesego
TI Incorporating Sustainability into Development Plans in Selected African
   Cities
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE environmental sustainability; climate-resilient; development plans;
   mainstreaming; sustainable cities; resilient cities; sustainable
   development
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RESILIENCE; BARRIERS
AB African cities face critical challenges in delivering essential services due to limited financial resources and vulnerabilities to climate change impacts, such as floods, and water and energy insecurity. Many cities lack adequate stormwater drainage infrastructure and capacity, hindering their ability to implement environmental sustainability projects. Reports show that two-thirds of sub-Saharan African cities are "at extreme risk" from climate change, threatening local infrastructure and development. Climate change mitigation and adaptation require integration across all sectors, as development without environmental considerations can exacerbate vulnerabilities. This study evaluated how selected African cities have incorporated environmental sustainability into their development plans, using the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) mainstreaming framework for assessment. The research employed a qualitative approach through thematic content analysis, examining both successes and challenges in mainstreaming environmental sustainability. Findings indicate varying success levels, with some cities excelling in integrating certain environmental sustainability dimensions, while others face significant barriers. The study identifies key enablers and impediments to the effective incorporation of environmental sustainability into urban development, concluding that, while some aspects of environmental sustainability mainstreaming are well addressed, others remain inadequately integrated. These findings underscore the need for a more systematic and comprehensive approach to embedding environmental sustainability within urban development policies and practices across African cities.
C1 [Gaegane, Lesego] Univ Witwatersrand, Wits Business Sch, ZA-2000 Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of Witwatersrand
RP Gaegane, L (corresponding author), Univ Witwatersrand, Wits Business Sch, ZA-2000 Johannesburg, South Africa.
EM 769580@students.wits.ac.za
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NR 83
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 23
AR 10493
DI 10.3390/su162310493
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA P4R0C
UT WOS:001377786300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Contreras, MT
   Nash, S
   Escauriaza, C
AF Contreras, Maria Teresa
   Nash, Sebastian
   Escauriaza, Cristian
TI Anthropogenic effects on flood hazards in a hyper-arid watershed: The
   2015 Atacama floods
SO EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Atacama flood; human impacts; hydrodynamic modelling; hyper-arid regions
ID EXTREME PRECIPITATION; CLIMATE-CHANGE; FLASH FLOODS; DESERT; REGION;
   INUNDATION; EVENTS; CHILE; MODEL; COAST
AB An unprecedented precipitation event in the hyper-arid Atacama Desert of Northern Chile occurred in March 2015. Geomorphic alterations to the river channel and the coastal zone, coupled with the exceptional magnitude of the rainfall, caused catastrophic damage and loss of life. On the coast of the El Salado watershed, legacy mine tailings infilled the watershed-ocean connection, while the river channel was altered both by tailings and urbanization. The consequences of this event resulted from the coupling of anthropogenic geomorphic changes with an unusual climate event. Lack of field data, complex geomorphology and sediment loads influenced by human activity make analysing floods in these regions especially challenging. The objective of this work is to improve our understanding of the factors that control flood hazards by using numerical simulations to reconstruct the 2015 flood in El Salado. We carry out unsteady two-dimensional simulations fully coupled with the sediment concentration to identify the influence of tailing deposits, considering high-resolution data of the pre- and post-2015 flood topography. The results highlight the importance of specific event-based studies, using models that can help designing better strategies for climate change adaptation and risk mitigation, while providing information for risk reduction and channel restoration.
C1 [Contreras, Maria Teresa] Los Alamos Natl Lab, Earth & Environm Sci Div, Los Alamos, NM USA.
   [Nash, Sebastian; Escauriaza, Cristian] Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Dept Ingn Hidraul & Ambiental, Av Vicuna Mackenna 4860, Santiago 7820436, Chile.
C3 United States Department of Energy (DOE); Los Alamos National
   Laboratory; Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile
RP Escauriaza, C (corresponding author), Pontificia Univ Catolica Chile, Dept Ingn Hidraul & Ambiental, Av Vicuna Mackenna 4860, Santiago 7820436, Chile.
EM cescauri@ing.puc.cl
RI Escauriaza, Cristian/D-6318-2014
FU Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientfico y Tecnolgico [1191785, 2023,
   1523A0009, ECM-02]; Fondecyt
FX This work has been supported by Fondecyt project 1191785. We acknowledge
   the additional support from ANID/Fondap 2023 Grant 1523A0009 and the
   supercomputing infrastructure of the NLHPC (ECM-02).
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NR 59
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 0
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0197-9337
EI 1096-9837
J9 EARTH SURF PROC LAND
JI Earth Surf. Process. Landf.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 49
IS 15
BP 5362
EP 5376
DI 10.1002/esp.6017
EA NOV 2024
PG 15
WC Geography, Physical; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Physical Geography; Geology
GA P9X9T
UT WOS:001357149000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Piraei, R
   Niazkar, M
   Gangi, F
   Türkkan, GE
   Afzali, SH
AF Piraei, Reza
   Niazkar, Majid
   Gangi, Fabiola
   Turkkan, Gokcen Eryilmaz
   Afzali, Seied Hosein
TI Short-Term Drought Forecast across Two Different Climates Using Machine
   Learning Models
SO HYDROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE drought; standardized precipitation index; machine learning; XGBoost
ID STANDARDIZED PRECIPITATION INDEX; PROVINCE
AB This paper presents a comparative analysis of machine learning (ML) models for predicting drought conditions using the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) for two distinct stations, one in Shiraz, Iran and one in Tridolino, Italy. Four ML models, including Artificial Neural Network (ANN), Multiple Linear Regression, K-Nearest Neighbors, and XGBoost Regressor, were employed to forecast multi-scale SPI values (for 6-, 9-, 12-, and 24-month) considering various lag times. Results indicated that the ML model with the most robust performance varied depending on station and SPI duration. Furthermore, ANN demonstrated robust performance for SPI estimations at Shiraz station, whereas no single model consistently outperformed the others for Tridolino station. These findings were further validated through the confidence percentage analysis performed on all ML models in this study. Across all scenarios, longer SPI durations generally yielded better model performance. Additionally, for Shiraz station, optimal lag times varied by SPI duration: 6 months for the 6- and 9-month SPI, 4 months for the 12-month SPI, and 2 months for the 24-month SPI. For Tridolino station, on the other hand, no definitive optimal lag time was identified. These findings contribute to our understanding of predicting drought indicators and supporting effective water resource management and climate change adaptation efforts.
C1 [Piraei, Reza; Afzali, Seied Hosein] Shiraz Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Shiraz 7134851156, Iran.
   [Niazkar, Majid] Euro Mediterranean Ctr Climate Change, Porta Innovaz Bldg,2nd Floor Via Liberta 12,Marghe, I-30175 Venice, Italy.
   [Niazkar, Majid] Ca Foscari Univ Venice, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
   [Gangi, Fabiola] Univ Milan, Dept Agr & Environm Sci, Via Celoria 2, I-20133 Milan, Italy.
   [Turkkan, Gokcen Eryilmaz] Balikesir Univ, Dept Civil Engn, TR-10145 Balikesir, Turkiye.
C3 Shiraz University; Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici
   (CMCC); Universita Ca Foscari Venezia; University of Milan; Balikesir
   University
RP Niazkar, M (corresponding author), Euro Mediterranean Ctr Climate Change, Porta Innovaz Bldg,2nd Floor Via Liberta 12,Marghe, I-30175 Venice, Italy.; Niazkar, M (corresponding author), Ca Foscari Univ Venice, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
EM majid.niazkar@cmcc.it; fabiola.gangi@unimi.it; afzali@shirazu.ac.ir
RI Gangi, Fabiola/KJM-5949-2024; Afzali, Seied Hosein/W-8468-2018; Niazkar,
   Majid/I-1844-2019
OI Gangi, Fabiola/0000-0002-9192-4369; Afzali, Seied
   Hosein/0000-0002-9195-615X; Niazkar, Majid/0000-0002-5022-1026; Piraei,
   Reza/0000-0001-7129-8076
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NR 42
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2306-5338
J9 HYDROLOGY-BASEL
JI Hydrology
PD OCT
PY 2024
VL 11
IS 10
AR 163
DI 10.3390/hydrology11100163
PG 18
WC Water Resources
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Water Resources
GA K3I7X
UT WOS:001342853800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ariza-Salamanca, AJ
   González-Moreno, P
   López-Quintanilla, JB
   Navarro-Cerrillo, RM
AF Ariza-Salamanca, Antonio Jesus
   Gonzalez-Moreno, Pablo
   Lopez-Quintanilla, Jose Benedicto
   Navarro-Cerrillo, Rafael Maria
TI Large-Scale Mapping of Complex Forest Typologies Using Multispectral
   Imagery and Low-Density Airborne LiDAR: A Case Study in Pinsapo Fir
   Forests
SO REMOTE SENSING
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; forest management; forest typology; remote
   sensing; machine learning
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; CLASSIFICATION; AGREEMENT
AB Climate change increases the vulnerability of relict forests. To address this problem, regional Forest Services require silvicultural and conservation actions to designate specific forest management alternatives. In this context, the main objective of this study was to develop a methodology to map complex Abies pinsapo forest typologies using multispectral and low-density airborne LiDAR data and machine learning. Stand density, species composition and cover were used to identify seven forest typologies. Random forest resulted as the more accurate model (OA = 0.62; Kappa = 0.43) to classify those types based on multispectral and LiDAR data, although showing a moderate model performance. Classification performance showed great differences between forest types with better results for the uneven-aged stands compared to the even-aged and two-aged stands. The developed typology was applied to supply local forest managers with more accurate forest maps that can be used to improve forest management plans. The typology proposed is easy to apply in forest management practices since it only uses as input the diameter at breast height, tree density and specific composition. The study demonstrated the potential of low-density LiDAR data combined with spectral information from high-resolution orthophotos to predict the structural characteristics of complex forest typologies.
C1 [Ariza-Salamanca, Antonio Jesus; Gonzalez-Moreno, Pablo; Navarro-Cerrillo, Rafael Maria] Univ Cordoba, Dept Forestry Engn, Silviculture Lab, Dendrochronol & Climate Change,DendrodatLab ERSAF, Campus Rabanales,Crta 4,Km 396, Cordoba 14071, Spain.
   [Lopez-Quintanilla, Jose Benedicto] Consejeria Medio Ambiente & Ordenac Terr, Malaga 29071, Spain.
C3 Universidad de Cordoba
RP Navarro-Cerrillo, RM (corresponding author), Univ Cordoba, Dept Forestry Engn, Silviculture Lab, Dendrochronol & Climate Change,DendrodatLab ERSAF, Campus Rabanales,Crta 4,Km 396, Cordoba 14071, Spain.
EM o32arsaa@uco.es; rmnavarro@uco.es
RI Ariza Salamanca, Antonio/AAF-6597-2021; Navarro-Cerrillo,
   Rafael/AAG-5872-2019; Ariza Salamanca, Antonio Jesus/GXG-3631-2022;
   Gonzalez-Moreno, Pablo/C-8422-2015
OI Ariza Salamanca, Antonio Jesus/0000-0001-6050-4284; Navarro Cerrillo,
   Rafael M/0000-0003-3470-8640; Gonzalez-Moreno, Pablo/0000-0001-9764-8927
FU Consejeria de Medio Ambiente y Ordenacion del Territorio (Junta de
   Andalucia); University of Cordoba
FX This research was funded by Consejeria de Medio Ambiente y Ordenacion
   del Territorio (Junta de Andalucia) and the University of Cordoba.
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NR 57
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 2
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2072-4292
J9 REMOTE SENS-BASEL
JI Remote Sens.
PD SEP
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 17
AR 3182
DI 10.3390/rs16173182
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Remote Sensing;
   Imaging Science & Photographic Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Remote Sensing; Imaging
   Science & Photographic Technology
GA F7K1T
UT WOS:001311555500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Burridge, DP
AF Burridge, Daniel Patrick
TI Overflowing the Channels of the Left Global Accumulation and Communal
   Agro-Ecology as Competing Projects of Governance in Coastal El Salvador
SO JOURNAL OF WORLD-SYSTEMS RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Environmental Movements; World-Systems Analysis; State-Movement
   Interactions; Latin America; Agro-Ecology and Food Sovereignty
ID DEMOCRACY
AB In 2012, the "climate hotspot" region of the "Bajo Lempa" in El Salvador was the recipient of a Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) Fund granted by the United States and administered by the leftist FMLN political party to bring "sustainable development" to the region. Local organizations initially pursued funding opportunities through this mega-project though their efforts were unsuccessful, thereby undercutting subsequent campaigns to resist the project for its environmental risks. Remaining pockets of resistance were undermined by gang violence directed at key community leaders, seemingly at the behest of local oligarchs. Thus, an interlocking web of politicaleconomic obstacles blocked communal agency to forge alternative climate futures. By analytically foregrounding the meso-level relationships between community-based environmental movements and leftist-controlled state institutions subordinated to global logics of accumulation, I distill the contradictions inherent to anthropocentric state forms, and the inability of the Latin American left to incorporate environmental concerns into their projects of governance. Ultimately, I argue that despite their inability to halt the MCA, the political and agro-ecological practices of communities in the Bajo Lempa "overflow" channels of the Latin American left and instantiate communal projects of resource governance as horizons of climate change adaptation, and radically democratic forms of governing social life.
C1 [Burridge, Daniel Patrick] Univ Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA.
C3 Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); University
   of Pittsburgh
RP Burridge, DP (corresponding author), Univ Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA.
EM dpb36@pitt.edu
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NR 58
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU UNIV PITTSBURGH, UNIV LIBRARY SYSTEM
PI PITTSBURGH
PA 3960 FORBES AVE, PITTSBURGH, PA 15260 USA
EI 1076-156X
J9 J WORLD SYST RES
JI J. World Syst. Res.
PD SUM-FAL
PY 2024
VL 30
IS 2
BP 530
EP 559
DI 10.5195/JWSR.2024.1167
PG 30
WC Sociology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Sociology
GA F4Z5Y
UT WOS:001309917800003
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Celliers, L
   Rölfer, L
   Rivers, N
   Rosendo, S
   Fernandes, M
   Snow, B
   Costa, MM
AF Celliers, Louis
   Roelfer, Lena
   Rivers, Nina
   Rosendo, Sergio
   Fernandes, Meredith
   Snow, Bernadette
   Costa, Maria Manez
TI Stratification of stakeholders for participation in the governance of
   coastal social-ecological systems
SO AMBIO
LA English
DT Article
DE Environmental management; Ocean and coastal governance;
   Social-ecological systems; Stakeholder agency; Stakeholder analysis
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LOCAL-GOVERNMENT; ZONE MANAGEMENT; CAPE-TOWN;
   IDENTIFICATION; FRAMEWORK; POWER; CITY
AB Knowledge co-production has become part of an evolution of participatory and transdisciplinary research approaches that are increasingly important for achieving sustainability. To effectively involve the most appropriate stakeholders there is a need for engagement and increasing prominence of stakeholders in environmental management and governance processes. The paper aims at developing and testing a methodology for stratifying stakeholders by (i) classifying organisations involved in coastal and ocean governance by their agency, and (ii) grouping them into organisational archetypes for representation and selection in research processes. Agency was measured by the three dimensions of scale, resources, and power. Each dimension was further elaborated as a set of indicators. The methodology is applied in the context of a research project set in Algoa Bay, South Africa. The stratification of organisations enabled the research team to gain a better understanding of the stakeholder landscape of organisational agency, and thus identify the most relevant stakeholder with which to engage. The use of a hierarchical cluster analysis identified five organisational archetypes in relation to ocean and coastal governance in Algoa Bay. The methodology used in this study proposes an informed and intentional approach to create the conditions under which the co-production of and participation in research processes can take place.
C1 [Celliers, Louis; Roelfer, Lena; Costa, Maria Manez] Helmholtz Zentrum Hereon, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, Fischertwiete 1, D-20095 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Celliers, Louis; Roelfer, Lena] Leuphana Univ Luneburg, SESI, Fac Sustainabil, Luneburg, Germany.
   [Rivers, Nina; Fernandes, Meredith; Snow, Bernadette] Nelson Mandela Univ, Inst Coastal & Marine Res ICMR, A Block,Ocean Sci Campus,Gommery Ave, ZA-6031 Gqeberha, South Africa.
   [Rosendo, Sergio] Nova Univ Lisbon UNL, Colegio Almada Negreiros, Fac Social Sci & Humanities FCSH, Interdisciplinary Ctr Social Sci CICS NOVA,NOVA F, Campus Campolide, P-1070312 Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Snow, Bernadette] Univ Strathclyde, Law Sch, One Ocean Hub, Lord Hope Bldg,141 St James Rd, Glasgow G4 0LT, Scotland.
C3 Helmholtz Association; Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon; Leuphana University
   Luneburg; Nelson Mandela University; Universidade Nova de Lisboa;
   University of Strathclyde
RP Celliers, L (corresponding author), Helmholtz Zentrum Hereon, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, Fischertwiete 1, D-20095 Hamburg, Germany.; Celliers, L (corresponding author), Leuphana Univ Luneburg, SESI, Fac Sustainabil, Luneburg, Germany.
EM louis.celliers@hereon.de
RI Rölfer, Lena/IUN-9462-2023; Celliers, Louis/GRO-6282-2022; Snow,
   Bernadette/HSF-3849-2023; Costa, Maria/P-1225-2017
OI Rolfer, Lena/0000-0002-4364-5349; Snow, Bernadette/0000-0002-1598-4511
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NR 53
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 3
U2 12
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0044-7447
EI 1654-7209
J9 AMBIO
JI Ambio
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 52
IS 9
SI SI
BP 1418
EP 1430
DI 10.1007/s13280-023-01844-1
EA MAR 2023
PG 13
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA O1LN9
UT WOS:000955748600001
PM 36952095
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Viana, JL
   de Souza, JLM
   Hoshide, AK
   de Oliveira, RA
   de Abreu, DC
   da Silva, WM
AF Viana, Jessica Lima
   de Souza, Jorge Luiz Moretti
   Hoshide, Aaron Kinyu
   de Oliveira, Ricardo Augusto
   de Abreu, Daniel Carneiro
   da Silva, Wininton Mendes
TI Estimating Sugarcane Yield in a Subtropical Climate Using Climatic
   Variables and Soil Water Storage
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE agrometeorological modeling; multiple linear regression; statistical
   model; sugarcane; yield prediction
ID PRODUCTIVITY; EFFICIENCY; QUALITY; IMPACTS; GROWTH; MODEL;
   TRANSPIRATION; VARIABILITY; CULTIVARS; MATURITY
AB Brazil is the largest producer of sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) in the world, and this crop's response to climate and soil water storage is essential for optimal management and genetic/yield improvements. The objective of our study was to build a multivariate model to estimate sugarcane yield in the subtropical conditions of the northwestern Parana region using climatic and soil water storage variables. Observed yield data was used from experiments conducted at the Experimental Station of the Sugarcane Genetic Improvement Program of the Universidade Federal do Parana. The sugarcane varieties RB72454, RB867515, RB966928, and RB036066 were analyzed in the 1998-2006, 2008, 2018 and 2019 harvest years. Stepwise multiple linear regression analysis with repeated cross-validation was developed to estimate sugarcane yield given climate and soil water storage variables for crop growth phases. The accumulated degree days in Phases I and II and soil water storage in Phase II of development significantly impacted sugarcane yield. The multiple linear regression model, with accumulated degree days and soil water storage in Phases I and II of development, successfully predicted sugarcane yield for analyzed varieties. Sugarcane production models like the one we developed can improve crop management for greater sustainability and climate change adaption in Brazil and other areas.
C1 [Viana, Jessica Lima; Hoshide, Aaron Kinyu; de Abreu, Daniel Carneiro] Univ Fed Mato Grosso, Agrisci, Caixa Postal 729, BR-78550970 Sinop, MT, Brazil.
   [de Souza, Jorge Luiz Moretti] Univ Fed Parana, Campus Univ Curitiba, Dept Solos & Engn Agr DSEA, Rua Funcionarios 1540, BR-80035050 Curitiba, PR, Brazil.
   [Hoshide, Aaron Kinyu] Univ Maine, Coll Nat Sci Forestry & Agr, Orono, ME 04469 USA.
   [de Oliveira, Ricardo Augusto] Univ Fed Parana, Campus Univ Curitiba, Dept Fitotecnia & Fitossanidade DFF, Rua Funcionarios 1540, BR-80035050 Curitiba, PR, Brazil.
   [de Abreu, Daniel Carneiro] Univ Fed Mato Grosso, Campus Univ Sinop, Inst Ciencias Agr & Ambientais ICAA, Ave Alexandre Ferronato 1200, BR-78550728 Sinop, MT, Brazil.
   [da Silva, Wininton Mendes] Ctr Polit Adm, Empresa Mato Grossense Pesquisa Assistencia & Exte, BR-78049903 Cuiaba, MT, Brazil.
C3 Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso; Universidade Federal do Parana;
   University of Maine System; University of Maine Orono; Universidade
   Federal do Parana; Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso
RP Viana, JL (corresponding author), Univ Fed Mato Grosso, Agrisci, Caixa Postal 729, BR-78550970 Sinop, MT, Brazil.
EM jessica.limavp@gmail.com
RI Abreu, Daniel/LNP-9454-2024; Mendes da Silva, Wininton/HPF-2427-2023;
   Hoshide, PhD, Aaron K./Q-4003-2018
OI Viana, Jessica Lima/0000-0002-2830-8133; Abreu,
   Daniel/0000-0002-1082-1019; Hoshide, PhD, Aaron K./0000-0001-6222-2475;
   Mendes da Silva, Wininton/0000-0002-7945-2127
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TC 9
Z9 9
U1 1
U2 14
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 5
AR 4360
DI 10.3390/su15054360
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 9T5KU
UT WOS:000947065900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pathak, R
   Magliocca, NR
AF Pathak, Ruchie
   Magliocca, Nicholas R.
TI Assessing the Representativeness of Irrigation Adoption Studies: A
   Meta-Study of Global Research
SO AGRICULTURE-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE agriculture technology; diffusion and adoption; farmers; climate change
   adaptation; systematic review
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE BELIEFS; TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION; SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; WATER;
   ADAPTATION; IMPACT; DETERMINANTS; PERCEPTIONS; FUTURE; REQUIREMENTS
AB For decades, nations around the world have been promoting irrigation expansion as a method for improving agricultural growth, smoothing production risk, and alleviating rural poverty. Despite its apparent advantages, suboptimal adoption rates persist. According to the existing literature, determinants of irrigation adoption are often highly dependent on cultural, contextual, and/or local institutional factors. Yet, studies from diverse geographies identify a consistent set of factors. Thus, to be able to make generalizable inferences from such studies, a global geographic representativeness assessment of irrigation adoption studies was conducted to determine whether identified factors influencing irrigation were the result of geographic, epistemological, or disciplinary biases. The results indicate that multiple geographic biases exist with respect to studying farmers' irrigation adoption decision-making. More research on this topic is being conducted in regions that have little to a high percentage of irrigation (>1%), are readily accessible, receive moderate amounts of average annual rainfall, and have moderate amounts of cropland cover. The results suggest the need to expand research efforts in areas with little to no irrigation to identify constraints and help accelerate economic growth, poverty reduction, and food and livelihood security for rural communities in these regions.
C1 [Pathak, Ruchie; Magliocca, Nicholas R.] Univ Alabama, Dept Geog, Tuscaloosa, AL 35401 USA.
C3 University of Alabama System; University of Alabama Tuscaloosa
RP Pathak, R (corresponding author), Univ Alabama, Dept Geog, Tuscaloosa, AL 35401 USA.
EM rpathak@crimson.ua.edu
OI Pathak, Ruchie/0000-0001-9157-9131; Magliocca,
   Nicholas/0000-0002-0971-0207
FU National Science Foundation [1856054]
FX The authors were supported by a National Science Foundation award INFEWS
   #1856054.
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NR 124
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 6
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2077-0472
J9 AGRICULTURE-BASEL
JI Agriculture-Basel
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 12
IS 12
AR 2105
DI 10.3390/agriculture12122105
PG 31
WC Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 7F7WA
UT WOS:000902051800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Conrad, LM
   Fernald, AG
   Guldan, SJ
   Ochoa, CG
AF Conrad, Lily M.
   Fernald, Alexander G.
   Guldan, Steven J.
   Ochoa, Carlos G.
TI A Water Balancing Act: Water Balances Highlight the Benefits of
   Community-Based Adaptive Management in Northern New Mexico, USA
SO HYDROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE flood irrigation; water management; deep percolation; surface water;
   groundwater; water balance
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; IRRIGATED VALLEY; ADAPTATION; RECHARGE; IMPACTS;
   SUSTAINABILITY; AVAILABILITY; RESILIENCE; SYSTEMS; FLOOD
AB Quantifying groundwater recharge from irrigation in water-scarce regions is critical for sustainable water management in an era of decreasing surface water deliveries and increasing reliance on groundwater pumping. Through a water balance approach, our study estimated deep percolation (DP) and characterized surface water and groundwater interactions of two flood-irrigated fields in northern New Mexico to evaluate the regional importance of irrigation-related recharge in the context of climate change. DP was estimated for each irrigation event from precipitation, irrigation input, runoff, change in soil water storage, and evapotranspiration data for both fields. Both fields exhibited positive, statistically significant relationships between DP and total water applied (TWA), where one field exhibited positive, statistically significant relationships between DP and groundwater level fluctuation (GWLF) and between GWLF and total water applied. In 2021, total DP on Field 1 was 739 mm, where 68% of irrigation water applied contributed to DP. Field 2's total DP was 1249 mm, where 81% of irrigation water applied contributed to DP. Results from this study combined with long-term research indicate that the groundwater recharge and flexible management associated with traditional, community-based irrigation systems are the exact benefits needed for appropriate climate change adaptation.
C1 [Conrad, Lily M.; Fernald, Alexander G.] New Mexico State Univ, Water Resources Res Inst, Las Cruces, NM 88003 USA.
   [Guldan, Steven J.] New Mexico State Univ, Sustainable Agr Sci Ctr, Alcalde, NM 87511 USA.
   [Ochoa, Carlos G.] Oregon State Univ, Coll Agr Sci, Ecohydrol Lab, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
C3 New Mexico State University; New Mexico State University; Oregon State
   University
RP Fernald, AG (corresponding author), New Mexico State Univ, Water Resources Res Inst, Las Cruces, NM 88003 USA.
EM conradl@nmsu.edu; afernald@mnsu.edu; sguldan@nmsu.edu;
   carlos.ochoa@oregonstate.edu
OI Conrad, Lily/0000-0001-5596-4753; Ochoa, Carlos G/0000-0002-4958-919X;
   fernald, alexander/0000-0003-0299-6705
FU state of New Mexico; New Mexico State University's College of
   Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences; New Mexico Water
   Resources Research Institute
FX This research was funded by the state of New Mexico, through special and
   state appropriations made to the New Mexico Water Resources Research
   Institute NMWRRI2019-2020 and NMWRRI2021, and New Mexico State
   University's College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental
   Sciences.
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TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 6
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2306-5338
J9 HYDROLOGY-BASEL
JI Hydrology
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 9
IS 4
AR 64
DI 10.3390/hydrology9040064
PG 21
WC Water Resources
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Water Resources
GA 0T6GP
UT WOS:000787065300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bacciu, V
   Sirca, C
   Spano, D
AF Bacciu, Valentina
   Sirca, Costantino
   Spano, Donatella
TI Towards a systemic approach to fire risk management
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Fire risk; Paradigm shift; Systemic management; Pandemic; Climate
   change; Adaptive management and governance
ID ANTHROPOGENIC CLIMATE-CHANGE; FOREST-FIRES; ADAPTIVE GOVERNANCE;
   WILDFIRE; ADAPTATION; LANDSCAPES; DRIVERS; CRISIS
AB Fire risk management is at a crossroads. The last three fire seasons worldwide, dotted by extreme fire behavior and "megafire" events, highlighted the need for a shifting mentality towards a novel and integrated fire management framework, flexible, adaptive, and responsive to the changing environmental and societal conditions. In this context, the pandemic outbreak added other elements of concern due to its impacts on fire management. The health crisis shined also a spotlight on the government's capacity to manage interconnected risks and anticipatory risk management and the urgent need to change the dominating paradigm in fire policy and management. Based on the review of several proposed approaches framing the impelling fire management perspectives, from the socio-ecological systems to the fire resilience concepts, here we provide a new "systemic fire management framework". The approach integrates the multiple perspectives in fire management (multi-level, multi-actor, cross-sectoral and multi-purpose) in four pillars: (i) disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation connection; (ii) community engagement support; (iii) adaptive management towards system resilience; (iv) and adaptive governance. The approach aims to contribute to go beyond the short term and sectoral governance toward a more sustainable long term perspective, promoting a multifunctional, fire-resistant, and resilient mosaic landscape based on sustainable development processes.
C1 [Bacciu, Valentina; Sirca, Costantino; Spano, Donatella] Fdn Ctr Euromediterraneo Cambiamenti Climat, IAFES Div, Via De Nicola 9, I-07100 Sassari, Italy.
   [Bacciu, Valentina] CNR, Inst BioEcon CNR IBE, Traversa La Crucca 3, I-07100 Sassari, Italy.
   [Sirca, Costantino; Spano, Donatella] Univ Sassari, Dipartimento Agr, Viale Italia 39, I-07100 Sassari, Italy.
C3 Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici (CMCC); Consiglio
   Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR); University of Sassari
RP Bacciu, V (corresponding author), Fdn Ctr Euromediterraneo Cambiamenti Climat, IAFES Div, Via De Nicola 9, I-07100 Sassari, Italy.
EM valentina.bacciu@cmcc.it
RI Bacciu, Valentina/AAH-2990-2021
OI Bacciu, Valentina/0000-0002-2361-1416
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NR 103
TC 20
Z9 22
U1 6
U2 30
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD MAR
PY 2022
VL 129
BP 37
EP 44
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2021.12.015
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 0U3UJ
UT WOS:000787577400004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rao, VB
   Ashok, K
   Govardhan, D
AF Rao, Vadlamudi Brahmananda
   Ashok, Karumuri
   Govardhan, Dandu
TI Unprecedented Climate Change in India and a Three-Pronged Method for
   Reliable Weather and Climate Prediction
SO FRONTIERS IN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE KUM method; extreme weather; human suffering; tropical cyclone; monsoon;
   Indian summer monsoon (ISM)
ID BAROCLINIC INSTABILITY; MONSOON PREDICTION; SIMULATION; DISEASES;
   ENERGY; SYSTEM; IMPACT; OCEAN
AB India, one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world, has suffered severe economic losses as well as life losses as per the World Focus report.(1) More than 80% of its land and more than 50 million of its people are affected by weather disasters. Disaster mitigation necessitates reliable future predictions, which need focused climate change research. From the climate change perspective, the summer monsoon, the main lifeline of India, is predicted to change very adversely. The duration of the rainy season is going to shrink, and pre-monsoon drying can also occur. These future changes can impact the increase of vector-borne diseases, such as malaria, dengue, and others. In another recent study, 29 world experts from various institutions found that the largest exposure to disasters, such as tropical cyclones (TCs), river floods, droughts, and heat waves, is over India. For improved and skillful prediction, we suggest a three-stage cumulative method, namely, K is for observational analysis, U is for knowledge and understanding, and M is for modeling and prediction. In this brief note, we report our perspective of imminent weather disasters to India, namely, monsoons and TCs, and how the weather and climate forecasting can be improved, leading to better climate change adaptation.
C1 [Rao, Vadlamudi Brahmananda] Natl Inst Space Res, Sao Jose Dos Campos, Brazil.
   [Rao, Vadlamudi Brahmananda] Andhra Univ, Dept Meteorol & Oceanog, Visakhapatnam, India.
   [Ashok, Karumuri; Govardhan, Dandu] Univ Hyderabad, Ctr Earth Ocean & Atmospher Sci, Hyderabad, India.
C3 Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE); Andhra University;
   University of Hyderabad
RP Rao, VB (corresponding author), Natl Inst Space Res, Sao Jose Dos Campos, Brazil.; Rao, VB (corresponding author), Andhra Univ, Dept Meteorol & Oceanog, Visakhapatnam, India.
EM raovadlamud@gmail.com
OI Dandu, Govardhan/0000-0001-5159-701X
FU Frontiers in Climate Journal
FX The publication charge of this article is fully funded by the Frontiers
   in Climate Journal.
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NR 49
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 1
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-9553
J9 FRONT CLIM
JI Front. Clim.
PD NOV 15
PY 2021
VL 3
AR 716507
DI 10.3389/fclim.2021.716507
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA L4XY3
UT WOS:001023323000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Delpy, F
   Zari, MP
   Jackson, B
   Benavidez, R
   Westend, T
AF Delpy, Fabian
   Pedersen Zari, Maibritt
   Jackson, Bethanna
   Benavidez, Rubianca
   Westend, Thomas
TI Ecosystem Services Assessment Tools for Regenerative Urban Design in
   Oceania
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE ecosystem-based adaptation; multidisciplinary design; urban ecology;
   Pacific islands; nature-based design; SIDS; climate change adaptation;
   New Zealand; urban design
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; IMPACTS; HEALTH; ISLAND
AB Tools that spatially model ecosystem services offer opportunities to integrate ecology into regenerative urban design. However, few of these tools are designed for assessing ecosystem services in cities, meaning their application by designers is potentially limited. This research reviews and compares a range of ecosystem services assessment tools to find those that are most suited for the urban context of Oceania. The tool classification includes considerations of type of input and output data, time commitment, and necessary skills required. The strengths and limitations of the most relevant tools are further discussed alongside illustrative case studies, some collected from literature and one conducted as part of this research in Wellington, Aotearoa using the Land Utilisation and Capability Indicator (LUCI) tool. A major finding of the research is that from the 95 tools reviewed, only four are judged to be potentially relevant for urban design projects. These are modelling tools that allow spatially explicit visualisation of biophysical quantification of ecosystem services. The ecosystem services assessed vary among tools and the outputs' reliability is often highly influenced by the user's technical expertise. The provided recommendations support urban designers and architects to choose the tool that best suits their regenerative design project requirements.
C1 [Delpy, Fabian] Univ Utrecht, Dept Biol, Padualaan 8, NL-3584 CH Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Pedersen Zari, Maibritt; Westend, Thomas] Victoria Univ Wellington, Wellington Sch Architecture, 139 Vivian St, Wellington 6011, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
   [Jackson, Bethanna; Benavidez, Rubianca] Victoria Univ Wellington, Sch Geog Environm & Earth Sci, Wellington 6012, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
C3 Utrecht University; Victoria University Wellington; Victoria University
   Wellington
RP Zari, MP (corresponding author), Victoria Univ Wellington, Wellington Sch Architecture, 139 Vivian St, Wellington 6011, Aotearoa, New Zealand.
EM f.p.delpy@students.uu.nl; maibritt.pedersen@vuw.ac.nz;
   bethanna.jackson@vuw.ac.nz; rubianca.benavidez@vuw.ac.nz;
   thomas.m.westend@gmail.com
OI Pedersen Zari, Maibritt/0000-0003-4664-7558; Benavidez,
   Rubianca/0000-0002-8907-7797
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NR 72
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 23
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAR
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 5
AR 2825
DI 10.3390/su13052825
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA QW3SG
UT WOS:000628573000001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Feinberg, DS
AF Feinberg, Daniel S.
TI What factors predict the quality of hazard mitigation plans in
   Washington State?
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Collaboration; Diffusion; Hazard mitigation
AB Hazard mitigation plans can help to reduce communities' losses when faced with natural hazards, some of which (e.g., floods) are projected to intensify with climate change. A growing body of plan evaluation literature seeks to measure the quality of these plans, given that higher-quality plans may be more likely to achieve their objectives (e.g., reducing a community's losses from flooding). Processes of collaboration (i.e., joint decision-making by various agencies and stakeholders) and diffusion (i.e., the spread of ideas between jurisdictions over time and space), among others, may influence plan quality, although empirical evidence is limited. This study assessed potential predictors of plan quality for 33 county-level hazard mitigation plans in Washington State, using a combination of survey data, county characteristics, and previously determined plan quality scores. Significant predictors of plan quality included indicators of vertical (state-to-county) and horizontal (county-to-county) diffusion, as well as economic capacity, although indicators of collaborative dynamics, along with several other hypothesized predictors, including past disaster experience (i.e., severity) were not significant. Hazard planning professionals at the federal, state, and local levels may benefit from integrating these findings into future work, in conjunction with other climate change adaptation initiatives. Specifically, fostering peer-to-peer interactions between counties might help to produce and disseminate knowledge about climate solutions.
C1 [Feinberg, Daniel S.] Kean Univ, Sch Environm & Sustainabil Sci, 1000 Morris Ave, Union, NJ 07083 USA.
   [Feinberg, Daniel S.] Monmouth Univ, Dept Chem & Phys, 400 Cedar Ave, West Long Branch, NJ 07764 USA.
C3 Kean University; Monmouth University
RP Feinberg, DS (corresponding author), Kean Univ, Sch Environm & Sustainabil Sci, 1000 Morris Ave, Union, NJ 07083 USA.; Feinberg, DS (corresponding author), Monmouth Univ, Dept Chem & Phys, 400 Cedar Ave, West Long Branch, NJ 07764 USA.
EM danielscottfeinberg@gmail.com
OI Feinberg, Daniel/0000-0003-0760-4539
FU Washington Sea Grant [R/RCE-4]
FX This study was partially funded by Washington Sea Grant (Project No.
   R/RCE-4).
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NR 65
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 7
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JAN
PY 2021
VL 164
IS 1-2
AR 1
DI 10.1007/s10584-021-02987-4
PG 29
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA PZ6OB
UT WOS:000612858100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maiolo, M
   Mel, RA
   Sinopoli, S
AF Maiolo, Mario
   Mel, Riccardo Alvise
   Sinopoli, Salvatore
TI A Stepwise Approach to Beach Restoration at Calabaia Beach
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE coastal erosion; coastal engineering; coastal management; nature-based
   solutions; boulders in bulk; beach nourishment; Posidonia oceanica
ID COASTAL ZONE MANAGEMENT; SEA-LEVEL RISE; POSIDONIA-OCEANICA;
   STORM-SURGE; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; ENSEMBLE PREDICTION; GROWTH DYNAMICS;
   PROFILE MODEL; LARGE-SCALE; PROTECTION
AB Sea hazards are increasingly threatening worldwide coastal areas, which are among the most strategic resources of the Earth in supporting human population, economy and the environment. These hazards enhance erosion processes and flooding events, producing severe socio-economic impacts and posing a challenge to ocean engineers and stakeholders in finding the optimal strategy to protect both the coastal communities and the health of the environment. The impact of coastal hazards is actually worsened not only by an enhancing rate of relative sea level rise and storminess driven by climate changes, but also by increasing urban pressure related to the development of the sea economy. With regard to larger environmental awareness and climate change adaptation needs, the present study focuses on a stepwise approach that supports the actions for coastal protection at Calabaia Beach, which is located in the Marine Experimental Station of Capo Tirone (Cosenza, Italy). These actions first aim to protect humans and coastal assets, then to restore the environment and the local habitat, overcoming the need for the emergency interventions carried out in the last decades and pointing out that healthy ecosystems are more productive and support a sustainable marine economy ("Blue Growth").
C1 [Maiolo, Mario; Mel, Riccardo Alvise; Sinopoli, Salvatore] Univ Calabria, Environm Engn Dept UNICAL DIAm, Capo Tirone Expt Marine Stn, I-87036 Arcavacata Di Rende, Italy.
C3 University of Calabria
RP Maiolo, M (corresponding author), Univ Calabria, Environm Engn Dept UNICAL DIAm, Capo Tirone Expt Marine Stn, I-87036 Arcavacata Di Rende, Italy.
EM mario.maiolo@unical.it; riccardo_alvise.mel@unical.it;
   salvatore.sinopoli@unical.it
RI MAIOLO, Mario/D-2704-2019
OI MAIOLO, Mario/0000-0002-6208-1307; Critelli,
   Salvatore/0000-0001-7325-0228; Sinopoli, Salvatore/0000-0003-2262-3607;
   Mel, Riccardo Alvise/0000-0002-5534-7170
FU Governo Italiano, Piano di interventi infrastrutturali di emergenza in
   Calabria-eventi alluvionali settembre 2000, Ordinanza di Protezione
   Civile [3081/2000]; Regione Calabria, Progetto Integrato Strategico-Rete
   Ecologica Regionale, POR Calabria-Asse I-Misura 1.10 [1562]; Provincia
   di Cosenza, Progetto esecutivo per la difesa e riqualificazione del
   litorale nei Comuni di Bonifati, Sangineto e Belvedere M.-Tratto da nord
   Capo Bonifati a nord Capo Tirone, PEG-Bilancio 2004
FX This research was funded by Governo Italiano, Piano di interventi
   infrastrutturali di emergenza in Calabria-eventi alluvionali settembre
   2000, Ordinanza di Protezione Civile no3081/2000, by Regione Calabria,
   Progetto Integrato Strategico-Rete Ecologica Regionale, POR
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NR 112
TC 20
Z9 20
U1 1
U2 19
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD OCT
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 10
AR 2677
DI 10.3390/w12102677
PG 23
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA OM7PH
UT WOS:000586211200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chang, SE
   Yip, JZK
   Conger, T
   Oulahen, G
   Gray, E
   Marteleira, M
AF Chang, Stephanie E.
   Yip, Jackie Z. K.
   Conger, Tugce
   Oulahen, Greg
   Gray, Emily
   Marteleira, Michelle
TI Explaining communities' adaptation strategies for coastal flood risk:
   Vulnerability and institutional factors
SO JOURNAL OF FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; coastal flooding; community; institutional capacity; land
   use; local government; structural flood protection; vulnerability
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; HAZARD; RESILIENCE; BARRIERS; POLICY;
   INDICATORS; MITIGATION; FUTURE; CITIES
AB Increasing coastal flood risk has prompted a proliferation of cities that are adopting risk reduction and adaptation tools. This article inquires into what types of tools local governments tend to adopt for managing coastal flood risk and the factors that may be influencing these choices; in particular, factors related to hazard vulnerability and institutional capacity. Focusing on 40 diverse coastal communities in a study region in Canada, the study utilised data from the communities' Official Community Plans to characterise their approaches to managing coastal flood risk in terms of land use regulations, construction specifications, and/or structural flood protection tools. The data revealed considerable diversity in the portfolio of tools that the communities have adopted. Tool adoption was found to correlate strongly with hazard vulnerability; that is, communities with similar physical and socio-economic vulnerability conditions tended to take similar adaptation actions. For example, established communities with highly urbanised coastlines tended to rely on structural flood protection while suburban communities with semi-developed coastlines predominantly utilised land use regulations. Institutional factors such as resource availability and local leadership, which were operationalised using survey data, exhibited surprisingly little correlation with the types of tools that communities adopted.
C1 [Chang, Stephanie E.; Gray, Emily; Marteleira, Michelle] Univ British Columbia, Sch Community & Reg Planning SCARP, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
   [Chang, Stephanie E.; Yip, Jackie Z. K.; Conger, Tugce] Univ British Columbia, Inst Resources Environm & Sustainabil IRES, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
   [Oulahen, Greg] Ryerson Univ, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, Toronto, ON, Canada.
C3 University of British Columbia; University of British Columbia; Toronto
   Metropolitan University
RP Chang, SE (corresponding author), Univ British Columbia, Sch Community & Reg Planning SCARP, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
EM stephanie.chang@ubc.ca
FU Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response (MEOPAR)
   Network of Centres of Excellence (NCE)
FX Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response (MEOPAR)
   Network of Centres of Excellence (NCE)
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NR 43
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 4
U2 30
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1753-318X
J9 J FLOOD RISK MANAG
JI J. Flood Risk Manag.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 13
IS 4
AR e12646
DI 10.1111/jfr3.12646
EA JUL 2020
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA OY6ZV
UT WOS:000548350400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fu, XY
AF Fu, Xinyu
TI Measuring local sea-level rise adaptation and adaptive capacity: A
   national survey in the United States
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Sea-level rise; Adaptation planning; Adaptive capacity; Urban planning
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; TAMPA BAY-REGION; OVERCOMING BARRIERS;
   PLANNING MANDATES; VULNERABILITY; PLANS; POLICY; COST
AB Sea-level rise (SLR) has increasingly manifested the need for adaptation in the United States (US) coastal areas. Few empirical studies have investigated the extent of local SLR adaptation and adaptive capacity on a national scale. To address this research gap, I conducted a national survey among 231 coastal localities in the US and obtained 86 individual copies of surveys, with a response rate of 37.2%. I then employed multivariate regression models to examine the relationship between local actions and adaptive capacity while controlling for socioeconomic variations. Based on the survey results, I find that, at this nascent stage, the coastal localities are more actively investing in adaptation planning than actions. Among the adaptation actions, they generally preferred the protection and accommodation strategies to those of the managed retreat. Localities in this sample reported medium to low adaptive capacity, with leadership, funding, staff, and political environment being the weakest capacity elements. The regression results indicate that localities with higher adaptive capacity have been implementing more adaptation than those with limited capacity. This empirical research provides a first glance into local SLR adaptation and sheds light on the plausible pathways to building local adaptive capacity and improving coastal resilience through adaptation.
C1 [Fu, Xinyu] Univ Waikato, Fac Arts & Social Sci, Environm Planning Programme, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.
C3 University of Waikato
RP Fu, XY (corresponding author), Univ Waikato, Fac Arts & Social Sci, Environm Planning Programme, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.
EM xinyu.fu@waikato.ac.nz
RI Fu, Xinyu/ABA-6804-2020
FU University of Florida Graduate Student Fellowship
FX I would like to thank the University of Florida Graduate Student
   Fellowship for supporting this research. I would also want to thank Dr.
   Zhong-Ren Peng and Dr. Kathryn Frank from the University of Florida who
   provided valuable comments on an earlier draft. Finally, I thank the
   three anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments that have
   significantly improved this article. All views and errors are my own.
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NR 71
TC 22
Z9 24
U1 2
U2 23
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 102
AR 102717
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2020.102717
PG 10
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA LP8RR
UT WOS:000534585300016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Diallo, A
   Emmanuel, D
   Owusu, V
AF Diallo, Aboubacar
   Emmanuel, Donkor
   Owusu, Victor
TI Climate change adaptation strategies, productivity and sustainable food
   security in southern Mali
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation strategies; Climate change; Environmental change; Food
   security; Maize yield; Mali
ID CROP MODELS; VULNERABILITY; PERSPECTIVE; RISK
AB Many people in African countries derive their livelihoods from agriculture. Therefore, unfavourable environmental and climatic conditions render them more vulnerable to increasing food insecurity and poverty rates. However, few studies have investigated how farmers' adaptation strategies affect farm productivity and household food security in the Sahelian region, notably Mali. We analyse factors that influence adaptation strategies to climate change and the impacts of the adaptation strategies on maize productivity and household food security in southern Mali. Farmers use adaptation strategies such as organic fertilizers, changing planting dates and growing of short duration maize varieties to mitigate against the negative effects of climate change. We find that farmer experience, number of livestock owned, off-farm employment, access to credit, farmer association and technical training exert positive effects on the use of planting short-duration maize varieties as an adaptation strategy, while distance to the farm shows a negative effect. We observe that household size, experience in maize farming, number of livestock owned and technical training positively influence farmers to change planting dates as an adaptation strategy. The use of organic fertilizers and short-duration maize varieties promote maize productivity and food security. We conclude that building farmers' adaptive capacity tends to reduce their vulnerability to climate change by increasing crop yields and food security.
C1 [Diallo, Aboubacar] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Bamako, Mali.
   [Diallo, Aboubacar] Rhine Waal Univ Appl Sci, Bamako, Mali.
   [Emmanuel, Donkor] Rhine Waal Univ Appl Sci, Fac Life Sci, Marie Curie Str 1, D-47533 Kleve, Germany.
   [Owusu, Victor] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Agr Econ Agribusiness & Extens, Kumasi, Ghana.
C3 Kwame Nkrumah University Science & Technology
RP Diallo, A (corresponding author), Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Bamako, Mali.; Diallo, A (corresponding author), Rhine Waal Univ Appl Sci, Bamako, Mali.
EM dialloaboubacar44@yahoo.fr; edonkor.knust@gmail.com;
   vowusu.agric@knust.edu.gh
RI Owusu, Victor/GQA-8523-2022; Donkor, Emmanuel/H-3745-2014
OI Owusu, Victor/0000-0002-5277-1128; Donkor, Emmanuel/0000-0001-9279-1484
FU Borlaug Higher Education for Agricultural Research and Development
   (BHEARD) [BFS-G-11-00002]
FX This study was funded by the Borlaug Higher Education for Agricultural
   Research and Development (BHEARD) (BFS-G-11-00002).
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NR 31
TC 81
Z9 84
U1 4
U2 50
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD APR
PY 2020
VL 159
IS 3
BP 309
EP 327
DI 10.1007/s10584-020-02684-8
EA MAR 2020
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA LD9UY
UT WOS:000520992500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Frühauf, M
   Schmidt, G
   Illiger, P
   Meinel, T
AF Fruehauf, M.
   Schmidt, G.
   Illiger, P.
   Meinel, T.
BE Fruhauf, M
   Guggenberger, G
   Meinel, T
   Theesfeld, I
   Lentz, S
TI Types, Occurrence and Tendencies of Soil Degradation in the Altai Krai
   and the KULUNDA Research Region
SO KULUNDA: CLIMATE SMART AGRICULTURE: SOUTH SIBERIAN AGRO-STEPPE AS
   PIONEERING REGION FOR SUSTAINABLE LAND USE
SE Innovations in Landscape Research
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Altai Krai; History of land use; Causativ factors and types of soil
   degradation; Desertification; Different types of degradation; Wind
   erosion
ID LAND-USE CHANGE; CARBON STOCKS
AB The Kulunda Steppe in southwestern Siberia is nowadays an agrarian region characterized by an intensive land use unsuited for the natural environmental conditions. The KULUNDA project's research region is part of the agricultural regions ploughed and cultivated during the so-called Virgin Lands Campaign of the Soviet era. Here, cause and effect relationships between physical and chemical soil properties under different land use managements are analysed regarding climate change adaptation, reduction of greenhouse gases and a sustainable regional development. This chapter focuses on the spatial differentiation as well as intensity- and process-related assessment of selected forms of soil degradation in the research region. The region's soil degradation is characterized by changed physical and chemical soil properties besides the occurrence of water and especially wind erosion. Type and intensity of the different degradation processes vary with local environmental conditions. In this connection, we could show that type, intensity and period of land management practice resulted in various negative effects on local conditions which increase overall the vulnerability and erosion susceptibility of the locations. In areas with an annual precipitation of less than 250 mm, the degradation even leads partly to a desertification phenomenon.
C1 [Fruehauf, M.; Schmidt, G.; Illiger, P.] Martin Luther Univ Halle Wittenberg, Inst Geosci & Geog, Von Seckendorff Pl 4, D-06120 Halle, Germany.
   [Meinel, T.] Amazonen Werke, Rippachtalstr 10, D-04249 Leipzig, Germany.
C3 Martin Luther University Halle Wittenberg
RP Frühauf, M (corresponding author), Martin Luther Univ Halle Wittenberg, Inst Geosci & Geog, Von Seckendorff Pl 4, D-06120 Halle, Germany.
EM manfred.fruehauf@geo.uni-halle.de
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NR 40
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 2
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2524-5155
EI 2524-5163
BN 978-3-030-15927-6; 978-3-030-15926-9
J9 INNOV LAND RES
PY 2020
BP 201
EP 222
DI 10.1007/978-3-030-15927-6_14
D2 10.1007/978-3-030-15927-6
PG 22
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Business & Economics;
   Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BP7GI
UT WOS:000561993400015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fadly, D
   Fontes, F
AF Fadly, Dalia
   Fontes, Francisco
TI Geographical proximity and renewable energy diffusion: An empirical
   approach
SO ENERGY POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Renewable energy; Trade; Geography; Policy adoption; Technology
   diffusion; Panel fixed effects
ID CLIMATE POLICY INNOVATION; TECHNOLOGY DIFFUSION; KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS;
   PORTFOLIO STANDARDS; ADOPTION; DETERMINANTS; TRADE; INFORMATION;
   COMPETITION; STATES
AB In an era where achieving both economic growth and environmental sustainability is paramount, the role of technology diffusion remains an important one. Recent literature explores the link between geographical proximity and the adoption and diffusion of climate change adaptation policies. However, it has generally focused on a restricted set of developed countries and focused on the diffusion of policy instrument rather than the outcome of the policies. In this paper, we argue that domestic intensity of adoption of renewable energy technologies is likely to be affected by the adoption pattern in neighbouring countries. Additionally, this effect is likely to be stronger when important trade partners are intensive adopters of renewable energies. To test these hypotheses, we construct an index that captures a distance-weighted measure of intensity of renewable energies in other countries and apply a fixed effects framework to a panel of up to 116 countries over the (1980-2012) period. Our results confirm the existence of a geographic spill-over effect on the intensity of adoption of renewable energy technologies. Moreover, this effect is stronger when intensive adopters of renewable energies are also important trading partners, highlighting the relevance of trade channel as a potential catalyst of the diffusion of renewable energies across countries.
C1 [Fadly, Dalia] Philipps Univ Marburg, Ctr Near & Middle Eastern Studies CNMS, Deutschhausstr 12, D-35032 Marburg, Germany.
   [Fadly, Dalia] Cairo Univ, Fac Econ & Polit Sci, Cairo, Egypt.
   [Fontes, Francisco] Food & Agr Org United Nations FAO, Agr Dev Econ Div ESA, Policy Analyst Monitoring & Analyzing Food & Agr, Rome, Italy.
   [Fontes, Francisco] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Dept Geog & Environm, London, England.
C3 Philipps University Marburg; Egyptian Knowledge Bank (EKB); Cairo
   University; Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO);
   University of London; London School Economics & Political Science
RP Fadly, D (corresponding author), Philipps Univ Marburg, Ctr Near & Middle Eastern Studies CNMS, Deutschhausstr 12, D-35032 Marburg, Germany.
EM dalia.fadly@staff.uni-marburg.de; francisco.pereirafontes@fao.org
RI Fadly, Dalia/IXE-0378-2023
OI Fontes, Francisco/0000-0003-1266-5037; Fadly, Dalia/0000-0003-1052-8100
FU U.K. Economics and Social Research Council (ESRC)
FX The authors would like to thank participants at the European Association
   for Environmental and Resource Economists conference, Athens, June 2017
   for their useful comments and suggestions on earlier version of the
   paper. Francisco Fontes acknowledges financial support from U.K.
   Economics and Social Research Council (ESRC) and the Centre for Climate
   Change Economics and Policy for excellent research facilities.
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NR 100
TC 42
Z9 43
U1 4
U2 34
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4215
EI 1873-6777
J9 ENERG POLICY
JI Energy Policy
PD JUN
PY 2019
VL 129
BP 422
EP 435
DI 10.1016/j.enpol.2019.02.034
PG 14
WC Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HY3GZ
UT WOS:000468012900039
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Das, S
AF Das, Saudamini
TI Evaluating climate change adaptation through evacuation decisions: a
   case study of cyclone management in India
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID HURRICANE; VULNERABILITY; MODEL
AB Adaptations to extreme climatic events like tropical storms are being built into disaster management by empowering vulnerable communities through activities like disaster awareness, trainings on rescue measures, provisions of better infrastructure, and strengthening of societal institutions under the Disaster Risk Reduction and Disaster Risk Management programs. With increasing threats from climate change, it is essential that the effectiveness of such measures is evaluated and limitations are addressed. The State of Odisha in Eastern India had witnessed nearly 10years of such capacity building for cyclone management when it was hit by the severe cyclone Phailin in 2013. The public response to the evacuation order was overwhelming. In some areas, as many as 95% of the residents evacuated, and they were aware of the precautions to be taken before a storm strikes whereas some other areas showed as low as 33% evacuation and least interest in training and capacity building programs and maintenance of critical infrastructure like cyclone shelters. Analyzing evacuation responses with logistic regression, social economic issues like unemployment, prevalence of theft, and no provision for the evacuation of livestock to safety explained the evacuation failure significantly. In the future, such extreme events are predicted to hit coastal areas with more intensity due to climate change, and this necessitates that governments address such socio-economic problems along with cyclone adaptation programs to make disaster management more effective.
C1 [Das, Saudamini] Inst Econ Growth, Delhi, India.
   [Das, Saudamini] Natl Bank Agr & Rural Dev, Dept Econ Anal & Res, Mumbai, India.
RP Das, S (corresponding author), Inst Econ Growth, Delhi, India.; Das, S (corresponding author), Natl Bank Agr & Rural Dev, Dept Econ Anal & Res, Mumbai, India.
EM sdas_28@yahoo.co.in
RI Das, Saudamini/R-6956-2019
OI das, saudamini/0000-0002-4070-8447
FU Government of Odisha
FX This study was undertaken under the Government Of India-United Nations
   Development Programme project "Enhancing Institutional and Community
   Resilience to Disaster and Climate Change" and financial help from the
   Government of Odisha is sincerely acknowledged. Sincere thanks go to all
   three anonymous reviewers for their excellent suggestions and to Tejal
   Johri for efficient research assistance.
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NR 43
TC 16
Z9 17
U1 0
U2 17
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JAN
PY 2019
VL 152
IS 2
SI SI
BP 291
EP 305
DI 10.1007/s10584-018-2292-1
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA HK2AR
UT WOS:000457710400007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Essl, I
   Mauerhofer, V
AF Essl, I.
   Mauerhofer, V.
TI Opportunities for mutual implementation of nature conservation and
   climate change policies: A multilevel case study based on local
   stakeholder perceptions
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Nature conservation; Climate change measure; Climate protection;
   Qualitative research; Urban city Vienna; Stakeholder views
ID BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION; PROTECTED AREAS; SCIENCE; MANAGEMENT;
   POLITICS; EUROPE; EU
AB This paper assesses EU nature conservation and EU climate protection policies within the context of their local implementation in Vienna/Austria in order to gain insights into the decision-making process as well as to show the extent of achievements and experienced difficulties. In this connection, this paper also investigates based on published knowledge and the perceptions of stakeholders the awareness of nature conservation measures as climate-change adaptation and possibly ways of improvement. In order to address these issues, additionally to an in-depth literature review, 16 experts working in Vienna in the field of either nature conservation or climate protection were interviewed. The transcriptions of these interviews were then used in a qualitative content analysis. The findings show that the vast majority of the interviewed stakeholders see EU climate policy and nature conservation policy separately. Further-more, the implementation of EU climate and nature conservation policy in Vienna is indicated as a "learning by doing" process. There the currently limited cooperation between stakeholders can be improved. Our study also finds that the awareness of different stakeholder groups of the possibility to use nature conservation as a measure against climate change is limited. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Essl, I.] Univ Vienna, Fac Philol & Cultural Studies, Vienna, Austria.
   [Mauerhofer, V.] Meiji Univ, Grad Sch Lim, Environm Law Ctr Org Strateg Coordinat Environm R, Chiyoda Ku, B730,14 Gokan,1-1 Kanda Surugadai, Tokyo 1018301, Japan.
C3 University of Vienna; Meiji University
RP Mauerhofer, V (corresponding author), Meiji Univ, Grad Sch Lim, Environm Law Ctr Org Strateg Coordinat Environm R, Chiyoda Ku, B730,14 Gokan,1-1 Kanda Surugadai, Tokyo 1018301, Japan.
EM volker.mauerhofer@gmx.at
OI Mauerhofer, Volker/0000-0002-5444-2619
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NR 63
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 27
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD MAY 10
PY 2018
VL 183
BP 898
EP 907
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2018.01.210
PG 10
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA GC4OH
UT WOS:000429763800079
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lawrence, J
   Haasnoot, M
AF Lawrence, Judy
   Haasnoot, Marjolijn
TI What it took to catalyse uptake of dynamic adaptive pathways planning to
   address climate change uncertainty
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Decision making; Deep uncertainty; Adaptation pathways; Climate change
   adaptation; Serious game; Flood risk management
ID ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT; TRANSITION; PERCEPTIONS; PERSPECTIVE; GAMES;
   RISK
AB Implementing climate-resilient pathways in conditions of uncertainty and change is a serious challenge. Approaches have been developed for this type of problem, one of which, Dynamic Adaptive Policy Pathways approach (DAPP), has been applied in practice in a limited number of circumstances, mainly for large infrastructure projects and at national scales. To better understand what it takes to catalyse uptake of DAPP to better address uncertainty and change than typical static planning approaches, we examined the role of a simulation game facilitated by a knowledge broker, in a real-life local decision setting on flood risk management in New Zealand. Four intervention phases over four years are described and their influence analysed: 1) creating interest through framing the science, 2) increasing awareness using the Game, 3) experimenting with DAPP, and 4) uptake of DAPP. We found that a knowledge broker introducing new framing of changing risk profiles, facilitating use of the Game and the-DAPP approach in a real-life decision making setting, with contextual support from events and (inter)national reports, catalysed the uptake of adaptive pathways planning. We identified enabling requirements necessary for embedding adaptive planning into decision-making practice for addressing uncertainty and change. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Lawrence, Judy] Victoria Univ Wellington, New Zealand Climate Change Res Inst, POB 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand.
   [Haasnoot, Marjolijn] Deltares, Boussinesqweg 1, NL-2629 HV Delft, Netherlands.
   [Haasnoot, Marjolijn] Delft Univ Technol, Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Victoria University Wellington; Deltares; Delft University of Technology
RP Lawrence, J (corresponding author), Victoria Univ Wellington, New Zealand Climate Change Res Inst, POB 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand.
EM judy.lawrence@vuw.ac.nz
RI Haasnoot, Marjolijn/H-4827-2012; Lawrence, Judy/W-9823-2019
FU Deltares
FX JL was funded by a government research grant and MH by Deltares. Thanks
   to Graeme Campbell, Nicola Shorten, Laura McKim, Daya Atapattu, Dania
   Golub (GWRC), Nigel Taptiklis (Wellington City Council), Steve Markham
   (Tasman District Council); and Dan Zwartz (Ministry for the Environment)
   and the workshop participants; Adolf Stroombergen (Infometrics); Willem
   van Deursen (Carthago Consulting); the Game design team at Deltares;
   NIWA for river flow scenarios. Thanks also go to Dr. Rutger van der
   Brugge, Professor Martin Manning, Professor Bruce Glavovic and to two
   reviewers for their useful suggestions on earlier versions of the paper.
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NR 47
TC 112
Z9 120
U1 3
U2 50
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD FEB
PY 2017
VL 68
BP 47
EP 57
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2016.12.003
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EI7PT
UT WOS:000392691100006
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jacobi, J
   Rist, S
   Altieri, MA
AF Jacobi, Johanna
   Rist, Stephan
   Altieri, Miguel A.
TI Incentives and disincentives for diversified agroforestry systems from
   different actors' perspectives in Bolivia
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Agroforestry adoption; incentives; diversified farming systems; climate
   change adaptation; Bolivia
ID ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICES; AGRICULTURE; LAND; MANAGEMENT; ADOPTION;
   FARMERS; INTENSIFICATION; LANDSCAPES; PAYMENTS; IMPACTS
AB Even though diversified agroforestry systems can provide sustainable livelihoods and a resilient production of different goods, adoption remains limited in Bolivia. We examine major obstacles to agroforestry adoption and possible incentives proposed by farmers and civil-society organizations, and relate them to governance and international mechanisms that might play a role in agroforestry adoption. Market access for produce from diversified agroforestry remains difficult, as does its processing and transport. Moreover, farmers have difficulties in achieving the quantities and homogenous quality demanded by markets in the major cities. But most importantly, farmers and civil-society organizations saw little government support, although 'ecological production in harmony with Mother Earth' is prescribed by law and the constitution. Agroforestry farmers needed support most urgently in the initial phase, when investment costs are high and returns low. They suggested affordable credits, subsidies for diversified farming systems, and insurance against fire. We identified important albeit small steps towards developing markets for agroforestry products, but government support - mostly in the form of diesel subsidies, materials, and infrastructure - mainly benefitted largescale monocultures and cattle ranching. In response to this, interviewees opted for strengthening farmers' organizations, for demanding support with the help of civil-society organizations, and for disseminating best practices.
C1 [Jacobi, Johanna; Altieri, Miguel A.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
   [Rist, Stephan] Univ Bern, Ctr Dev & Environm, Bern, Switzerland.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley;
   University of Bern
RP Jacobi, J (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
EM johanna.jacobi@berkeley.edu
RI Jacobi, Johanna/AAE-6575-2019
OI Jacobi, Johanna/0000-0003-3432-4938
FU Swiss National Science Foundation (Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur
   Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung) [P2BEP1_148876]; Swiss
   National Science Foundation (SNF) [P2BEP1_148876] Funding Source: Swiss
   National Science Foundation (SNF)
FX The research was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation
   (Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen
   Forschung) under Grant P2BEP1_148876.
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NR 71
TC 13
Z9 15
U1 1
U2 28
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1473-5903
EI 1747-762X
J9 INT J AGR SUSTAIN
JI Int. J. Agric. Sustain.
PY 2017
VL 15
IS 4
BP 365
EP 379
DI 10.1080/14735903.2017.1332140
PG 15
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA FB9UQ
UT WOS:000406485000003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kershaw, T
   Lash, D
AF Kershaw, T.
   Lash, D.
TI Investigating the productivity of office workers to quantify the
   effectiveness of climate change adaptation measures
SO BUILDING AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Comfort; Productivity; Climate change; Adaptation; Building; Design
ID SYMPTOMS; VENTILATION; PERCEPTION
AB The impacts of climate change pose many threats to our current way of life. However, the current mitigation agenda has not yet produced the carbon emission reductions needed implying that some level of adaptation will be required. For buildings this is likely to mean either drastic changes to architecture, occupant behaviour or the increased use of artificial cooling to maintain thermal comfort in the future. The capital cost of sustainable buildings is often perceived to be higher than for conventional buildings and there is little incentive to employ sustainable building adaptations over air-conditioning type solutions, making future reductions in carbon emissions unlikely. In this paper we investigate contributing factors to worker productivity in an attempt to justify the perceived cost of sustainable adaptations. Then as a proof of concept we estimate the potential savings that could be achieved by applying two simple adaptations to an office building to produce a more comfortable environment. It is hoped that this consideration of loss of productivity and its causes will aid not only in the choice of useful adaptation decisions, but also a consideration of payback periods will help persuade building commissioners of their value and overcome the perceptions about sustainable buildings. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Kershaw, T.; Lash, D.] Univ Exeter, Ctr Energy & Environm, Exeter EX4 4RN, Devon, England.
C3 University of Exeter
RP Kershaw, T (corresponding author), Univ Exeter, Ctr Energy & Environm, Rennes Dr, Exeter EX4 4RN, Devon, England.
EM t.j.kershaw@ex.ac.uk
RI Kershaw, Tristan/D-2930-2012
OI kershaw, tristan/0000-0003-2148-5396
FU Technology Strategy Board project "Cornwall Council Office
   Rationalisation Programme" under the Design for Future Climate stream
FX This work was funded by the Technology Strategy Board project "Cornwall
   Council Office Rationalisation Programme" under the Design for Future
   Climate stream.
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NR 35
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 1
U2 21
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0360-1323
EI 1873-684X
J9 BUILD ENVIRON
JI Build. Environ.
PD NOV
PY 2013
VL 69
BP 35
EP 43
DI 10.1016/j.buildenv.2013.07.010
PG 9
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA 244ZP
UT WOS:000326429000004
OA Green Accepted, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Harrington-Abrams, R
   Bower, E
AF Harrington-Abrams, Rachel
   Bower, Erica
TI A missing link? The role of international organizations in
   climate-related planned relocation
SO CLIMATE POLICY
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Planned relocation; international organizations; climate change
   adaptation; loss and damage; coordination; accountability
ID RESETTLEMENT; ADAPTATION; DISPLACEMENT; GOVERNANCE; LESSONS; COMPLEX;
   MONEY
AB Planned relocation of communities to less hazardous sites is a complex process anticipated to become more prevalent as climate change accelerates. In many parts of the world, communities and national governments planning internal relocations rely on support from International Organizations (IOs) for decision-making and implementation processes. This IO assistance - ranging from policy guidelines to technical assessments, monitoring and evaluation to finance - varies widely based on diverse national and local contexts. Despite challenges including embedded power dynamics, many IOs are becoming more involved with planned relocation processes and therefore, a greater understanding of IO involvement in planned relocations to date is needed. Our analysis highlights an emergent gap in international climate mobility governance: while climate-related displacement and migration fall under existing IO mandates, there is no obvious institutional home for internal planned relocation. Current support from IOs to nationally and locally led planned relocation processes remains ad hoc and siloed, leading to gaps in international accountability and coordination, including a lack of human rights-based standards for IO engagement. In this article, we outline potential institutional arrangements dedicated to internal planned relocation and assess tradeoffs between pathways. Addressing this 'missing link' in institutional arrangements for internal planned relocation at the international level is essential to promote greater coordination and accountability between key stakeholders as planned relocation becomes more common in a changing climate.
C1 [Harrington-Abrams, Rachel] Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, Bush House,North East Wing,40 Aldwych, London WC2B 4BG, England.
   [Bower, Erica] Stanford Univ, Doerr Sch Sustainabil, Stanford, CA USA.
C3 University of London; King's College London; Stanford University
RP Harrington-Abrams, R (corresponding author), Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, Bush House,North East Wing,40 Aldwych, London WC2B 4BG, England.
EM rachel.harrington-abrams@kcl.ac.uk
OI Harrington-Abrams, Rachel/0000-0003-3027-9834
FX We would like to thank Sarah Koeltzow, Lorenzo Guadagno, Professor Jane
   McAdam, and Dr Helen Adams for their helpful feedback on earlier
   versions of this manuscript.
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NR 81
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 9
U2 9
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1469-3062
EI 1752-7457
J9 CLIM POLICY
JI Clim. Policy
PD 2024 AUG 17
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/14693062.2024.2390523
EA AUG 2024
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA D0P3K
UT WOS:001293287500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kebede, HY
   Mekonnen, AB
   Emiru, NC
   Mekuyie, M
   Ayal, DY
AF Kebede, Hilina Yohannes
   Mekonnen, Abrham Belay
   Emiru, Nega Chalie
   Mekuyie, Muluken
   Ayal, Desalegn Y.
TI Climate variability and indigenous adaptation strategies by Somali
   pastoralists in Ethiopia
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
ID AFAR REGION; WEATHER; IMPACTS
AB Pastoralism is a livelihood system for millions of people around the world and a great majority of them are found in Africa. The indigenous knowledge and strategies on pastoralism are not well understood and properly documented. Hence, this study sheds light on location-specific indigenous climate change adaptation strategies and explores the pastoralist and agro-pastoralist households' perceptions against the meteorological records. Data were collected from 191 sample households, 12 key informants, 32 focus group participants, and National Meteorological Services. The results reveal that there is a high climate variability (CV = 30), high rainfall intensity, and longer dry periods. Almost every year the Rainfall seasonality index (SI) value predicts a longer dry season. The community's perception matched with recorded climate data of the past 36 years and identified 10 major climate extremes orally recounted in history. Indigenous strategies include indigenous weather forecasts, mating calendar, destocking, herd mobility, herd diversification, traditional rotational grazing system ('Seri'), and also emerging adaptation strategies (farming, petty trade, handcraft, charcoal sale, and casual labor) utilized as a result of the severity of climate variability and extremes in the region. The results indicate that emerging adaptation strategies are replacing the preexisting pastoralist livelihood system and that indigenous strategies need support to withstand the current and predicted weather and climate variability in the sites. Pastoralists and agro-pastoralists will be in a better position to adapt to the consequences of climate variability and extremes if indigenous institutions are revitalized with innovations.
C1 [Kebede, Hilina Yohannes] No Arizona Univ, Flagstaff, AZ USA.
   [Mekonnen, Abrham Belay] European Forest Inst, Governance Programme, Pl Vereinten Nationen 7, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
   [Mekonnen, Abrham Belay; Emiru, Nega Chalie; Mekuyie, Muluken] Hawassa Univ, Wondo Genet Coll Forestry & Nat Resources, POB 128, Shashemene, Ethiopia.
   [Ayal, Desalegn Y.] Addis Ababa Univ, Coll Dev Studies, Ctr Food Secur, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
C3 Northern Arizona University; Hawassa University; Addis Ababa University
RP Ayal, DY (corresponding author), Addis Ababa Univ, Coll Dev Studies, Ctr Food Secur, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
EM hk459@nau.edu; abrham.mekonnen@efi.int; nega@hu.edu.et;
   mulukenzeru@gmail.com; desalula@gmail.com
RI Ayal, Desalegn/AAG-3042-2021
OI Ayal, Desalegn Y/0000-0001-8966-2673; Mekonnen, Abrham
   Belay/0000-0003-4729-8759; EMIRU, NEGA CHALIE/0000-0003-1302-7088
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NR 57
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI Vienna
PA Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 8-10, A-1040 Vienna, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 155
IS 8
BP 7259
EP 7273
DI 10.1007/s00704-024-04993-9
EA JUN 2024
PG 15
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA E0R1F
UT WOS:001251513400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kim, YJ
   Park, C
   Lee, DK
   Park, TY
AF Kim, Yoon Jung
   Park, Chan
   Lee, Dong Kun
   Park, Tae Yoon
TI Connecting public health with urban planning: allocating walkable
   cooling shelters considering older people
SO LANDSCAPE AND ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban cooling shelter; Cooling refugee; Vulnerable group; Climate change
   adaptation; Land surface temperature; Heat stress
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE VULNERABILITY; SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; EXTREME HEAT;
   ADAPTATION; WALKABILITY; TEMPERATURE; MORTALITY; CENTERS; COUNTY; SPACES
AB Morbidity and mortality due to severe heat stress are particularly problematic for older people, which emphasizes the need to consider socio-demographic factors in distributing cooling resources. However, there are limited studies to concern the ways to link public health and urban planning to distribute cooling refugees targeting the elderly population. Therefore, this study suggests a socio-spatial analysis that evaluates the distribution of urban cooling shelters in neighborhood units by considering older people and land surface temperature. The walkable distance in a minimum of 10 min was considered when evaluating adequacy in the provision of urban cooling shelters that consisted of an urban park, community cooling center, and urban forest. Residential zones were assessed regarding social factors, which were the density of the elderly population and their relative land price features in housing. Two-way ANOVA test and random forest modeling were applied to identify zones with high vulnerability and low provision of cooling shelters. This study's results showed that resources were lacking in places, where the elderly population was high. How the socio-demographic features affected the inappropriate allocation of cooling resources was considered. This study offers insights to measure and design the adequate provision of urban cooling shelters to secure public health.
C1 [Kim, Yoon Jung] Korea Environm Inst, Korea Adaptat Ctr Climate Change, Sejong, South Korea.
   [Park, Chan] Univ Seoul, Dept Landscape Architecture, Seoul, South Korea.
   [Lee, Dong Kun] Seoul Natl Univ, Coll Agr & Life Sci, CALS, Dept Landscape Architecture & Rural Syst Engn, San 56-1, Seoul 151921, South Korea.
   [Park, Tae Yoon] Yonsei Univ, Grad Sch Educ, Seoul 03722, South Korea.
C3 Korea Environment Institute (KEI); University of Seoul; Seoul National
   University (SNU); Yonsei University
RP Lee, DK (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Coll Agr & Life Sci, CALS, Dept Landscape Architecture & Rural Syst Engn, San 56-1, Seoul 151921, South Korea.
EM kimyj@kei.re.kr; chaneparkmomo7@uos.ac.kr; dklee7@snu.ac.kr;
   ecopark@yonsei.ac.kr
RI Park, Tae-yoon/A-2871-2012; Kim, Yun/E-7117-2015
FU Korea Environment Institute (KEI) upon the request of the Korea Ministry
   of Environment [2020-002-06]
FX AcknowledgementsThis paper is based on the research work "Enhancing
   climate resilience and adaptation ability of vulnerable people
   considering climate change" (2020-002-06), conducted by the Korea
   Environment Institute (KEI) upon the request of the Korea Ministry of
   Environment.
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NR 60
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 12
U2 39
PU SPRINGER JAPAN KK
PI TOKYO
PA SHIROYAMA TRUST TOWER 5F, 4-3-1 TORANOMON, MINATO-KU, TOKYO, 105-6005,
   JAPAN
SN 1860-1871
EI 1860-188X
J9 LANDSC ECOL ENG
JI Landsc. Ecol. Eng.
PD APR
PY 2023
VL 19
IS 2
BP 257
EP 269
DI 10.1007/s11355-023-00543-z
EA FEB 2023
PG 13
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 9W9KP
UT WOS:000937581800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Getahun, YS
   Li, MH
   Chen, YY
   Yate, TA
AF Getahun, Yitea Seneshaw
   Li, Ming-Hsu
   Chen, Yi-Ying
   Yate, Tewoderos Addisu
TI Drought characterization and severity analysis using GRACE-TWS and MODIS
   datasets: a case study from the Awash River Basin (ARB), Ethiopia
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE drought characteristics; drought indices; drought severity; GRACE;
   MODIS; TWSA
ID WATER STORAGE; AGRICULTURAL DROUGHT; EVAPORATIVE DEMAND; RAINY-SEASON;
   VARIABILITY; INDEX; DEFICIT; TRENDS; EVOLUTION; RAINFALL
AB Drought is the utmost highly devastating phenomenon in Ethiopia because of societies that are reliant on rainfall-dependent agriculture; thus, it is crucial to characterize drought at the basin scale using new developments in remote sensing products and recently proposed drought indices. This study aimed to quantify drought in the Awash River Basin (ARB) using drought indices of the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI), Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index (SPEI), Evaporative Demand Drought Index (EDDI), Evaporative Stress Index (ESI), and Water Storage Deficit Index (WSDI). The Mann-Kendall test analysis of annual and seasonal terrestrial water storage (TWS) showed a significant increase from 2002 to 2017 that is beneficial for developmental activities in the ARB. GRACE showed a record high extreme drought that persisted for 15 months was noticed from 2005/01 to 2006/03 with a total water storage deficit of -411.8 mm with a peak shortage of -46.24 mm in 2005/03, representing severe terrestrial water shortage in the ARB. This GRACE-TWS-based quantified extreme water shortage in 2005/30 can be used as a threshold for adaptation. Overall, this study provides a reliable outcome that will be vital for the establishment of climate change adaptation pathways in the future for viable water resources management to minimize the disastrous impacts of drought in the AR.
C1 [Getahun, Yitea Seneshaw] Natl Cent Univ, Debre Berhan Univ, Nat Resources Management, Taoyuan 320, Taiwan.
   [Li, Ming-Hsu; Yate, Tewoderos Addisu] Natl Cent Univ, Grad Inst Hydrol & Ocean Sci, Taoyuan, Taiwan.
   [Chen, Yi-Ying] Acad Sinica, Res Ctr Environm Changes, Taipei 115, Taiwan.
C3 National Central University; National Central University; Academia
   Sinica - Taiwan
RP Getahun, YS (corresponding author), Natl Cent Univ, Debre Berhan Univ, Nat Resources Management, Taoyuan 320, Taiwan.
EM yiseneshaw@gmail.com
RI Getahun, Yitea/AAS-9048-2021; Yate, Tewodros/JDM-3505-2023; Li,
   Ming-Hsu/AAD-4938-2020; Chen, Yi-Ying/A-4892-2017
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NR 100
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 2
U2 15
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
EI 2408-9354
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PD FEB
PY 2023
VL 14
IS 2
BP 516
EP 542
DI 10.2166/wcc.2023.361
EA FEB 2023
PG 27
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA 9F5TS
UT WOS:000925262900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Frohlich, M
   Smith, TF
   Fidelman, P
   Baldwin, C
   Jacobson, C
   Carter, RW
AF Frohlich, Miguel
   Smith, Timothy F.
   Fidelman, Pedro
   Baldwin, Claudia
   Jacobson, Chris
   Carter, R. W. (Bill)
TI Towards adaptive coastal management law: Lessons from Australia and
   Brazil
SO OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive management; Adaptive governance; Climate change adaptation;
   Coastal management; Law; Managed retreat
ID POLICY; IMPLEMENTATION; RETREAT
AB Although adaptive management has been advocated for dealing with the complexity and dynamics of social ecological systems for more than 40 years, successful outcomes in practice have been limited. Among the efforts to overcome this implementation gap, there has been a growing interest in understanding the role of law in adaptive management. In this article, we provide an analysis of adaptive management in two jurisdictions struggling with coastal erosion in the context of their legal arrangements for coastal management: (i) Byron Shire, a local government area in the State of New South Wales, Australia; and (ii) Florian acute accent opolis, a municipality in the State of Santa Catarina, Brazil. Methods included document analysis and inductive thematic coding of 50 semi-structured interviews with key informants from four different stakeholder groups. Our results indicate that both legal certainty and legal flexibility are relevant for adaptive management success. Three directions towards coupling adaptive coastal management with law are suggested: (i) to incorporate adaptive management into coastal management legislation; (ii) to address legal path dependencies that cause maladaptation; and (iii) to integrate adaptive coastal management and adaptive coastal governance through adaptive coastal management law. Our suggestions contribute to improved knowledge on adaptive coastal management law by emphasising the need for an optimal balance between legal flexibility and legal certainty, which represents an avenue for further research and policy development beyond the jurisdictions analysed.
C1 [Frohlich, Miguel; Fidelman, Pedro; Jacobson, Chris] Univ Queensland, Ctr Policy Futures, Level 4,Bldg 20,Staff House Rd, St Lucia, Qld 4072, Australia.
   [Frohlich, Miguel; Smith, Timothy F.; Fidelman, Pedro; Baldwin, Claudia; Carter, R. W. (Bill)] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr, Sch Law & Soc, Locked Bag 4, Maroochydore, Qld 4558, Australia.
   [Frohlich, Miguel] Saes Advogados, Ave Rio Branco 4,1104, BR-20090000 Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
   [Smith, Timothy F.; Baldwin, Claudia] Brock Univ, Environm Sustainabil Res Ctr, 1812 Sir Isaac Brock Way, St Catharines, ON L2S 3A1, Canada.
   [Smith, Timothy F.] Uppsala Univ, SWEDESD, Campus Gotland, SE-62167 Visby, Sweden.
   [Fidelman, Pedro] Univ Tasmania, Ctr Marine Socioecol, Private Bag 129, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia.
C3 University of Queensland; University of the Sunshine Coast; Brock
   University; Uppsala University; University of Tasmania
RP Frohlich, M (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Ctr Policy Futures, Level 4,Bldg 20,Staff House Rd, St Lucia, Qld 4072, Australia.
EM m.frohlich@uq.edu.au; tsmith5@usc.edu.au; p.fidelman@uq.edu.au;
   cbaldwin@usc.edu.au; chris.jacobson.kiwi@gmail.com; bcarter@usc.edu.au
RI Carter, RW/T-8996-2019; , Claudia and Baldwin/G-6889-2019; Fidelman,
   Pedro/N-1466-2014
OI Fidelman, Pedro/0000-0001-7780-0952; Franco Frohlich,
   Miguel/0000-0002-9068-5167; Smith, Timothy/0000-0002-3991-5211
FU Australian Government through the Australian Research Council
   [FT180100652]; Australian Government through Research Training Program
   (RTP) scholarship
FX This research was supported by the Australian Government through the
   Australian Research Council Discovery Projects Funding Scheme (Project
   FT180100652) and a Research Training Program (RTP) scholarship. This
   work contributes to Future Earth Coasts, a Global Research Project of
   Future Earth. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and
   are not necessarily those of the Australian Government, Australian
   Research Council or Future Earth Coasts. We thank all the interviewees
   for their participation in this research project.
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NR 86
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 5
U2 17
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0964-5691
EI 1873-524X
J9 OCEAN COAST MANAGE
JI Ocean Coastal Manage.
PD MAR 15
PY 2022
VL 219
AR 106057
DI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2022.106057
EA FEB 2022
PG 9
WC Oceanography; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Oceanography; Water Resources
GA 0M4XA
UT WOS:000782157600003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Samoy-Pascual, K
   Yadav, S
   Evangelista, G
   Burac, MA
   Rafael, M
   Cabangon, R
   Tokida, T
   Mizoguchi, M
   Regalado, MJ
AF Samoy-Pascual, Kristine
   Yadav, Sudhir
   Evangelista, Gio
   Burac, Mary Ann
   Rafael, Marvelin
   Cabangon, Romeo
   Tokida, Takeshi
   Mizoguchi, Masaru
   Regalado, Manuel Jose
TI Determinants in the Adoption of Alternate Wetting and Drying Technique
   for Rice Production in a Gravity Surface Irrigation System in the
   Philippines
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE adoption; AWD; irrigation; rice; water-savings; yield
ID WATER PRODUCTIVITY; CENTRAL LUZON; TECHNOLOGIES; MANAGEMENT; FARMERS;
   PADDY
AB Alternate Wetting and Drying (AWD) is a well-known low-cost water-saving and climate change adaptation and mitigation technique for irrigated rice. However, its adoption rate has been low despite the decade of dissemination in Asia, especially in the Philippines. Using cross-sectional farm-level survey data, this study empirically explored factors shaping AWD adoption in a gravity surface irrigation system. We used regression-based approaches to examine the factors influencing farmers' adoption of AWD and its impact on yield. Results showed that the majority of the AWD adopters were farmers who practiced enforced rotational irrigation (RI) scheduling within their irrigators' association (IA). With the current irrigation management system, the probability of AWD implementation increases when farmers do not interfere with the irrigation schedule (otherwise they opt to go with flooding). Interestingly, the awareness factor did not play a significant role in the farmers' adoption due to the RI setup. However, the perception of water management as an effective weed control method was positively significant, suggesting that farmers are likely to adopt AWD if weeds are not a major issue in their field. Furthermore, the impact on grain yields did not differ with AWD. Thus, given the RI scheduling already in place within the IA, we recommend fine-tuning this setup following the recommended safe AWD at the IA scale.
C1 [Samoy-Pascual, Kristine; Rafael, Marvelin; Regalado, Manuel Jose] DA Philippine Rice Res Inst, Rice Engn & Mechanizat Div, Sci City Munoz, Nueva Ecija 3119, Philippines.
   [Yadav, Sudhir; Evangelista, Gio; Burac, Mary Ann; Cabangon, Romeo] Int Rice Res Inst, Sustainable Impact Platform, Los Banos 4031, Philippines.
   [Tokida, Takeshi] Inst Agroenvironm Sci, Natl Agr & Food Res Org, 3-1-3,Kannondai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 3058604, Japan.
   [Mizoguchi, Masaru] Univ Tokyo, Grad Sch Agr & Life Sci, Dept Global Agr Sci, Bunkyo Ku, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Tokyo 1138657, Japan.
C3 CGIAR; International Rice Research Institute (IRRI); National
   Agriculture & Food Research Organization - Japan; University of Tokyo
RP Samoy-Pascual, K (corresponding author), DA Philippine Rice Res Inst, Rice Engn & Mechanizat Div, Sci City Munoz, Nueva Ecija 3119, Philippines.; Yadav, S (corresponding author), Int Rice Res Inst, Sustainable Impact Platform, Los Banos 4031, Philippines.
EM kspascual@exchange.philrice.gov.ph; s.yadav@irri.org;
   g.evangelista@irri.org; m.burac@irri.org; ml.rafael@philrice.gov.ph;
   r.cabangon221@gmail.com; tokida@affrc.go.jp;
   amizo@mail.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp; mjcregalado@exchange.philrice.gov.ph
RI Regalado, Manuel Jose/IST-5419-2023; Samoy-Pascual,
   Kristine/AAZ-5237-2020; Tokida, Takeshi/F-7203-2010; Yadav,
   Sudhir/K-7110-2012
OI Mizoguchi, Masaru/0000-0001-8175-4880; Tokida,
   Takeshi/0000-0001-7245-2952; Yadav, Sudhir/0000-0001-7658-8144;
   Evangelista, Gio/0000-0001-8623-6046; SAMOY-PASCUAL,
   KRISTINE/0000-0003-1224-1314
FU The DA-Bureau of Agricultural Research [PhilRice-RTF-002-246,
   IRRI-A-2017-21]; The Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC)
   [81016734]
FX The DA-Bureau of Agricultural Research funded the survey under project
   WateRice (PhilRice-RTF-002-246 and IRRI-A-2017-21). The Swiss Agency for
   Development and Cooperation (SDC) funded the APC through the CORIGAP
   project entitled Closing Rice Yield Gaps in Asia with Reduced
   Environmental Footprint (Grant no. 81016734).
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NR 42
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 3
U2 23
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD JAN
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 1
AR 5
DI 10.3390/w14010005
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA YG4NJ
UT WOS:000742467200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Camargo, A
   Cortesi, L
AF Camargo, Alejandro
   Cortesi, Luisa
TI Flooding water and society
SO WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE cycle; floods; flow; hydrosocial; materiality; water
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; HYDROSOCIAL CYCLE; POLITICAL ECOLOGY;
   ENCOUNTERS
AB As social scientists of water, we need to keep evaluating the analytical tools we use. Through the example of floods, we here develop a critique of one of those tools, the hydrosocial cycle framework, in order to expand our conceptualizations of water. The hydrosocial cycle is a re-elaboration of the classical hydrological cycle which explicitly politicizes and denaturalizes the study of hydrological systems. In political ecology, such a conceptual framework has been pivotal to the understanding of how water circulates in society through a complex web of power relations, economic structures, and processes that are at the same time spatial and historical. But when we deploy this concept to examine floods, a number of limitations emerge. In this article, we formulate three specific theses which focus on those limitations: (a) an overemphasis on society, (b) a lack of attention to ecology and, more generally the relationships between water and other nonhuman elements and processes, and (c) a heuristic overreliance on the metaphors of flow and cycle. In developing these three theses, we discern alternative paths of analysis to conceptualize floodwaters at a time when these events increasingly constitute a significant threat to humans and nonhumans alike. Our hope is that this critique will also contribute to broader interdisciplinary debates about water and society. This article is categorized under: Human Water > Water as Imagined and Represented Water and Life > Conservation, Management, and Awareness Human Water > Water Governance
C1 [Camargo, Alejandro] Univ Norte, Barranquilla, Colombia.
   [Cortesi, Luisa] Cornell Univ, Dept Sci & Technol Studies, Ithaca, NY USA.
   [Cortesi, Luisa] Cornell Univ, Dept Anthropol, Ithaca, NY USA.
   [Cortesi, Luisa] Yale Univ, Sch Forestry & Environm Studies, New Haven, CT 06511 USA.
   [Cortesi, Luisa] Yale Univ, Dept Anthropol, New Haven, CT 06520 USA.
C3 Universidad del Norte Colombia; Cornell University; Cornell University;
   Yale University; Yale University
RP Cortesi, L (corresponding author), Cornell Univ, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA.
EM luisa.cortesi@yale.edu
RI Cortesi, Luisa/GLS-1304-2022; Camargo, Alejandro/AAR-7724-2020
OI Camargo, Alejandro/0000-0002-5812-8416; Cortesi,
   Luisa/0000-0002-6548-0573
FU Universite de Montreal; Cornell University; Yale University
FX Universite de Montreal; Cornell University; Yale University
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NR 71
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 0
U2 15
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 2049-1948
J9 WIRES WATER
JI Wiley Interdiscip. Rev.-Water
PD SEP
PY 2019
VL 6
IS 5
AR e1374
DI 10.1002/wat2.1374
EA AUG 2019
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA IR6AI
UT WOS:000480138600001
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Knott, JE
   Jacobs, JM
   Sias, JE
   Kirshen, P
   Dave, EV
AF Knott, Jayne E.
   Jacobs, Jennifer M.
   Sias, Jo E.
   Kirshen, Paul
   Dave, Eshan, V
TI A Framework for Introducing Climate-Change Adaptation in Pavement
   Management
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE pavements; climate change; sea-level rise; adaptation planning;
   groundwater rise; temperature rise; infrastructure; resiliency;
   life-cycle costs; pavement management systems
ID ADAPTIVE POLICY PATHWAYS; DESIGN; COSTS; INFRASTRUCTURE; TEMPERATURE;
   PERFORMANCE
AB Greenhouse gas emissions have caused global temperatures to rise since the mid-20th century accompanied by sea-level rise (SLR). Temperature increases and SLR-induced groundwater rise have been shown to cause premature pavement failure in many roadway structures. Hybrid bottom-up/top-down (hybrid) adaptation approaches have shown promise by initially investigating an asset's response to incremental environmental change and then identifying the timing of critical effects for budgetary planning. This improves practitioners' understanding of the asset's climate resiliency and informs adaptation-plan development to minimize both cost and risk. In this study, a hybrid approach to pavement adaptation with climate-change-induced temperature and groundwater rise is demonstrated at a case-study site in coastal New Hampshire. The hot-mix-asphalt (HMA) thickness that achieves a minimum of 85% reliability is calculated for 70 combinations of incremental temperature and groundwater rise. Increasing the base-layer thickness improves resiliency against rising temperatures, but rising groundwater diminishes this improvement demonstrating that both HMA and base-layer thickness increases are needed. Thirteen adaptation pathways are evaluated for pavement performance, life-cycle costs, and road-surface inundation over a 60-year pavement management period. A stepwise and flexible adaptation plan is developed that includes HMA overlays with prescribed thickness and application timing, base-layer rehabilitation options, and re-evaluation opportunities.
C1 [Knott, Jayne E.] JFK Environm Serv LLC, Upton, MA 01568 USA.
   [Jacobs, Jennifer M.; Sias, Jo E.; Dave, Eshan, V] Univ New Hampshire, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Durham, NH 03824 USA.
   [Kirshen, Paul] Univ Massachusetts, Sch Environm, Boston, MA 02125 USA.
C3 University System Of New Hampshire; University of New Hampshire;
   University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Boston
RP Knott, JE (corresponding author), JFK Environm Serv LLC, Upton, MA 01568 USA.
EM jfknott@jfkenviroserv.com
RI Knott, Jayne/GQP-2309-2022; Dave, Eshan/G-2937-2010
OI Knott, Jayne/0000-0002-3663-107X; Dave, Eshan/0000-0001-9788-2246;
   Jacobs, Jennifer/0000-0003-3824-6439; Sias, Jo/0000-0001-5284-0392
FU University of New Hampshire (UNH) Department of Civil and Environmental
   Engineering; UNH Center for Infrastructure Resilience to Climate
   (UCIRC); Infrastructure and Climate Network (ICNet) - U.S. National
   Science Foundation via the RCN-SEES: Engineering Research Collaboratory
   for Sustainable Infrastructure in a Changing Climate [CBET 1231326]
FX This research was funded in part by the University of New Hampshire
   (UNH) Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering; and the UNH
   Center for Infrastructure Resilience to Climate (UCIRC). It was also
   supported by the Infrastructure and Climate Network (ICNet) which was
   funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation via the RCN-SEES:
   Engineering Research Collaboratory for Sustainable Infrastructure in a
   Changing Climate (Grant Number: CBET 1231326).
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Z9 32
U1 3
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PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD AUG
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 16
AR 4382
DI 10.3390/su11164382
PG 23
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA IV7UO
UT WOS:000484472500126
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mullin, CA
   Kirchhoff, CJ
AF Mullin, Cristina A.
   Kirchhoff, Christine J.
TI Marshaling Adaptive Capacities within an Adaptive Management Framework
   to Enhance the Resiliency of Wastewater Systems
SO JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION
LA English
DT Article
DE climate variability; change; planning; flooding; precipitation;
   wastewater management; organizational learning; resilience; adaptive
   capacity
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; GOVERNANCE; BARRIERS; STATE; RISK
AB We assess adaptive capacity and adaptive management as measures of wastewater (WW) system resiliency using data from interviews with WW system managers (hereafter managers) impacted by past storms. Results suggest the most resilient WW systems are those with high adaptive capacities that employ an adaptive management approach to make ongoing adaptation investments over time. Greater amounts of generic adaptive capacities (i.e., skilled staff and good leadership) help smooth both day-to-day and emergency operations and provide a foundation for adaptive management. In turn, adaptive management helps managers both build more generic adaptive capacities, and develop and employ greater amounts and diversity of specific adaptive capacities (i.e., soft and/or hard adaptations) that are especially important for enhancing and sustaining resiliency. Adaptive management also enables managers to better understand their system's vulnerabilities, how those vulnerabilities change over time, and what specific actions may reduce those vulnerabilities. Finally, our work suggests WW system resilience critically depends on the capacities of the human systems for building resilience as much as or more so than relying only on physical infrastructure resilience. Our work contributes to filling an important gap in the literature by advancing our understanding of the human dimensions of infrastructure resilience and has practical implications for advancing resilience in the WW sector.
C1 [Mullin, Cristina A.; Kirchhoff, Christine J.] Univ Connecticut, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Storrs, CT 06269 USA.
C3 University of Connecticut
RP Mullin, CA (corresponding author), Univ Connecticut, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Storrs, CT 06269 USA.
EM cristina.mullin@uconn.edu
OI Mullin, Cristina/0000-0002-0615-6087; Kirchhoff,
   Christine/0000-0002-2686-6764
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NR 60
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 14
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1093-474X
EI 1752-1688
J9 J AM WATER RESOUR AS
JI J. Am. Water Resour. Assoc.
PD AUG
PY 2019
VL 55
IS 4
BP 906
EP 919
DI 10.1111/1752-1688.12709
PG 14
WC Engineering, Environmental; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Water
   Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Engineering; Geology; Water Resources
GA IM4QH
UT WOS:000477979100009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thaler, T
   Seebauer, S
AF Thaler, Thomas
   Seebauer, Sebastian
TI Bottom-up citizen initiatives in natural hazard management: Why they
   appear and what they can do?
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Flood risk management; Bottom-up initiative; Institutional capital;
   Human capital; Social capital; Governance arrangements
ID FLOOD RISK-MANAGEMENT; LOCAL STAKEHOLDER PARTICIPATION; SOCIETAL
   TRANSFORMATION; EMERGENCY SERVICES; COLLECTIVE ACTION; RESILIENCE;
   ADAPTATION; ROLES; ENGAGEMENT; COMMUNITIES
AB In the face of increasingly frequent and severe extreme weather events due to climate change, merely top-down governance approaches are increasingly found inadequate and ineffective. Recent climate change adaptation policy strives to promote bottom-up, citizen-driven initiatives to improve local resilience. How and under what conditions citizens may engage in collective action remains unclear, however. We employ a mixed-methods approach in Eastern Tyrol, Austria, combining stakeholder workshops with a survey of 216 citizens at risk. Results show that bottom-up citizen initiatives can provide multiple benefits, such as increasing risk awareness and local adaptive capacities. While citizens are open-minded to assuming a broad range of activities and responsibilities, local stakeholders in natural hazard management prefer to limit civic engagement to support roles, mostly during recovery from a natural hazard event. Citizen initiatives tend to emerge in communities with weak institutional capital. This may lead to conflicts with existing institutions over allocation of competences and power. Contrastingly, social and human forms of capital support the formation of initiatives; however, low willingness of citizens to assume leadership positions may be a bottleneck for sustained initiatives. Public administration and emergency organisations should address current institutional barriers. They should empower and allow citizens to act autonomously.
C1 [Thaler, Thomas] Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, Inst Mt Risk Engn, Vienna, Austria.
   [Seebauer, Sebastian] Joanneum Res Forsch Gesell mbH, LIFE Ctr Climate Energy & Soc, Graz, Austria.
C3 BOKU University
RP Thaler, T (corresponding author), Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, Inst Mt Risk Engn, Vienna, Austria.
EM thomas.thaler@boku.ac.at
RI ; Thaler, Thomas/O-7112-2014
OI Seebauer, Sebastian/0000-0003-4592-9529; Thaler,
   Thomas/0000-0003-3869-3722
FU Austrian Climate and Energy Fund; Austrian Climate Research Program
   [B567146]
FX Sincere thanks go to Claudia Winkler for support in survey design and
   administration, and to Stefan Ortner for workshop organisation. This
   research received financial support from the Austrian Climate and Energy
   Fund and was carried out within the Austrian Climate Research Program
   (funding no. B567146).
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U1 4
U2 34
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD APR
PY 2019
VL 94
BP 101
EP 111
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.12.012
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA IH7GR
UT WOS:000474672500011
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Halkos, G
   Skouloudis, A
AF Halkos, George
   Skouloudis, Antonis
TI Investigating resilience barriers of small and medium-sized enterprises
   to flash floods: a quantile regression of determining factors
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Flash floods; organizational resilience barriers; small and medium-sized
   enterprises; climate change; environmental perturbations; sustainable
   development
ID BUSINESS CONTINUITY MANAGEMENT; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SMES; RISK;
   HOUSEHOLDS; EFFICIENCY; MODELS; SYSTEM
AB Flash floods continue a trend of costly disasters attributed to changing weather patterns and climate disruptions. Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs) are more vulnerable and ill-prepared to flash flooding, compared to their larger counterparts, so they are disproportionately affected by such extreme weather events. This study reports on the results of a quantitative survey of SME owners/managers and employs quantile regression analysis in an attempt to shed light on factors affecting resilience barriers to flash floods. Findings suggest that the effect of organizational size on SME barriers is reduced as barriers increase. In contrast, the effect of organizational age is found to be positive with low magnitudes when barriers are either very low or considerably high in contrast to negative effects when barriers are at moderate levels. A positive influence of the industrial affiliation at all barrier levels is also identified. Previous experience with flash flooding events as well as the effect of profitability are found to have negative impact in most levels of analysis. The assessment highlights the need for targeted intervention and assistance to the various segments of the SME sector through customized guidance and/or ad hoc regulation by focusing on factors explaining barriers to resilience.
C1 [Halkos, George] Univ Thessaly, Dept Econ, Lab Operat Res, Volos, Greece.
   [Skouloudis, Antonis] Univ Aegean, Ctr Environm Policy & Strateg Environm Management, Dept Environm, Mitilini 81100, Greece.
C3 University of Thessaly; University of Aegean
RP Skouloudis, A (corresponding author), Univ Aegean, Ctr Environm Policy & Strateg Environm Management, Dept Environm, Mitilini 81100, Greece.
EM skouloudis@env.aegean.gr
RI Skouloudis, Antonis/AAG-9055-2020; HALKOS, GEORGE/AAE-4772-2020;
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NR 84
TC 22
Z9 22
U1 2
U2 47
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD JAN 2
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 1
BP 57
EP 66
DI 10.1080/17565529.2019.1596782
EA MAR 2019
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KE9KX
UT WOS:000465838300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pathirana, A
   Radhakrishnan, M
   Ashley, R
   Quan, NH
   Zevenbergen, C
AF Pathirana, Assela
   Radhakrishnan, Mohanasundar
   Ashley, Richard
   Nguyen Hong Quan
   Zevenbergen, Chris
TI Managing urban water systems with significant adaptation
   deficits-unified framework for secondary cities: part II-the practice
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE IMPACTS; MANAGEMENT; FLEXIBILITY; FUTURE; VULNERABILITY;
   DIMENSIONS; AGILITY; CITY
AB Adaptation gaps are shortcomings of a system responding to climate change, whereas adaptation deficits are shortcomings in providing services. These two drivers for adaptation are often in conflict in many secondary cities in the global south (SCGS). It is possible to align these seemingly conflicting drivers into a productive unity, a conceptual alignment, which is the first step in achieving harmony while implementing adaptation actions. This paper focuses on the practical aspects of implementing aligned adaptation action that leads to improvements in liveability, sustainability, and resilience of SCGS. At an abstract level, the nature of the adaptation problem is similar to the complex problems identified in various domains, such as software development, manufacturing, and supply chain management. The widely accepted "agile principles"-used in the above domains-is the basis for developing a set of twelve principles for urban adaptation, which are synthesized from numerous recent studies that have implicitly proposed or applied most of these principles to climate change adaptation in urban settings. These principles lead to four essential objectives appertaining to the process of sustainable urban adaptation. The urban agile principles are used to analyze the current state of adaptation of Can Tho City in Vietnam and to ascertain the agile ways of addressing its adaptation challenges. Analysis of the outcomes shows that harmonized approaches can simultaneously address both adaptation deficits and gaps.
C1 [Pathirana, Assela; Radhakrishnan, Mohanasundar; Ashley, Richard; Zevenbergen, Chris] UNESCO IHE Inst Water Educ, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Pathirana, Assela; Radhakrishnan, Mohanasundar; Ashley, Richard] Cooperat Res Ctr Water Sensit Cities, Clayton, Vic, Australia.
   [Nguyen Hong Quan] Vietnam Natl Univ Ho Chi Minh City VNU HCM, IER, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
C3 IHE Delft Institute for Water Education; Cooperative Research Centre for
   Water Sensitive Cities (CRCWSC); Vietnam National University Ho Chi Minh
   City (VNUHCM) System
RP Pathirana, A (corresponding author), UNESCO IHE Inst Water Educ, Delft, Netherlands.; Pathirana, A (corresponding author), Cooperat Res Ctr Water Sensit Cities, Clayton, Vic, Australia.
EM assela@pathirana.net
RI Pathirana, Assela/B-5189-2011
OI Pathirana, Assela/0000-0003-0907-1764; Nguyen, Hong
   Quan/0000-0001-7685-8191
FU EPSRC [EP/I029346/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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NR 53
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 32
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JUL
PY 2018
VL 149
IS 1
SI SI
BP 57
EP 74
DI 10.1007/s10584-017-2059-0
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA GN9AK
UT WOS:000439470600005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Davis, KF
   Bhattachan, A
   D'Odorico, P
   Suweis, S
AF Davis, Kyle Frankel
   Bhattachan, Abinash
   D'Odorico, Paolo
   Suweis, Samir
TI A universal model for predicting human migration under climate change:
   examining future sea level rise in Bangladesh
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE sea level rise; human migration; radiation model; climate change
   adaptation
ID ADAPTATION; IMPACTS; CYCLONE; FLOWS; VULNERABILITY; DISPLACEMENT;
   VARIABILITY; MOBILITY; DELTAS; SYSTEM
AB Climate change is expected to impact the habitability of many places around the world in significant and unprecedented ways in the coming decades. While previous studies have provided estimates of populations potentially exposed to various climate impacts, little work has been done to assess the number of people that may actually be displaced or where they will choose to go. Here we modify a diffusion-based model of human mobility in combination with population, geographic, and climatic data to estimate the sources, destinations, and flux of potential migrants as driven by sea level rise (SLR) in Bangladesh in the years 2050 and 2100. Using only maps of population and elevation, we predict that 0.9 million people (by year 2050) to 2.1 million people (by year 2100) could be displaced by direct inundation and that almost all of this movement will occur locally within the southern half of the country. We also find that destination locations should anticipate substantial additional demands on jobs (594 000), housing (197 000), and food (783 x109 calories) by mid-century as a result of those displaced by SLR. By linking the sources of migrants displaced by SLR with their likely destinations, we demonstrate an effective approach for predicting climate-driven migrant flows, especially in data-limited settings.
C1 [Davis, Kyle Frankel] Columbia Univ, Earth Inst, New York, NY 10025 USA.
   [Davis, Kyle Frankel] Nature Conservancy, New York, NY 10001 USA.
   [Bhattachan, Abinash] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Forestry & Environm Resources, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
   [D'Odorico, Paolo] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
   [Suweis, Samir] Univ Padua, CNISM, Dept Phys & Astron, I-35131 Padua, Italy.
   [Suweis, Samir] INFN, I-35131 Padua, Italy.
C3 Columbia University; Nature Conservancy; North Carolina State
   University; University of California System; University of California
   Berkeley; University of Padua; Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
   (INFN)
RP Davis, KF (corresponding author), Columbia Univ, Earth Inst, New York, NY 10025 USA.; Davis, KF (corresponding author), Nature Conservancy, New York, NY 10001 USA.
EM kd2620@columbia.edu
RI Suweis, Samir/G-7001-2014; Davis, Kyle/AEI-8432-2022; D'Odorico,
   Paolo/HTQ-6744-2023
OI Davis, Kyle Frankel/0000-0003-4504-1407; D'Odorico,
   Paolo/0000-0002-0007-5833
FU Nature Conservancy's NatureNet Science fellowship
FX K F D, A B, P D, andS Sdesigned the experiment. K F D, A B, and S S
   performed the analysis. K FD, A B, PD, and S S wrote the paper. KFD was
   funded by The Nature Conservancy's NatureNet Science fellowship.
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NR 70
TC 65
Z9 68
U1 1
U2 55
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD JUN
PY 2018
VL 13
IS 6
AR 064030
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/aac4d4
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA GJ1AG
UT WOS:000434985200001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Oo, AT
   Van Huylenbroeck, G
   Speelman, S
AF Oo, Aung Tun
   Van Huylenbroeck, Guido
   Speelman, Stijn
TI Assessment of climate change vulnerability of farm households in Pyapon
   District, a delta region in Myanmar
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Flooding; Saltwater intrusion; Vulnerability; Livelihood and;
   Socioeconomics
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY
AB Sea level rise causes saltwater intrusion and flooding of agricultural land and ultimately threatens the livelihoods of farm households in the delta region of Myanmar. Empirical research on the effects of climate change on the delta's agriculture and an assessment of the vulnerability are becoming necessary. This study explores the vulnerability of farm households to sea level rise using two methods: the Livelihood Vulnerability Index (LVI), which is comprised of 37 indicators, and the Socioeconomic Vulnerability Index (SeVI), which contains 35 indicators. Interviews with 178 farmers were conducted in Bogale, Pyapon and Dedaye Townships in Pyapon District. In addition, 7 focus group discussions were performed, with at least 2 discussions in each Township. Both methods identify Bogale to be the most vulnerable Township, followed by Dedaye and Pyapon Townships. Following the LVI approach, Bogale Township has the highest sensitivity to climate effects and the highest exposure to natural hazards, but also a higher adaptive capacity than the other townships. In contrast using the SeVI approach, Bogale was found to have the highest sensitivity and exposure to natural hazards but the lowest adaptive capacity score. The study found that the climate change adaptation measures taken by the farmers are important to limit vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change and thus promotion of the adaptive capacity of farmers is important for the delta region of Myanmar.
C1 [Oo, Aung Tun; Van Huylenbroeck, Guido; Speelman, Stijn] Univ Ghent, Fac Biosci Engn, Dept Agr Econ, Ghent, Belgium.
C3 Ghent University
RP Oo, AT (corresponding author), Univ Ghent, Fac Biosci Engn, Dept Agr Econ, Ghent, Belgium.
EM aungtun.oo@ugent.be
RI Van Huylenbroeck, Guido/L-9251-2017
OI speelman, stijn/0000-0001-7692-3459; Tun Oo, Aung/0000-0003-2203-5549
FU World Wide Fund For Nature (WWF) _Russell E. Train Education for Nature
   Program (EFN)
FX Heartfelt thanks to the farmers who were involved in the study. The
   authors would like to express their sincere gratitude to the Department
   of Agriculture (DoA) in Pyapon district for their support of the field
   survey. The corresponding author greatly acknowledges the World Wide
   Fund For Nature (WWF) _Russell E. Train Education for Nature Program
   (EFN) for the financial support to enhance capacity for conservation in
   Myanmar.
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NR 50
TC 36
Z9 39
U1 0
U2 29
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD JUN
PY 2018
VL 28
BP 10
EP 21
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2018.02.012
PG 12
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA GD1TK
UT WOS:000430284000002
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nalau, J
   Handmer, J
AF Nalau, Johanna
   Handmer, John
TI When is transformation a viable policy alternative?
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Policy change; Problem types; Transformation; Disaster risk management;
   Climate change adaptation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; WARMING CLIMATE; ADAPTATION;
   VULNERABILITY; EXTREMES; WEATHER; EVENTS; EUROPE
AB The most common response to change by societies is either to take incremental steps and maintain the current system or accept gradual partial change. Yet, given the current and future complex large-scale challenges like climate change, such responses are increasingly inadequate. Calls are now made for societies to implement transformative approaches in order to manage complex problems in a more sustainable and adaptive manner. However, the discussion around transformative change is still emerging and it is not clear as to what transformation means, how it can be evaluated, and how the conceptions of transformation fit within the current understanding of dealing with policy problems in practice. This paper explores the range of current understandings on transformation and its characteristics, and uses Handmer and Dovers' (2007, 2009, 2013) three-staged typology to investigate different approaches to identifying and managing policy problems and the potential scope for transformation. Examples from policy and practice within disaster risk management are used to demonstrate how different management approaches attempt to deal with particular problems and to investigate to what extent these could be transformative. It is argued that not all transformation is positive and welcome, and that greater focus needs to be placed on how complex problems are managed in a manner that enables long-term positive transformation. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Nalau, Johanna] Griffith Univ, Griffith Climate Change Response Program, Nathan, Qld 4222, Australia.
   [Handmer, John] RMIT Univ, Ctr Risk & Community Safety, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia.
C3 Griffith University; Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT)
RP Handmer, J (corresponding author), RMIT Univ, Ctr Risk & Community Safety, GPO Box 2476, Melbourne, Vic 3001, Australia.
EM j.nalau@griffith.edu.au; John.handmer@rmit.edu.au
RI Nalau, Johanna/V-5692-2018
OI Nalau, Johanna/0000-0001-6581-3967
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NR 46
TC 62
Z9 63
U1 1
U2 29
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD DEC
PY 2015
VL 54
BP 349
EP 356
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2015.07.022
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CT2AC
UT WOS:000362603400037
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Watkiss, P
   Benzie, M
   Klein, RJT
AF Watkiss, Paul
   Benzie, Magnus
   Klein, Richard J. T.
TI The complementarity and comparability of climate change adaptation and
   mitigation
SO WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID POLICY; FRAMEWORK; UNCERTAINTY; NETHERLANDS; SYNERGIES; ECONOMICS;
   IMPACTS; OPTIONS; COSTS; RISK
AB Both mitigation and adaptation can reduce the risks of climate change. This study reviews the complementarity and comparability between the two, looking first at the global level and then at the national-to-local domain. At the global level, the review finds differing definitions and viewpoints exist in the literature. Much of the economic literature reports that global mitigation and adaptation are substitutes (in economic terms). In contrast, the scientific literature considers them to be complementary (in policy terms), as they address different risks that vary temporally and spatially. The degree of complementarity and comparability therefore depends on the perspective taken, although there is a policy space where the two can overlap. However, the governance, institutional, and policy-based literature identifies that even if a global mitigation and adaptation mix could be defined, it would be highly contentious and extremely difficult to deliver in practice. The review then considers the complementarity and comparability of mitigation and adaptation at the national-to-local domain, in national policy and at sector level. The review finds there is greater potential for complementarity at this scale, although possible conflicts can also exist. However, the institutional, governance, and policy literature identifies a number of barriers to practical implementation, and as a result, complementary mitigation and adaptation action is unlikely to happen autonomously. Finally, the lessons from the review are drawn together to highlight policy relevant issues and identify research gaps. (C) 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
C1 [Watkiss, Paul] Paul Watkiss Associates, Oxford, England.
   [Benzie, Magnus; Klein, Richard J. T.] Stockholm Environm Inst, Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Stockholm Environment Institute
RP Watkiss, P (corresponding author), Paul Watkiss Associates, Oxford, England.
EM paul_watkiss@btinternet.com
RI ; Klein, Richard J.T./B-1148-2009
OI Watkiss, Paul/0000-0001-9940-976X; Klein, Richard
   J.T./0000-0002-9458-0944
FU European Community [282746]; ECONADAPT project (Economics of Adaptation)
   [603906]; UK Department for Environment and Climate Change; Norden
   Top-level Research Initiative subprogram 'Effect Studies and Adaptation
   to Climate Change'
FX The completion of this article received funding from the European
   Community's Seventh Framework Program, as part of the IMPACT2C Project
   (quantifying projected impacts under 2 degrees C warming, grant
   agreement 282746), the ECONADAPT project (Economics of Adaptation, grant
   agreement 603906), and the UK Department for Environment and Climate
   Change, as part of the AVOID Program. Research presented in this article
   contributes to the Nordic Centre of Excellence for Strategic Adaptation
   Research (NORD-STAR), which is funded by the Norden Top-level Research
   Initiative subprogram 'Effect Studies and Adaptation to Climate Change.'
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NR 98
TC 22
Z9 24
U1 1
U2 44
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1757-7780
EI 1757-7799
J9 WIRES CLIM CHANGE
JI Wiley Interdiscip. Rev.-Clim. Chang.
PD NOV-DEC
PY 2015
VL 6
IS 6
BP 541
EP 557
DI 10.1002/wcc.368
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA CU2CM
UT WOS:000363329800002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lakshmanan, A
   Geethalakshmi, V
   Rajalakshmi, D
   Bhuvaneswari, K
   Srinivasan, R
   Sridhar, G
   Sekhar, NU
   Annamalai, H
AF Lakshmanan, A.
   Geethalakshmi, V.
   Rajalakshmi, D.
   Bhuvaneswari, K.
   Srinivasan, R.
   Sridhar, G.
   Sekhar, N. U.
   Annamalai, H.
TI CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION STRATEGIES IN THE BHAVANI BASIN USING THE SWAT
   MODEL
SO APPLIED ENGINEERING IN AGRICULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation strategies; Climate Change; Rice; SWAT; RegCM3; A1B scenario
AB The present study aims to assess the impacts of climate change on hydrology and rice yield in the Bhavani Basin of India using the SWAT model. The investigation indicates that SWAT can be applied under a changing climate as a decision support tool for framing adaptation strategies such as altering the method of cultivation by changing water and fertilizer management. Climate change scenarios were developed using the RegCM3 model with EH5OM GCM output for an A1B scenario. The RegCM3 model tended to slightly underestimate the maximum and minimum temperatures. The generated daily climate data were used in the SWAT model for assessing the impact on hydrology and rice productivity of the river basin for a continuous time period of 130 years (1971-2100). To validate the SWAT model, predicted rice yields for the Bhavani Basin over a period of 11 years (1999-2009) were compared with the observed rice yields of Erode district in which the Bhavani Basin is located and the results indicated the satisfactory performance of the model.
   It is shown that the SWAT model can be employed under different climate change and management scenarios for developing adaptation strategies to sustain rice production. The SRI system of rice cultivation is found to be a better adaptive technology for changing climatic conditions than the conventional flooding system of cultivation in regards to water conservation (300 mm) and increasing yield (26%).
C1 [Lakshmanan, A.] Tamil Nadu Agr Univ, Dept Nano Sci & Technol, Coimbatore 641003, Tamil Nadu, India.
   [Geethalakshmi, V.; Rajalakshmi, D.; Bhuvaneswari, K.] Tamil Nadu Agr Univ, Agro Climate Res Ctr, Coimbatore 641003, Tamil Nadu, India.
   [Srinivasan, R.] Texas A&M Univ, Spatial Sci Lab, College Stn, TX USA.
   [Sridhar, G.] Univ Reading, Reading RG6 2AH, Berks, England.
   [Annamalai, H.] Univ Hawaii, IPRC SOEST, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
C3 Tamil Nadu Agricultural University; Tamil Nadu Agricultural University;
   Texas A&M University System; Texas A&M University College Station;
   University of Reading; University of Hawaii System
RP Lakshmanan, A (corresponding author), Tamil Nadu Agr Univ, Dept Nano Sci & Technol, Coimbatore 641003, Tamil Nadu, India.
EM lakshmanantnau@yahoo.com
RI arunachalam, lakshmanan/AAV-1073-2020; Vellingiri,
   Geethalakshmi/AAP-1053-2020; Bhuvaneswari, K./AAS-3767-2020; Srinivasan,
   Raghavan/D-3937-2009
OI Bhuvaneswari, Kulanthaivel/0000-0002-9139-5700; Srinivasan,
   Raghavan/0000-0001-8375-6038; arunachalam,
   lakshmanan/0000-0003-2912-1626; Geethalakshmi,
   Vellingiri/0000-0003-1631-121X
FU Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norway; Royal Norwegian Embassy in New
   Delhi
FX The authors would like to thank the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norway
   and the Royal Norwegian Embassy in New Delhi for the financial support
   to undertake the study through the ClimaRice project. The authors are
   also thankful to ISRO, Bangalore for providing necessary digitized land
   use data for running the SWAT model.
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NR 14
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 19
PU AMER SOC AGRICULTURAL & BIOLOGICAL ENGINEERS
PI ST JOSEPH
PA 2950 NILES RD, ST JOSEPH, MI 49085-9659 USA
SN 0883-8542
EI 1943-7838
J9 APPL ENG AGRIC
JI Appl. Eng. Agric.
PD NOV
PY 2011
VL 27
IS 6
BP 887
EP 893
PG 7
WC Agricultural Engineering
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 878GY
UT WOS:000299244700003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Falloon, P
   Bebber, DP
   Dalin, C
   Ingram, J
   Mitchell, D
   Hartley, TN
   Johnes, PJ
   Newbold, T
   Challinor, AJ
   Finch, J
   Galdos, MV
   Petty, C
   Cornforth, R
   Bhunnoo, R
   Pope, E
   Enow, A
   Borrion, A
   Waterson, A
   MacNeill, K
   Houldcroft, A
AF Falloon, Pete
   Bebber, Daniel P.
   Dalin, Carole
   Ingram, John
   Mitchell, Dann
   Hartley, Tom N.
   Johnes, Penny J.
   Newbold, Tim
   Challinor, Andrew J.
   Finch, Jessica
   Galdos, Marcelo, V
   Petty, Celia
   Cornforth, Ros
   Bhunnoo, Riaz
   Pope, Edward
   Enow, Andrew
   Borrion, Aiduan
   Waterson, Amy
   MacNeill, Katrina
   Houldcroft, Alice
TI What do changing weather and climate shocks and stresses mean for the UK
   food system?
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE UK; climate extremes; food system; food security; climate impacts;
   climate adaptation; climate change
C1 [Falloon, Pete; Pope, Edward; Waterson, Amy; MacNeill, Katrina] Hadley Ctr, Met Off, Exeter EX4 4QD, Devon, England.
   [Bebber, Daniel P.] Univ Exeter, Dept Biosci, Geoffrey Pope Bldg,Stocker Rd, Exeter EX4 4QD, Devon, England.
   [Dalin, Carole] UCL, Inst Sustainable Resources, Bartlett Sch Environm Energy & Resources, London, England.
   [Ingram, John] Univ Oxford, Environm Change Inst, South Parks Rd, Oxford OX1 3QY, England.
   [Mitchell, Dann] Univ Bristol, Cabot Inst Environm, Univ Rd, Bristol BS8 1SS, Avon, England.
   [Hartley, Tom N.] Food Stand Agcy, Strateg Surveillance, Foss House,1-2 Peasholme Green, York YO1 7PR, N Yorkshire, England.
   [Mitchell, Dann; Johnes, Penny J.] Univ Bristol, Sch Geog Sci, Univ Rd, Bristol BS8 1SS, Avon, England.
   [Newbold, Tim] UCL, Dept Genet Evolut & Environm, Ctr Biodivers & Environm Res, London, England.
   [Challinor, Andrew J.] Univ Leeds, Inst Climate & Atmospher Sci ICAS, Sch Earth & Environm, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Challinor, Andrew J.] CIAT, CGIAR Res Program Climate Change Agr & Food Secur, Cali, Colombia.
   [Finch, Jessica] Dept Environm Food & Rural Affairs, Seacole Bldg,2 Marsham St, London SW1P 4DF, England.
   [Petty, Celia; Cornforth, Ros] Univ Reading, Walker Inst, Reading RG6 6EU, Berks, England.
   [Petty, Celia] Univ Reading, Evidence Dev, Reading RG6 6EU, Berks, England.
   [Bhunnoo, Riaz] UK Res & Innovat, Global Food Secur Programme, Swindon, Wilts, England.
   [Enow, Andrew] UK Res & Innovat, Biotechnol & Biol Sci Res Council, Swindon, Wilts, England.
   [Borrion, Aiduan] UCL, Dept Civil Environm & Geomat Engn, Chadwick Bldg,Gower St, London WC1E 6BT, England.
   [Houldcroft, Alice] Met Off, Commun Team, Exeter, Devon, England.
C3 Met Office - UK; Hadley Centre; University of Exeter; University of
   London; University College London; University of Oxford; University of
   Bristol; University of Bristol; University of London; University College
   London; University of Leeds; CGIAR; Alliance; International Center for
   Tropical Agriculture - CIAT; University of Reading; University of
   Reading; University of London; University College London; Met Office -
   UK
RP Falloon, P (corresponding author), Hadley Ctr, Met Off, Exeter EX4 4QD, Devon, England.
EM pete.falloon@metoffice.gov.uk
RI Johnes, Penny/AAV-8395-2021; Dalin, Carole/AAF-1151-2021; Pope,
   Ed/H-9409-2017; Newbold, Tim/R-8958-2019; Challinor,
   Andrew/AAK-3023-2020; Valadares Galdos, Marcelo/C-3137-2012; Mitchell,
   Daniel/U-6509-2018; Johnes, Penny/D-1381-2009; Newbold, Tim/D-1524-2012
OI Bebber, Daniel/0000-0003-4440-1482; Mitchell,
   Daniel/0000-0002-0117-3486; Johnes, Penny/0000-0003-1605-6896; Falloon,
   Peter/0000-0001-7567-8885; Borrion, Aiduan/0000-0002-9869-1887; Dalin,
   Carole/0000-0002-2123-9622; Pope, Edward/0000-0002-8295-2667; Newbold,
   Tim/0000-0001-7361-0051; Ingram, John/0000-0001-9365-1889
FU Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme - BEIS; Met Office Hadley
   Centre Climate Programme - Defra; Natural Environment Research Council
   [NE/R010811/1, NE/N01524X/1]; Economic and Social Research Council
   [ES/S008160/1]; University Research Fellowship from the Royal Society
   [UF150526]; BBSRC [BB/P017126/1] Funding Source: UKRI; GCRF
   [ES/S008160/1] Funding Source: UKRI; NERC [NE/N01524X/1, NE/R010811/1]
   Funding Source: UKRI
FX PF was supported by the Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme
   funded by BEIS and Defra. CD was supported by an Independent Research
   Fellowship from the Natural Environment Research Council (Grant No.
   NE/N01524X/1). TN was supported by grants from the Natural Environment
   Research Council (NE/R010811/1) and the Economic and Social Research
   Council (ES/S008160/1), and by a University Research Fellowship from the
   Royal Society (UF150526). PF would like to thank Sean Milton and Helen
   Mako-Yule (Met Office, UK) and the Global Food Security Programme's
   Programme Coordination Group (www.foodsecurity.ac.uk/about/governance/)
   for discussions that helped inform the development of this paper, along
   with comments from three anonymous reviewers. The discussions that led
   to this paper were part of a Met Office Academic Partnership
   (www.metoffice.gov.uk/research/approach/collaboration/partnership)
   activity with logistical support from Shannon Jackson and Verity Payne
   (Met Office, UK).
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Z9 7
U1 4
U2 36
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD MAY 1
PY 2022
VL 17
IS 5
AR 051001
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/ac68f9
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 0Y6XH
UT WOS:000790531200001
OA Green Published, gold, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mianabadi, A
   Pourreza-Bilondi, M
AF Mianabadi, Ameneh
   Pourreza-Bilondi, Mohsen
TI Toward an analysis of water resources components through the Budyko
   approach in a large-scale framework, Iran
SO APPLIED WATER SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Groundwater; Water crisis; Budyko framework; Trend analysis
ID GROUNDWATER DEPLETION; TEMPERATURE; TRENDS; GRACE; BALANCE
AB Analyzing the water resources components and connecting these components in the large-scale framework lead the decision makers and scientists to find better innovative and more effective solutions to water crisis challenges. Hence, in this study, the trend in the water balance components during 1984-2010 has been analyzed in all 30 major basins in Iran through the Budyko framework considering the role of nature and humans in the water systems. The results show that the evaporation ratio (E/P) is higher than one in the hyper-arid and arid areas, especially in the years with less precipitation. It indicates that in these regions, the basins are under non-steady-state conditions and do not follow the Budyko framework. The trend analysis shows that in the western parts of the country, precipitation is considerably decreasing, leading to less runoff and available surface water and more demand for groundwater extraction. However, the basins in these areas are still under steady-state conditions with inconsiderable water crises. We argue that policymakers need to provide appropriate long-term plans for drought and climate change adaptation focusing on groundwater management to avoid the critical water challenges in these areas.
C1 [Mianabadi, Ameneh] Grad Univ Adv Technol, Inst Sci & High Technol & Environm Sci, Dept Ecol, Kerman, Iran.
   [Pourreza-Bilondi, Mohsen] Univ Birjand, Coll Agr, Water Engn Dept, Birjand, Iran.
   [Pourreza-Bilondi, Mohsen] Univ Birjand, Res Grp Drought & Climate Change, Birjand, Iran.
C3 Graduate University of Advanced Technology; University of Birjand;
   University of Birjand
RP Mianabadi, A (corresponding author), Grad Univ Adv Technol, Inst Sci & High Technol & Environm Sci, Dept Ecol, Kerman, Iran.
EM A.mianabadi@kgut.ac.ir; mohsen.pourreza@birjand.ac.ir
RI Mianabadi, Ameneh/ABF-5992-2021
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NR 47
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 10
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 2190-5487
EI 2190-5495
J9 APPL WATER SCI
JI Appl. Water Sci.
PD JUN
PY 2023
VL 13
IS 6
AR 132
DI 10.1007/s13201-023-01934-1
PG 16
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA G5NV7
UT WOS:000989630600002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cevik, S
   Jalles, JT
AF Cevik, Serhan
   Jalles, Joao Tovar
TI For whom the bell tolls: Climate change and income inequality
SO ENERGY POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Income inequality; Climate change; Vulnerability; Resilience
ID ECONOMIC-GROWTH; FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT; NATURAL DISASTERS; PANEL-DATA;
   DEMOCRACY; MACROECONOMICS; CONSEQUENCES; TEMPERATURE; DEPENDENCE;
   GEOGRAPHY
AB Climate change is the defining challenge of our time with complex and evolving dynamics. The effects of climate change on economic output and financial stability have received considerable attention, but there has been much less focus on the relationship between climate change and income inequality. In this paper, we provide new evidence on the association between climate change and income inequality, using a large panel of 158 countries during the period 1995-2019. We find that an increase in climate change vulnerability is positively associated with rising income inequality. More interestingly, splitting the sample into country groups reveals a considerable contrast in the impact of climate change on income inequality. While climate change vulnerability has no sta-tistically significant effect on income distribution in advanced economies, the coefficient on climate change vulnerability is seven times greater and statistically highly significant in the case of developing countries due largely to weaker capacity for climate change adaptation and mitigation. These findings are robust with alter-native estimation methods and measures of income inequality, but it should be noted that the appropriate measurement of climate change vulnerability and resilience remains a challenge that imposes limits on empirical analysis.
C1 [Cevik, Serhan] Int Monetary Fund, 700 19th St NW, Washington, DC 20431 USA.
   [Jalles, Joao Tovar] Univ Lisbon, Lisbon Sch Econ & Management ISEG, Rua Quelhas 6, P-1200781 Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Jalles, Joao Tovar] Univ Lisbon, ISEG, Res Econ & Math REM & Res Unit Complex & Econ UECE, Rua Miguel Lupi 20, P-1249078 Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Jalles, Joao Tovar] Univ Nova Lisboa, Nova Sch Business & Econ, Econ Policy, Rua Holanda 1, P-2775405 Carcavelos, Portugal.
   [Jalles, Joao Tovar] IPAG Business Sch, 184 Blvd St Germain, F-75006 Paris, France.
C3 International Monetary Fund; Universidade de Lisboa; Universidade de
   Lisboa; Universidade Nova de Lisboa; IPAG Business School
RP Jalles, JT (corresponding author), Univ Lisbon, Lisbon Sch Econ & Management ISEG, Rua Quelhas 6, P-1200781 Lisbon, Portugal.
EM scevik@imf.org; joaojalles@gmail.com
OI Cevik, Serhan/0000-0002-2373-2023
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NR 84
TC 22
Z9 22
U1 64
U2 138
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4215
EI 1873-6777
J9 ENERG POLICY
JI Energy Policy
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 174
AR 113475
DI 10.1016/j.enpol.2023.113475
EA FEB 2023
PG 11
WC Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA C7UT5
UT WOS:000963932000001
OA Green Submitted
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Boes, RM
   Balestra, A
AF Boes, R. M.
   Balestra, A.
BE Boes, RM
   Droz, P
   Leroy, R
TI Past, present and future role of Dams in Switzerland
SO ROLE OF DAMS AND RESERVOIRS IN A SUCCESSFUL ENERGY TRANSITION, ECS 2023
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 12TH ICOLD EUROPEAN CLUB SYMPOSIUM (ECS)
CY SEP 05-08, 2023
CL INTERLAKEN, SWITZERLAND
ID RIVER
AB Switzerland is considered the water tower of Europe because of its topographically, and hydrologically favourable conditions with abundant water resources. The headwaters of Europe's major rivers Rhine and Rhone as well as relevant tributaries to the Danube and Po rivers, namely Inn and Ticino, respectively, are in the Swiss Alps. In lack of other major natural resources to generate electricity, the country has therefore been greatly exploiting its water resources since an early stage through the construction of storage hydropower schemes with regulating dams, now accounting for a good half of Switzerland's total annual hydropower production.
   Although most of the Swiss dams were built for hydropower generation, they also increasingly provide considerable benefits as multipurpose reservoirs in terms of storage for natural hazards protection as well as agricultural, domestic, industrial and recreational scopes.
   It is expected that the importance of hydropower storage on various time scales will continue to increase in the context of the envisaged renewable energy transition. Meanwhile, previously glaciated areas also offer sites for new multipurpose reservoirs. The expected challenges for Swiss dam engineering will be more and more interdisciplinary: operation and maintenance of ageing dams and hydropower plants, climate change adaptation, environmental compatibility and the increasing pressure for multipurpose exploitation of the water resources impose a comprehensive understanding and a participatory approach involving all stakeholders.
C1 [Boes, R. M.] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Lab Hydraul Hydrol & Glaciol, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Boes, R. M.; Balestra, A.] Swiss Comm Dams, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Balestra, A.] Lombardi Engn Ltd, Zurich, Switzerland.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich
RP Boes, RM (corresponding author), Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Lab Hydraul Hydrol & Glaciol, Zurich, Switzerland.; Boes, RM (corresponding author), Swiss Comm Dams, Zurich, Switzerland.
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NR 48
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU CRC PRESS-TAYLOR & FRANCIS GROUP
PI BOCA RATON
PA 6000 BROKEN SOUND PARKWAY NW, STE 300, BOCA RATON, FL 33487-2742 USA
BN 978-1-032-57671-8; 978-1-003-44042-0; 978-1-032-57668-8
PY 2023
BP 3
EP 17
DI 10.1201/9781003440420-1
PG 15
WC Engineering, Civil
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering
GA BX0DH
UT WOS:001228551200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tione, SE
   Nampanzira, D
   Nalule, G
   Kashongwe, O
   Katengeza, SP
AF Tione, Sarah Ephrida
   Nampanzira, Dorothy
   Nalule, Gloria
   Kashongwe, Olivier
   Katengeza, Samson Pilanazo
TI Anthropogenic Land Use Change and Adoption of Climate Smart Agriculture
   in Sub-Saharan Africa
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; climate-smart agriculture; land allocation;
   agricultural policy; Sub-Saharan Africa
AB Compelling evidence in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) shows that Climate-Smart Agriculture (CSA) has a positive impact on agricultural productivity. However, the uptake of CSA remains low, which is related to anthropogenic, or human-related, decisions about CSA and agricultural land use. This paper assesses households' decisions to allocate agricultural land to CSA technologies across space and over time. We use the state-contingent theory, mixed methods, and mixed data sources. While agricultural land is increasing, forest land is decreasing across countries in SSA. The results show that household decisions to use CSA and the extent of agricultural land allocation to CSA remain low with a negative trend over time in SSA. Owned land and accessing land through rental markets are positively associated with allocating land to CSA technologies, particularly where land pressure is high. Regarding adaptation, experiencing rainfall shocks is significantly associated with anthropogenic land allocation to CSA technologies. The country policy assessment further supports the need to scale up CSA practices for adaptation, food security, and mitigation. Therefore, scaling up CSA in SSA will require that agriculture-related policies promote land tenure security and land markets while promoting climate-smart farming for food security, adaptation, and mitigation.
C1 [Tione, Sarah Ephrida] Minist Agr, Dept Planning, POB 30134, Lilongwe, Malawi.
   [Nampanzira, Dorothy; Nalule, Gloria] Makerere Univ, Coll Vet Med Anim Resources & Biosecur, Dept Livestock & Ind Resources, POB 7062, Kampala, Uganda.
   [Kashongwe, Olivier] Leibniz Inst Agr Engn & Bioecon, Dept Engn Livestock Management, D-14469 Potsdam, Germany.
   [Kashongwe, Olivier] Egerton Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Anim Sci, POB 536, Nakuru 20115, Kenya.
   [Katengeza, Samson Pilanazo] Lilongwe Univ Agr & Nat Resources LUANAR, Directorate Res & Outreach, POB 219, Lilongwe, Malawi.
C3 Makerere University; Leibniz Association; Leibniz Institut fur
   Agrartechnik und Biookonomie (ATB); Egerton University; Lilongwe
   University of Agriculture & Natural Resources
RP Tione, SE (corresponding author), Minist Agr, Dept Planning, POB 30134, Lilongwe, Malawi.
EM sarahtione@gmail.com
RI Tione, Sarah/GXG-8891-2022; Nampanzira, Dorothy/GSM-9631-2022
OI Kashongwe, Olivier/0000-0002-6107-4084; Tione, Sarah
   Ephrida/0000-0002-3849-2915
FU African Economic Research Consortium under the Climate Change and
   Economic Development in Africa (CCEDA) [RC21595]; African Economic
   Research Consortium
FX This research was funded by the African Economic Research Consortium
   under the Climate Change and Economic Development in Africa (CCEDA)
   collaborative research project grant number RC21595 and the APC was also
   funded by the African Economic Research Consortium. The findings,
   opinions and recommendations are those of the authors and do not
   necessarily reflect the views of the Consortium, its individual members
   or the AERC Secretariat.
CR Abegunde VO, 2022, COGENT SOC SCI, V8, DOI 10.1080/23311886.2022.2086343
   Ampaire E.L., 2015, The role of policy in facilitating the adoption of climate-smart agriculture in Uganda
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   CIAT BFS/USAID, 2017, CSA COUNTRY PROFILES
   CIAT World Bank, 2018, CSA COUNTRY PROFILES, P30
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   FAO, 2016, Climate-Smart Agriculture SourcebookModule 1: Why Climate-Smart Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
   FAO, 2021, CLIM SMART AGR
   FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), 2016, E AFR CLIM SMART AGR E AFR CLIM SMART AGR
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NR 40
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 2
U2 14
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 22
AR 14729
DI 10.3390/su142214729
PG 29
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6K7IM
UT WOS:000887670900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nguyen, VH
   Yen, HPH
AF Van Hong Nguyen
   Hoang Phan Hai Yen
TI Seasonal variation and its impacts in rice-growing regions of the Mekong
   Delta
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Crop; Seasonal variation; Weather factors; Cultivation; Mekong Delta
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SEA-LEVEL; YIELD; PRODUCTIVITY; RAIN
AB Purpose In recent years, agricultural activities in the Mekong Delta have frequently faced the potential risks of drought, saline intrusion and unusually heavy rainfall because of climate change, leading to a decline in crop yield. Therefore, this study aimed to establish rice planting seasons in An Giang, an upper-located province in the Mekong Delta. Design/methodology/approach The impacts of seasonal variation on the key rice seasons were simulated using the Food and Agriculture Organization-crop model for the OM6976 rice variety grown in the study area. For the simulation, the model combined crop, soil, weather and crop management data. Findings The results show that seasonal variation because of changes in weather factors leads to alternation in crop yields across the study area. Specifically, the spring and summer rice planting seasons are advanced by one to two weeks compared with the baseline, and crop yield increased by 5.9% and 4.2%, respectively. Additionally, planting for the autumn-winter rice season on 3 August increased crop yield by up to 8.1%. Originality/value In general, rice planting seasons that account for weather factor changes effectively reduce production costs and optimise production.
C1 [Van Hong Nguyen] Sub Inst Hydrometeorol & Climate Change SIHYMECC, Hcm City, Vietnam.
   [Hoang Phan Hai Yen] Vinh Univ, Sch Social Sci Educ, Nghe An, Vietnam.
C3 Vinh University
RP Yen, HPH (corresponding author), Vinh Univ, Sch Social Sci Educ, Nghe An, Vietnam.
EM hoangphanhaiyen@vinhuni.edu.vn
OI Hong, Nguyen Van/0000-0003-3884-3268
CR [Anonymous], 2016, El Nino" event in Vietnam: Agriculture food security and livelihood needs assessment in response to drought and sal water instrusion, P75
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   Xiao, 2019, THEOR APPL CLIMATOL, V157, P1483
   Zhu X, 2018, EARTHS FUTURE, V6, P656, DOI 10.1002/2017EF000687
NR 28
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 9
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-8692
EI 1756-8706
J9 INT J CLIM CHANG STR
JI Int. J. Clim. Chang. Strateg. Manag.
PD DEC 8
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 4-5
BP 483
EP 491
DI 10.1108/IJCCSM-05-2020-0048
EA AUG 2021
PG 9
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XK8OD
UT WOS:000685551900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thiffault, N
   Raymond, P
   Lussier, JM
   Aubin, I
   Royer-Tardif, S
   D'Amato, AW
   Doyon, F
   Lafleur, B
   Perron, M
   Bousquet, J
   Isabel, N
   Carles, S
   Lupien, P
   Malenfant, A
AF Thiffault, Nelson
   Raymond, Patricia
   Lussier, Jean-Martin
   Aubin, Isabelle
   Royer-Tardif, Samuel
   D'Amato, Anthony W.
   Doyon, Frederik
   Lafleur, Benoit
   Perron, Martin
   Bousquet, Jean
   Isabel, Nathalie
   Carles, Sylvie
   Lupien, Patrick
   Malenfant, Annie
TI Climate change adaptation silviculture: from concepts to reality Report
   of a conference held at Carrefour Forets 2019
SO FORESTRY CHRONICLE
LA French
DT Article
DE silvicultural treatments; global change; vulnerability; drought;
   hardwood forests; mixedwood forests; boreal forests; ecosystem-based
   management; tree breeding; genomics; implementation; functional ecology
ID IRREGULAR SHELTERWOOD SYSTEM; SINGLE-TREE; FORESTS; PERCEPTIONS; HEALTH;
   GROWTH; VULNERABILITY; MANAGEMENT; DYNAMICS; DROUGHT
AB As part of the Carrefour Fortts 2019 Conference, the forest research branch of Quebec's Ministare des Fortts, de la Faune et des Parcs and the Canadian Wood Fibre Centre of Natural Resources Canada organized jointly the symposium "Adaptive silviculture to climate change: from concepts to reality". The symposium brought together a hundred actors from the forest sector including engineers, biologists, technicians, private woodlot owners, professors, researchers and students. Speakers from different regions of Quebec and Vermont shared current knowledge related to adaptive silviculture in order to nurture reflexion and dialogue about actions that can be taken today to help forests to adapt with the anticipated changes. The symposium covered the theoretical framework of adaptive silviculture, then offered case studies of different ecosystems, innovative tools or research initiatives. The symposium also included presentations by practitioners who described the challenges and opportunities offered by adaptive silviculture in their professional practice. Based on an interactive discussion, participants identified increased drought events, partial cuttings and mixed-species plantations as important topics on which researchers and practitioners should interact in years to come.
C1 [Thiffault, Nelson; Lussier, Jean-Martin] Ressources Nat Canada, Serv Canadien Forets, Ctr Canadien Fibre Bois, 1055 Rue PEPS,CP 10380,Succ St Foy, Quebec City, PQ G1V 4C7, Canada.
   [Thiffault, Nelson; Aubin, Isabelle; Doyon, Frederik; Lafleur, Benoit] Univ Laval, Fac Foresterie Geog & Geomat, Ctr Etud Foret, Quebec City, PQ G1V 0A6, Canada.
   [Raymond, Patricia; Perron, Martin] Minist Forets Faune & Parcs Quebec, Direct Rech Forestiere, 2700 Rue Einstein, Quebec City, PQ G1P 3W8, Canada.
   [Aubin, Isabelle; Royer-Tardif, Samuel] Ressources Nat Canada, Serv Canadien Forets, Ctr Foresterie Grands Lacs, 1219 Queen St E, Sault Ste Marie, ON P6A 2E5, Canada.
   [D'Amato, Anthony W.] Univ Vermont, Rubenstein Sch Environm & Nat Resources, 204E Aiken Ctr, Burlington, VT 05405 USA.
   [Doyon, Frederik] Univ Quebec Outaouais, Inst Sci Foret Temperee, 58 Rue Principale, Ripon, PQ J0V 1V0, Canada.
   [Lafleur, Benoit] Univ Quebec Abitibi Temiscamingue, Inst Rech Forets, 445 Boul Univ, Rouyn Noranda, PQ J9X 5E4, Canada.
   [Perron, Martin; Bousquet, Jean] Univ Laval, Fac Foresterie Geog & Geomat, Chaire Rech Canada Genom Forestiere, 1030 Ave Med, Quebec City, PQ G1V 0A6, Canada.
   [Isabel, Nathalie] Univ Laval, Fac Foresterie Geog & Geomat, Dept Sci Bois & Foret, 2405 Rue Terrasse, Quebec City, PQ G1V 0A6, Canada.
   [Isabel, Nathalie] Ressources Nat Canada, Serv Canadien Forets, Ctr Foresterie Laurentides, 1055 Rue PEPS,CP 10380,Succ St Foy, Quebec City, PQ G1V 4C7, Canada.
   [Carles, Sylvie] Minist Forets Faune & Parcs, Direct Gen Prod Semences & Plants Forestiers, 5700,4e Ave Ouest, Quebec City, PQ G1H 6R1, Canada.
   [Lupien, Patrick] Syndicat Producteurs Bois Mauricie Lanaudiere & C, 2410 Rue Ind, Trois Rivieres, PQ G8Z 4R5, Canada.
   [Malenfant, Annie] Minist Forets Faune & Parcs, Direct Gest Forets Gaspesie Iles de la Madeleine, 195 Boul Perron Est, Caplan, PQ G0C 1H0, Canada.
C3 Natural Resources Canada; Canadian Forest Service; Laval University;
   Natural Resources Canada; Canadian Forest Service; University of
   Vermont; University of Quebec; University Quebec Outaouais; University
   of Quebec; University Quebec Abitibi-Temiscamingue; Laval University;
   Laval University; Natural Resources Canada; Canadian Forest Service
RP Thiffault, N (corresponding author), Ressources Nat Canada, Serv Canadien Forets, Ctr Canadien Fibre Bois, 1055 Rue PEPS,CP 10380,Succ St Foy, Quebec City, PQ G1V 4C7, Canada.; Thiffault, N (corresponding author), Univ Laval, Fac Foresterie Geog & Geomat, Ctr Etud Foret, Quebec City, PQ G1V 0A6, Canada.
EM nelson.thiffault@canada.ca
RI Bousquet, Jean/O-4221-2019; D'Amato, Anthony/AAV-3245-2021; Thiffault,
   Nelson/B-3039-2009
OI Thiffault, Nelson/0000-0003-2017-6890
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NR 56
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 8
PU CANADIAN INST FORESTRY
PI MATTAWA
PA C/O CANADIAN ECOLOGY CENTRE, PO BOX 430, 6905 HWY 17 W, MATTAWA, ONTARIO
   P0H 1V0, CANADA
SN 0015-7546
EI 1499-9315
J9 FOREST CHRON
JI For. Chron.
PD JAN
PY 2021
VL 97
IS 1
BP 28
EP 42
PG 15
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA QO6BS
UT WOS:000623226300004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pagliacci, F
   Defrancesco, E
   Bettella, F
   D'Agostino, V
AF Pagliacci, Francesco
   Defrancesco, Edi
   Bettella, Francesco
   D'Agostino, Vincenzo
TI Mitigation of Urban Pluvial Flooding: What Drives Residents' Willingness
   to Implement Green or Grey Stormwater Infrastructures on Their Property?
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE pluvial flooding; stormwater infrastructures; green infrastructures and
   grey infrastructures; awareness
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK PERCEPTION; CITIZENS; COMMUNICATION;
   ADOPTION
AB As a consequence of climate change, the impact of pluvial flooding is expected to increase in the next decades. Despite citizens' poor knowledge, several types of stormwater infrastructure can be implemented to mitigate the impact of future events. This paper focuses on the implementation of green and grey stormwater interventions (i.e., with or without vegetation) on private properties. Framed by the Protection Motivation Theory, a survey-based case study analysis, carried out in a pluvial flooding-prone area of the Veneto Region (Italy), highlights the main factors driving people's willingness to implement these interventions. The analysis shows that the implementation of grey stormwater infrastructures is driven by the perceived threat and the amount of past pluvial flooding damage (i.e., the direct experience as a proxy of prior knowledge) while the implementation of green stormwater infrastructures is driven also by additional factors (awareness of these interventions, age and education level of the citizens). Based on these results, lack of knowledge on innovative stormwater interventions represents a critical barrier to their implementation on private properties, and it confirms the need for specific dissemination and information activities.
C1 [Pagliacci, Francesco; Defrancesco, Edi; Bettella, Francesco; D'Agostino, Vincenzo] Univ Padua, Dept TESAF Terr & Sistemi Agroforestali, I-35020 Legnaro, PD, Italy.
C3 University of Padua
RP Pagliacci, F (corresponding author), Univ Padua, Dept TESAF Terr & Sistemi Agroforestali, I-35020 Legnaro, PD, Italy.
EM francesco.pagliacci@unipd.it; edi.defrancesco@unipd.it;
   francesco.bettella@unipd.it; vincenzo.dagostino@unipd.it
RI ; PAGLIACCI, Francesco/IUO-6756-2023; Defrancesco, Edi/M-8654-2015
OI D'AGOSTINO, VINCENZO/0000-0003-2261-9069; PAGLIACCI,
   Francesco/0000-0002-3667-7115; Defrancesco, Edi/0000-0002-3369-1616
FU BEWARE Life project [LIFE17 GIC/IT/000091]
FX This research was funded by BEWARE Life project, grant number LIFE17
   GIC/IT/000091.
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NR 52
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 4
U2 26
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD NOV
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 11
AR 3069
DI 10.3390/w12113069
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA OY3SZ
UT WOS:000594170800001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McNamara, KE
   Clissold, R
   Westoby, R
   Piggott-McKellar, AE
   Kumar, R
   Clarke, T
   Namoumou, F
   Areki, F
   Joseph, E
   Warrick, O
   Nunn, PD
AF McNamara, Karen E.
   Clissold, Rachel
   Westoby, Ross
   Piggott-McKellar, Annah E.
   Kumar, Roselyn
   Clarke, Tahlia
   Namoumou, Frances
   Areki, Francis
   Joseph, Eugene
   Warrick, Olivia
   Nunn, Patrick D.
TI An assessment of community-based adaptation initiatives in the Pacific
   Islands
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; DEVELOPING STATES;
   PROJECTS; LESSONS; SUCCESS; CONTEXT
AB For the Pacific Islands, community-based adaptation activities are crucial, and yet it remains uncertain whether they are effectively promoting long-term adaptive capacity. Here we evaluate the performance of 32 community-based adaptation initiatives across 20 rural communities in the Pacific. We find that initiative appropriateness was a strength while sustainability was a consistent issue, locally funded initiatives and those implemented by non-governmental organizations were more likely to perform better, and climate awareness-raising initiatives and those integrated with ecosystem-based adaptation performed best. We also identify four multidimensional and interdependent optimization points for future community-based adaptation initiatives: local approval and ownership, shared access to and benefit from initiatives, integration of local realities, and systems-thinking and forward planning. Our analysis suggests the need for a praxis shift whereby adaptation is locally led, communities drive their own agendas, and donors and implementers become facilitators that resource the diverse capacities of communities and help achieve local objectives equitably.
   Community-based adaptation, in principle, leverages existing local knowledge, capabilities and priorities, but it is unclear what factors drive its success or lack thereof. Here the authors evaluate 32 community-based adaptation initiatives in the Pacific Islands and identify key optimization points for future initiatives.
C1 [McNamara, Karen E.; Clissold, Rachel; Piggott-McKellar, Annah E.; Clarke, Tahlia] Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Westoby, Ross] Griffith Univ, Griffith Inst Tourism, Gold Coast, Qld, Australia.
   [Kumar, Roselyn; Nunn, Patrick D.] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sch Social Sci, Sunshine Coast, Qld, Australia.
   [Namoumou, Frances] Pacific Conf Churches, Suva, Fiji.
   [Areki, Francis] World Wildlife Fund Pacific, Suva, Fiji.
   [Joseph, Eugene] Conservat Soc Pohnpei, Ponape, Micronesia.
   [Warrick, Olivia] Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Ctr, Port Vila, Vanuatu.
C3 University of Queensland; Griffith University; Griffith University -
   Gold Coast Campus; University of the Sunshine Coast
RP McNamara, KE (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
EM karen.mcnamara@uq.edu.au
RI Westoby, Ross/G-8895-2019; Piggott-McKellar, Annah/GPF-9291-2022; Nunn,
   Patrick/C-7864-2011; McNamara, Karen/D-7322-2013
OI Piggott-McKellar, Annah/0000-0002-2810-9812; Nunn,
   Patrick/0000-0001-9295-5741; Clissold, Rachel/0000-0001-9669-8746;
   Kumar, Roselyn/0000-0002-3940-0488; McNamara, Karen/0000-0002-4511-8403;
   Westoby, Ross/0000-0001-9868-2246
FU Australian Research Council Linkage grant [LP160100941]; Australian
   Research Council [LP160100941] Funding Source: Australian Research
   Council
FX We are very grateful to the 415 participants for providing such
   valuable, important and meaningful insights in this study. Without you,
   this study would not have been possible. We also thank and acknowledge
   the various local gatekeepers who were instrumental in helping with
   fieldwork logistics, introductions and access to communities, and
   translation. This research was funded through an Australian Research
   Council Linkage grant (number LP160100941).
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NR 75
TC 115
Z9 117
U1 5
U2 35
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 10
IS 7
BP 628
EP +
DI 10.1038/s41558-020-0813-1
EA JUN 2020
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA ME5NJ
UT WOS:000544168800003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thomas, KA
   Warner, BP
AF Thomas, Kimberley Anh
   Warner, Benjamin P.
TI Weaponizing vulnerability to climate change
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Vulnerability; Climate justice; Securitization; Adaptation
ID ENVIRONMENTAL GENTRIFICATION; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; ECO-URBANISM;
   ADAPTATION; SECURITY; LAGOS; SECURITIZATION; RESILIENCE; RISK; CITY
AB As scores of climate change adaptation measures are implemented around the world, there have been growing calls among academics and practitioners to also address the processes that underpin human vulnerability to climate change. However, there is mounting evidence that adaptation and vulnerability are linked, such that ostensibly adaptive responses can have negative consequences and augment people's vulnerability. We analyzed several climate change responses at various scales and developed a typology of five discrete but related modes by which the vulnerability of already vulnerable populations is being [re]produced. Crucially, this work suggests that for at least one of these modes, the vulnerability of other groups is perversely inverted, such that relatively secure populations perceive themselves to be at risk. The cases we present illustrate that people's vulnerability is being used against them, or put another way, is being weaponized-exacerbating their precarity by excluding them from much needed and due assistance, while directing resources instead to bolstering the well-being of those already well-positioned to respond to climate threats. Our typology provides a theoretical intervention by illustrating how climate vulnerability and security are co-produced, as well as a practical tool to help decision makers to adopt more just and equitable climate policies.
C1 [Thomas, Kimberley Anh] Temple Univ, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.
   [Warner, Benjamin P.] Univ New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131 USA.
C3 Pennsylvania Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); Temple
   University; University of New Mexico
RP Thomas, KA (corresponding author), Temple Univ, Dept Geog & Urban Studies, 308 Gladfelter Hall,1115 Polett Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19122 USA.
EM kimthomas@temple.edu
RI Thomas, Kimberley/ACI-7704-2022
OI Thomas, Kimberley/0000-0002-9600-385X
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NR 128
TC 90
Z9 96
U1 2
U2 47
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD JUL
PY 2019
VL 57
AR 101928
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2019.101928
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA IP9MX
UT WOS:000480375400013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Salmon, C
   Duvat, VKE
AF Salmon, Camille
   Duvat, Virginie K. E.
TI Taking into account the natural coastal systems in coastal risk
   management
SO HOUILLE BLANCHE-REVUE INTERNATIONALE DE L EAU
LA French
DT Article
DE buffer zone; resilience; tropical cyclones; morpho-sedimentary systems;
   French overseas territories
ID HAZARDS; RESILIENCE; SERVICES; IMPACTS
AB Based on two case studies located in French overseas territories, this presentation aims to investigate how to base coastal risk management policies on natural coastal system protection. The in-depth analysis of the impacts of and resilience to cyclones Oli in Tubuai Island (French Polynesia, Feb. 2010) and Bejisa in Reunion Island (Jan. 2014), raised the major role of natural buffers degradation (i.e. sand-dune systems) in increasing vulnerability. Five processes are analysed here: contraction (reduction in land area), fragmentation of sedimentary cells by coastal structures, shoreline fixation due to coastal defences, removal or modification of vegetation and finally, coral beach extraction. These phenomena alter the attenuation function of waves and wind, and finally increase damages when a coastal hazard occurs. This results have concrete implications in terms of enhancing resilience of territories to sea-related risks, enabling to: (1) design and implement conservation and restoration policies so as to strengthen the buffering capacity of sand-dune systems; (2) consider the sediment cell as the relevant scale for coastal risk management; (3) implement context-specific solutions that take into account long-term changes, so as to initiate a climate change adaptation policy.
C1 [Salmon, Camille; Duvat, Virginie K. E.] Univ la Rochelle, CNRS, UMR LIENSs 7266, 2 Rue Olympe de Gouges, F-17000 La Rochelle, France.
C3 La Rochelle Universite; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
   (CNRS)
RP Salmon, C (corresponding author), Univ la Rochelle, CNRS, UMR LIENSs 7266, 2 Rue Olympe de Gouges, F-17000 La Rochelle, France.
EM camille.salmon@univ-lr.fr
RI Duvat, Virginie/GLN-3102-2022
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NR 18
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 20
PU EDP SCIENCES S A
PI LES ULIS CEDEX A
PA 17, AVE DU HOGGAR, PA COURTABOEUF, BP 112, F-91944 LES ULIS CEDEX A,
   FRANCE
SN 0018-6368
EI 1958-5551
J9 HOUILLE BLANCHE
JI Houille Blanche-Rev. Int.
PD APR
PY 2018
IS 2
BP 5
EP 12
DI 10.1051/lhb/2018015
PG 8
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA GI6QQ
UT WOS:000434516400001
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tomaszkiewicz, M
   Abou Najm, M
   Beysens, D
   Alameddine, I
   Zeid, EB
   El-Fadel, M
AF Tomaszkiewicz, M.
   Abou Najm, M.
   Beysens, D.
   Alameddine, I.
   Zeid, E. Bou
   El-Fadel, M.
TI Projected climate change impacts upon dew yield in the Mediterranean
   basin
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Non-conventional water resources; Dew; Geostatistical analysis; Climate
   change adaptation
ID NEGEV DESERT; COLLECTION; CMIP5; EVAPOTRANSPIRATION; PRECIPITATION;
   CORDEX; URBAN; FOG
AB Water scarcity is increasingly raising the need for non-conventional water resources, particularly in arid and semi-arid regions. In this context, atmospheric moisture can potentially be harvested in the form of dew, which is commonly disregarded from the water budget, although its impact may be significant when compared to rainfall during the dry season. In this study, a dew atlas for the Mediterranean region is presented illustrating dew yields using the yield data collected for the 2013 dry season. The results indicate that cumulative monthly dew yield in the region can exceed 2.8 mm at the end of the dry season and 1.5 mm during the driest months, compared to <1mm of rainfall during the same period in some areas. Dew yields were compared with potential evapotranspiration (PET) and actual evapotranspiration (ET) during summer months thus highlighting the role of dew to many native plants in the region. Furthermore, forecasted trends in temperature and relative humidity were used to estimate dew yields under future climatic scenarios. The results showed a 27% decline in dew yield during the critical summer months at the end of the century (2080). (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Tomaszkiewicz, M.; Abou Najm, M.; Alameddine, I.; El-Fadel, M.] Amer Univ Beirut, Fac Engn & Architecture, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Beirut, Lebanon.
   [Beysens, D.] Univ Paris 06, Univ Paris Diderot, ESPCI, Phys & Mecan Milieux Heterogenes,UMR CNRS 7636, 10 Rue Vauquelin, F-75005 Paris, France.
   [Beysens, D.] CEA Grenoble, Serv Basses Temp, Grenoble, France.
   [Beysens, D.] Univ Grenoble 1, Grenoble, France.
   [Beysens, D.] OPUR, 60 Rue Emeriau, F-75015 Paris, France.
   [Zeid, E. Bou] Princeton Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Princeton, NJ 08540 USA.
C3 American University of Beirut; Universite Paris Cite; Sorbonne
   Universite; Universite PSL; Ecole Superieure de Physique et de Chimie
   Industrielles de la Ville de Paris (ESPCI); CEA; Communaute Universite
   Grenoble Alpes; Universite Grenoble Alpes (UGA); Princeton University
RP Abou Najm, M (corresponding author), Amer Univ Beirut, Fac Engn & Architecture, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Beirut, Lebanon.
EM majdian@aub.edu.lb
RI Alameddine, Ibrahim/D-9365-2013; Najm, Majdi/M-1587-2014
OI Alameddine, Ibrahim/0000-0002-8974-1985; Abou Najm,
   Majdi/0000-0002-8434-2520
FU Lebanese National Council for Scientific Research [03-11-12]; University
   Research Board at the American University of Beirut [21085]; United
   States Agency for International Development through the USAID-NSF PEER
   [AID-OAA-A_I1_00012]; Sorbonne-Paris-Cite Program, France
FX Support for this work was obtained from the Lebanese National Council
   for Scientific Research (Grant # 03-11-12), the University Research
   Board at the American University of Beirut (Project # 21085), and the
   United States Agency for International Development through the USAID-NSF
   PEER initiative (Grant#-AID-OAA-A_I1_00012). Additional support was
   obtained from the Sorbonne-Paris-Cite Program, France. Special thanks
   are extended to Marina Mileta and Iryna Milimouk-Melnytchouk for their
   help in collecting data at Cres (Croatia).
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NR 48
TC 40
Z9 50
U1 3
U2 51
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD OCT 1
PY 2016
VL 566
BP 1339
EP 1348
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.05.195
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DS8VK
UT WOS:000381060900128
PM 27266520
OA Bronze, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chowdhury, RK
   Beecham, S
   Boland, J
   Piantadosi, J
AF Chowdhury, Rezaul K.
   Beecham, Simon
   Boland, John
   Piantadosi, Julia
TI Understanding South Australian rainfall trends and step changes
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE rainfall; climate change; trend; step change
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; DATA SET; VARIABILITY; OSCILLATION; ASSOCIATION;
   TEMPERATURE; TESTS; BASIN; SHIFT; RIVER
AB Rainfall is the key hydroclimatic variable that plays a vital role in the development of regional water management policies. Assessment of observed rainfall behaviour and its spatial and temporal variations are therefore important for climate change adaptation measures. This study assessed trends and step changes in observed annual and seasonal rainfalls across the South Australian region. More than 100 years of high-quality rainfall data from 53 rainfall stations were analyzed using robust statistical techniques. The results are presented according to the eight South Australian natural resource management regions. Increasing annual rainfall trends were observed for the Arid Lands, Alinytjara Wilinara and Adelaide and Mount Lofty Ranges regions whereas decreasing trends were found for the Murray Darling Basin, Eyre Peninsula and South East regions. Both upward and downward trends were identified in the Northern and Yorke region. Seasonally, austral spring and summer rainfalls exhibited increasing trends in most of the regions whereas autumn and winter rainfalls showed decreasing trends. Most of the rainfall step changes were observed to happen in the 1960s and 1970s. The study also includes a discussion on possible mechanisms of South Australian rainfall variability and changes that may have links to the observed trends and step changes.
C1 [Chowdhury, Rezaul K.] United Arab Emirates Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Al Ain, U Arab Emirates.
   [Beecham, Simon] Univ S Australia, Sch Nat & Built Environm, Mawson Lakes, SA, Australia.
   [Boland, John; Piantadosi, Julia] Univ S Australia, Sch Informat Technol & Math Sci, Mawson Lakes, SA, Australia.
C3 United Arab Emirates University; University of South Australia;
   University of South Australia
RP Chowdhury, RK (corresponding author), United Arab Emirates Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Al Ain, U Arab Emirates.
EM RezaulKabir@uaeu.ac.ae
RI Piantadosi, Julia/A-1228-2012; Beecham, Simon/M-1544-2016; Boland,
   John/B-3046-2008
OI Beecham, Simon/0000-0002-9884-3852; Boland, John/0000-0003-1132-7589;
   Chowdhury, Rezaul/0000-0003-1631-9748
FU Goyder Institute for Water Research
FX This research was funded by the Goyder Institute for Water Research as
   part of the project: Development of an agreed set of climate projections
   for South Australia
   (http://www.goyderinstitute.org/programs/climate/index.php). The review
   comments from two anonymous reviewers have greatly improved this paper.
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   [No title captured]
   [No title captured]
   [No title captured]
   [No title captured]
   [No title captured]
NR 69
TC 29
Z9 30
U1 0
U2 34
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0899-8418
EI 1097-0088
J9 INT J CLIMATOL
JI Int. J. Climatol.
PD MAR 15
PY 2015
VL 35
IS 3
BP 348
EP 360
DI 10.1002/joc.3982
PG 13
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA CC8TU
UT WOS:000350642000003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wrathall, DJ
   Oliver-Smith, A
   Fekete, A
   Gencer, E
   Reyes, ML
   Sakdapolrak, P
AF Wrathall, David J.
   Oliver-Smith, Anthony
   Fekete, Alexander
   Gencer, Ebru
   Reyes, Marqueza Lepana
   Sakdapolrak, Patrick
TI Problematising loss and damage
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GLOBAL WARMING
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; social vulnerability; adaptation; compensation; risk
   management
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; DISASTER RISK; IMPACTS; ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY;
   HAZARDS; LIMITS; SPACE; SCOPE
AB In the space of a few short years, the UNFCCC process has given birth to a new policy regime, the Warsaw International Mechanism on Loss and Damage, to prepare for the adverse consequences of climate change to vulnerable societies. The justification for this policy is that a residual domain exists wherein climate change adaptation, disaster risk reduction and public/private risk transfer mechanisms are insufficient for peoples and places overwhelmed by climate impacts. We link this domain conceptually to scientific research on climate change impacts, and specifically to research on limits to adaptation. The normative position of this academic debate is generally oriented toward the need for transformative adaptation. This paper aims to anticipate the challenges that the Warsaw mechanism will encounter achieving transformation in practice. Both policy design (as it is taking shape) and implementation face a set of interrelated conceptual and operational problems that challenge whether resources can and will address adverse consequences among the most vulnerable. In the end, loss and damage policy may suffer from the same limitations as adaptation policy: it is concerned with the reconstitution of vulnerable states of being, rather than their transformation into something more fundamentally conducive of wellbeing and development.
C1 [Wrathall, David J.] United Nations Univ, Inst Environm & Human Secur UNU EHS, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
   [Oliver-Smith, Anthony] Univ Florida, Dept Anthropol, Gainesville, FL 32605 USA.
   [Fekete, Alexander] Cologne Univ Appl Sci, D-50679 Cologne, Germany.
   [Gencer, Ebru] United Nations Off Disaster Risk Reduct UNISDR, New York, NY 10024 USA.
   [Reyes, Marqueza Lepana] Assoc Southeast Asian Nations ASEAN, Quezon City 1101, Metro Manila, Philippines.
   [Sakdapolrak, Patrick] Univ Bonn, Dept Geog, D-53115 Bonn, Germany.
C3 State University System of Florida; University of Florida; University of
   Bonn
RP Wrathall, DJ (corresponding author), United Nations Univ, Inst Environm & Human Secur UNU EHS, UN Campus,Pl Vereinten Nationen 1, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
EM wrathall@ehs.unu.edu; aros@ufl.edu; alexander.fekete@fh-koeln.de;
   Eag44@columbia.edu; marqueza.lepana@asean.org; psakdapo@uni-bonn.de
RI Reyes, Marqueza/ITV-2860-2023; Sakdapolrak, Patrick/AAT-6359-2021;
   Fekete, Alexander/C-4071-2017
OI Fekete, Alexander/0000-0002-8029-6774; Sakdapolrak,
   Patrick/0000-0001-7137-1552
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NR 95
TC 35
Z9 38
U1 1
U2 24
PU INDERSCIENCE ENTERPRISES LTD
PI GENEVA
PA WORLD TRADE CENTER BLDG, 29 ROUTE DE PRE-BOIS, CASE POSTALE 856, CH-1215
   GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
SN 1758-2083
EI 1758-2091
J9 INT J GLOBAL WARM
JI Int. J. Glob. Warm.
PY 2015
VL 8
IS 2
SI SI
BP 274
EP 294
DI 10.1504/IJGW.2015.071962
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CV4FJ
UT WOS:000364222000009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Becker, AH
   Acciaro, M
   Asariotis, R
   Cabrera, E
   Cretegny, L
   Crist, P
   Esteban, M
   Mather, A
   Messner, S
   Naruse, S
   Ng, AKY
   Rahmstorf, S
   Savonis, M
   Song, DW
   Stenek, V
   Velegrakis, AF
AF Becker, Austin H.
   Acciaro, Michele
   Asariotis, Regina
   Cabrera, Edgard
   Cretegny, Laurent
   Crist, Philippe
   Esteban, Miguel
   Mather, Andrew
   Messner, Steve
   Naruse, Susumu
   Ng, Adolf K. Y.
   Rahmstorf, Stefan
   Savonis, Michael
   Song, Dong-Wook
   Stenek, Vladimir
   Velegrakis, Adonis F.
TI A note on climate change adaptation for seaports: a challenge for global
   ports, a challenge for global society
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; TROPICAL CYCLONES
AB With 80 % of world trade carried by sea, seaports provide crucial linkages in global supply-chains and are essential for the ability of all countries to access global markets. Seaports are likely to be affected directly and indirectly by climatic changes, with broader implications for international trade and development. Due to their coastal location, seaports are particularly vulnerable to extreme weather events associated with increasing sea levels and tropical storm activity, as illustrated by hurricane "Sandy". In view of their strategic role as part of the globalized trading system, adapting ports in different parts of the world to the impacts of climate change is of considerable importance. Reflecting the views of a diverse group of stakeholders with expertise in climate science, engineering, economics, policy, and port management, this essay highlights the climate change challenge for ports and suggests a way forward through the adoption of some initial measures. These include both "soft" and "hard" adaptations that may be spearheaded by individual port entities, but will require collaboration and support from a broad range of public and private sector stakeholders and from society at large. In particular, the essay highlights a need to shift to more holistic planning, investment and operation.
C1 [Becker, Austin H.] Stanford Univ, Emmett Interdisciplinary Program Environm & Resou, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
   [Acciaro, Michele] Det Norske Veritas, Barum, Norway.
   [Acciaro, Michele] Kuhne Logist Univ, Hamburg, Germany.
   [Asariotis, Regina] UNCTAD, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Cabrera, Edgard] World Meteorol Org, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Cretegny, Laurent] KPMG, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
   [Crist, Philippe] Int Transport Forum OECD, Paris, France.
   [Esteban, Miguel] Univ Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan.
   [Mather, Andrew] Ethekwini Municipal, Durban, South Africa.
   [Messner, Steve] NextPlan, Sonoma, CA USA.
   [Naruse, Susumu] Int Assoc Ports & Harbors, Tokyo, Japan.
   [Ng, Adolf K. Y.] Univ Manitoba, IH Asper Sch Business, Winnipeg, MB, Canada.
   [Rahmstorf, Stefan] Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res, Potsdam, Germany.
   [Savonis, Michael] ICF Int, Fairfax, VA USA.
   [Song, Dong-Wook] Edinburgh Napier Univ, Sch Engn & Built Environm, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
   [Stenek, Vladimir] Int Finance Corp, Washington, DC USA.
   [Velegrakis, Adonis F.] Univ Aegean, Dept Marine Sci, Mitilini, Greece.
C3 Stanford University; Kuhne Logistics University; KPMG Australia;
   Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development (OECD); University
   of Tokyo; University of Manitoba; Potsdam Institut fur
   Klimafolgenforschung; Edinburgh Napier University; University of Aegean
RP Becker, AH (corresponding author), Stanford Univ, Emmett Interdisciplinary Program Environm & Resou, Y2E2 Bldg Suite 226,473 Via Ortega, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
EM austinb@stanford.edu; Michele.Acciaro@the-klu.org;
   Regina.Asariotis@unctad.org; ecabrera@wmo.int; Laurent@cretegny.ch;
   philippe.crist@oecd.org; esteban.fagan@gmail.com;
   andrewmather@telkomsa.net; Steven.d.messner@live.com;
   s_naruse@iaphworldports.org; adolf.ng@ad.umanitoba.ca;
   rahmstorf@ozean-klima.de; msavonis@icfi.com; D.Song@napier.ac.uk;
   VStenek@ifc.org; afv@aegean.gr
RI Rahmstorf, Stefan/A-8465-2010; Ng, Adolf K.Y./M-5964-2013; Acciaro,
   Michele/J-7669-2018
OI Song, Dong-Wook/0000-0001-6013-1465; Velegrakis,
   Adonis/0000-0001-8222-1189; mather, Andrew/0000-0001-8133-9425; Becker,
   Austin/0000-0001-9224-7913; Acciaro, Michele/0000-0003-0144-3033;
   Esteban, Miguel/0000-0003-3032-499X
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NR 57
TC 101
Z9 111
U1 10
U2 106
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD OCT
PY 2013
VL 120
IS 4
BP 683
EP 695
DI 10.1007/s10584-013-0843-z
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 223SR
UT WOS:000324830500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mavrogianni, A
   Davies, M
   Wilkinson, P
   Pathan, A
AF Mavrogianni, A.
   Davies, M.
   Wilkinson, P.
   Pathan, A.
TI LONDON HOUSING AND CLIMATE CHANGE: Impact on Comfort and Health -
   Preliminary Results of a Summer Overheating Study
SO OPEN HOUSE INTERNATIONAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate Change; Urban Heat Island; Domestic; Overheating; Health Risk
ID ANTHROPOGENIC HEAT; PUBLIC-HEALTH; URBAN AREAS; ASSOCIATION; MORTALITY;
   EXCESS
AB Climate change presents potential increased threats to the comfort and health of urban populations as a result of higher summer temperatures. This paper reviews recent research on the climate change adaptation potential of urban environments and focuses on a major conurbation, London. Recent work relating to the impact of exposure to heat on population health is also noted. Data obtained from a pilot monitoring study carried out in a subset of 36 dwellings (from a total of 110 dwellings in the overall study) across London during the summer of 2009 is then discussed. Preliminary results illustrate the need to quantify the net impacts of individual building characteristics and the location of each dwelling within the London heat island. During a hot period, more than 40% of the monitored bedrooms failed the recommended overheating criteria during the night time. There was some indication of purpose built flats being more prone to overheating. The potential use of such data as the basis of a heat-related health risk epidemiological model for London is discussed. Such a tool would help health policy makers to target the most vulnerable building types and areas.
C1 [Mavrogianni, A.; Davies, M.; Pathan, A.] UCL, Bartlett Sch Grad Studies, London WC1E 6BT, England.
   [Wilkinson, P.] Univ London London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, London WC1E 7HT, England.
C3 University of London; University College London; University of London;
   London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
RP Mavrogianni, A (corresponding author), UCL, Bartlett Sch Grad Studies, 19 Torrington Pl, London WC1E 6BT, England.
EM A.Mavrogianni@ucl.ac.uk; Michael.Davies@ucl.ac.uk; A.Pathan@ucl.ac.uk;
   Paul.Wilkinson@lshtm.ac.uk
OI Mavrogianni, Anna/0000-0002-5104-1238; Davies,
   Michael/0000-0003-2173-7063
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   2010, PALN NEW YORK CIT 20
NR 53
TC 35
Z9 37
U1 0
U2 34
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 0168-2601
EI 2633-9838
J9 OPEN HOUSE INT
JI Open House Int.
PD JUN
PY 2010
VL 35
IS 2
BP 49
EP 59
PG 11
WC Architecture; Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Architecture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Urban Studies
GA 630AO
UT WOS:000280243600009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Geneletti, D
   Zardo, L
AF Geneletti, Davide
   Zardo, Linda
TI Ecosystem-based adaptation in cities: An analysis of European urban
   climate adaptation plans
SO LAND USE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Ecosystem-based adaptation; Urban ecosystem services; Urban planning;
   Climate change
ID HEAT-ISLAND; GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE; SERVICES; MANAGEMENT; AREAS; CITY;
   EXPERIENCES; INNOVATION; BENEFITS; ROOFS
AB Ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) measures have been increasingly promoted in the literature, as well as in policies and practices, for their environmental and socio-economic co-benefits. The recent scientific literature has shown a growing interest to assess climate adaptation plans at the urban level, in recognition of the important role played by urban areas in addressing climate change challenges. However, little information is available on the combination of these two issues, i.e., the actual inclusion of EbA measures in climate adaptation plans at the urban level. This paper addresses this gap by developing a framework to analyze the treatment of EbA in urban level climate planning, and apply it to a sample of climate adaptation plans in Europe. The framework consists of a classification of EbA measures, and a scoring system to evaluate how well they are reflected in different components of the plans. The results suggest that there is in general good awareness in plans of EbA measures, and of their potential role in addressing climate change challenges. However, their treatment in climate adaptation plans at the urban level often lacks sufficient baseline information, as well as convincing implementation actions. The paper concludes by offering recommendations to improve future practice, in terms of enhancing the baseline information to improve the proposal and design of EbA measures, improving the treatment of co-benefits associated to EbA measures, and strengthening coordination with other planning tools. Possible future development of this works include the integration of the proposed EbA classification, and the analysis of a larger sample of territorial plans. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/11.0/).
C1 [Geneletti, Davide; Zardo, Linda] Univ Trent, Dept Civil Environm & Mech Engn, I-38123 Trento, Italy.
   [Geneletti, Davide] Stanford Univ, Woods Inst Environm, Nat Capital Project, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
C3 University of Trento; Stanford University
RP Geneletti, D (corresponding author), Univ Trent, Dept Civil Environm & Mech Engn, Via Mesiano 77, I-38123 Trento, Italy.
EM davide.geneletti@unitn.it; linda.zardo@unitn.it
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NR 72
TC 151
Z9 165
U1 6
U2 165
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-8377
EI 1873-5754
J9 LAND USE POLICY
JI Land Use Pol.
PD JAN
PY 2016
VL 50
BP 38
EP 47
DI 10.1016/j.landusepol.2015.09.003
PG 10
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DA4FO
UT WOS:000367755700004
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Roggema, R
AF Roggema, Rob
BA Roggema, R
BF Roggema, R
TI Swarm Planning The Development of a Planning Methodology to Deal with
   Climate Adaptation Introduction
SO SWARM PLANNING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF A PLANNING METHODOLOGY TO DEAL WITH
   CLIMATE ADAPTATION
SE Springer Theses-Recognizing Outstanding PhD Research
LA English
DT Editorial Material; Book Chapter
C1 [Roggema, Rob] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Architecture, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Roggema, Rob] Univ Wageningen & Res Ctr, NL-6700 HB Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Delft University of Technology; Wageningen University & Research
RP Roggema, R (corresponding author), Delft Univ Technol, Fac Architecture, Delft, Netherlands.
RI Roggema, Robert/AFM-3455-2022
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   Van Ginneken J., 2009, KRACHT ZWERM
NR 10
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 2190-5053
EI 2190-5061
BN 978-94-007-7152-9; 978-94-007-7151-2
J9 SPRINGER THESES-RECO
PY 2014
BP XIX
EP XXIX
D2 10.1007/978-94-007-7152-9
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA BA0JZ
UT WOS:000331570400002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fuldauer, LI
   Thacker, S
   Haggis, RA
   Fuso-Nerini, F
   Nicholls, RJ
   Hall, JW
AF Fuldauer, Lena I.
   Thacker, Scott
   Haggis, Robyn A.
   Fuso-Nerini, Francesco
   Nicholls, Robert J.
   Hall, Jim W.
TI Targeting climate adaptation to safeguard and advance the Sustainable
   Development Goals
SO NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; TRADE-OFFS; RISK; FRAMEWORK; VULNERABILITY;
   SYNERGIES; LESSONS
AB The international community has committed to achieve 169 Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) targets by 2030 and to enhance climate adaptation under the Paris Agreement. Despite the potential for synergies, aligning SDG and climate adaptation efforts is inhibited by an inadequate understanding of the complex relationship between SDG targets and adaptation to impacts of climate change. Here we propose a framework to conceptualise how ecosystems and socio-economic sectors mediate this relationship, which provides a more nuanced understanding of the impacts of climate change on all 169 SDG targets. Global application of the framework reveals that adaptation of wetlands, rivers, cropland, construction, water, electricity, and housing in the most vulnerable countries is required to safeguard achievement of 68% of SDG targets from near-term climate risk by 2030. We discuss how our framework can help align National Adaptation Plans with SDG targets, thus ensuring that adaptation advances, rather than detracts from, sustainable development.
   Without targeted climate adaptation, impacts of climate change threaten achievement of all 169 SDG targets. Fuldauer et al. provide an actionable framework to assess these impacts and help systematically align national adaptation plans with the SDGs.
C1 [Fuldauer, Lena I.; Thacker, Scott; Haggis, Robyn A.; Hall, Jim W.] Univ Oxford, Environm Change Inst, South Parks Rd, Oxford OX1 3QY, England.
   [Fuso-Nerini, Francesco] KTH Royal Inst Technol, KTH Climate Act Ctr, SE-10044 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Fuso-Nerini, Francesco] KTH Royal Inst Technol, KTH Div Energy Syst, SE-10044 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Nicholls, Robert J.] Univ East Anglia, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
C3 University of Oxford; Royal Institute of Technology; Royal Institute of
   Technology; University of East Anglia
RP Fuldauer, LI (corresponding author), Univ Oxford, Environm Change Inst, South Parks Rd, Oxford OX1 3QY, England.
EM lenafuldauer@gmail.com
RI Hall, Jim/ABF-1407-2020; Nicholls, Robert/G-3898-2010
OI Fuldauer, Lena I./0000-0002-2113-3334; Hall, Jim W/0000-0002-2024-9191;
   Nicholls, Robert/0000-0002-9715-1109; Fuso Nerini,
   Francesco/0000-0002-4770-4051
FU Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/N509711/1,
   EP/N017064/1]
FX We appreciate the contributions of the Infrastructure Transitions
   Research Consortium and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
   Council by grants (L.I.F.), EP/N509711/1 (L.I.F.), and EP/N017064/1
   (J.W.H). We thank Prof. Nathalie Seddon and colleagues at the University
   of Oxford and beyond for providing useful suggestions that improved this
   paper. We acknowledge the image courtesy of the United Nations
   Sustainable Development Goals:
   https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment.The content of this
   publication has not been approved by the United Nations and does not
   reflect the views of the United Nations or its officials or the Member
   States.
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NR 82
TC 50
Z9 51
U1 26
U2 137
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
EI 2041-1723
J9 NAT COMMUN
JI Nat. Commun.
PD JUN 23
PY 2022
VL 13
IS 1
AR 3579
DI 10.1038/s41467-022-31202-w
PG 15
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 2I9AH
UT WOS:000815263200023
PM 35739101
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Brown, H
   Stigge, B
AF Brown, Hillary
   Stigge, Byron
BA Brown, H
   Stigge, B
BF Brown, H
   Stigge, B
TI Climate-Adaptive Infrastructure: Responding to Changing Conditions
SO INFRASTRUCTURAL ECOLOGIES: ALTERNATIVE DEVELOPMENT MODELS FOR EMERGING
   ECONOMIES
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
NR 0
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU MIT PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA ONE ROGERS ST, CAMBRIDGE, MA 02142 USA
BN 978-0-262-03633-7; 978-0-262-53386-7
PY 2017
BP 115
EP 145
D2 10.7551/mitpress/10558.001.0001
PG 31
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA BO6CT
UT WOS:000519693700005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Frachon, L
   Bartoli, C
   Carrère, S
   Bouchez, O
   Chaubet, A
   Gautier, M
   Roby, D
   Roux, F
AF Frachon, Lea
   Bartoli, Claudia
   Carrere, Sebastien
   Bouchez, Olivier
   Chaubet, Adeline
   Gautier, Mathieu
   Roby, Dominique
   Roux, Fabrice
TI A Genomic Map of Climate Adaptation in <i>Arabidopsis thaliana</i> at a
   Micro-Geographic Scale
SO FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Arabidopsis thaliana; Bayesian hierarchical model; climate change;
   genome-environment association analysis; local adaptation; Pool-Seq;
   spatial grain
ID LOCAL ADAPTATION; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; GENETIC-VARIATION; FLOWERING
   TRAITS; ECOLOGICAL DATA; SEED DORMANCY; RANGE SHIFTS; EVOLUTION;
   POLYMORPHISM; ASSOCIATION
AB Understanding the genetic bases underlying climate adaptation is a key element to predict the potential of species to face climate warming. Although substantial climate variation is observed at a micro-geographic scale, most genomic maps of climate adaptation have been established at broader geographical scales. Here, by using a Pool-Seq approach combined with a Bayesian hierarchical model that control for confounding by population structure, we performed a genome-environment association (GEA) analysis to investigate the genetic basis of adaptation to six climate variables in 168 natural populations of Arabidopsis thaliana distributed in south-west of France. Climate variation among the 168 populations represented up to 24% of climate variation among 521 European locations where A. thaliana inhabits. We identified neat and strong peaks of association, with most of the associated SNPs being significantly enriched in likely functional variants and/or in the extreme tail of genetic differentiation among populations. Furthermore, genes involved in transcriptional mechanisms appear predominant in plant functions associated with local climate adaptation. Globally, our results suggest that climate adaptation is an important driver of genomic variation in A. thaliana at a small spatial scale and mainly involves genome-wide changes in fundamental mechanisms of gene regulation. The identification of climate-adaptive genetic loci at a micro-geographic scale also highlights the importance to include within-species genetic diversity in ecological niche models for projecting potential species distributional shifts over short geographic distances.
C1 [Frachon, Lea; Bartoli, Claudia; Carrere, Sebastien; Roby, Dominique; Roux, Fabrice] Univ Toulouse, INRA, CNRS, Lab Interact Plantes Microorganismes, Castanet Tolosan, France.
   [Frachon, Lea] Univ Napoli Federico II, Dipartimento Biol, Naples, Italy.
   [Frachon, Lea] Univ Zurich, Dept Systemat & Evolutionary Bot, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Bouchez, Olivier; Chaubet, Adeline] Genotoul, US 1426, GeT PlaGe, INRA, Castanet Tolosan, France.
   [Gautier, Mathieu] Univ Montpellier, INRA, Ctr Biol Gest Populat, Ctr Cooperat Int Rech Agron Dev,Inst Rech Dev,Mon, Montpellier, France.
C3 INRAE; Universite de Toulouse; Universite Federale Toulouse
   Midi-Pyrenees (ComUE); Universite Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier; Institut
   National des Sciences Appliquees de Toulouse; Centre National de la
   Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); University of Naples Federico II;
   University of Zurich; INRAE; Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement
   (IRD); Universite de Montpellier; CIRAD; INRAE
RP Roux, F (corresponding author), Univ Toulouse, INRA, CNRS, Lab Interact Plantes Microorganismes, Castanet Tolosan, France.
EM fabrice.roux@inra.fr
RI Chaubet, Adeline/AEP-3932-2022; Roux, Fabrice/A-1718-2009; gautier,
   mathieu/F-7429-2010; Bartoli, Claudia/F-4961-2017
OI Carrere, Sebastien/0000-0002-2348-0778; Chaubet,
   Adeline/0009-0003-9326-0935; Bartoli, Claudia/0000-0003-1461-2983;
   Frachon, Lea/0000-0001-8990-1419
FU Region Midi-Pyrenees (CLIMARES project); LABEX TULIP [ANR-10-LABX-41,
   ANR-1-IDEX-0002-02]
FX This work was funded by the Region Midi-Pyrenees (CLIMARES project) and
   the LABEX TULIP (ANR-10-LABX-41 and ANR-1-IDEX-0002-02).
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NR 85
TC 52
Z9 57
U1 2
U2 49
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
SN 1664-462X
J9 FRONT PLANT SCI
JI Front. Plant Sci.
PD JUL 10
PY 2018
VL 9
AR 967
DI 10.3389/fpls.2018.00967
PG 15
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA GM3QV
UT WOS:000438023000001
PM 30042773
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Andersen, I
AF Andersen, Inger
BE Verner, D
TI Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services Have a Role in Climate Adaptation
SO ADAPTATION TO A CHANGING CLIMATE IN THE ARAB COUNTRIES: A CASE FOR
   ADAPTATION GOVERNANCE AND LEADERSHIP IN BUILDING CLIMATE RESILIENCE
SE Mena Development Report
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
C1 World Bank, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
C3 The World Bank
RP Andersen, I (corresponding author), World Bank, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
CR Adger WN, 2001, CLIMATE CHANGE 2001: IMPACTS, ADAPTATION, AND VULNERABILITY, P533
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   Bioversity International, 2006, CROP WILD REL
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   World Bank, 2007, ASS TUN WAT DEGR COS
NR 28
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU WORLD BANK INST
PI WASHINGTON
PA 1818 H ST NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20433 USA
BN 978-0-8213-9459-5; 978-0-8213-9458-8
J9 MENA DEV REP
PY 2012
BP 152
EP 161
D2 10.1596/978-0-8213-9458-8
PG 10
WC Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA BA4WS
UT WOS:000336377500007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zamora-Pereira, JC
   Yousefpour, R
   Cailleret, M
   Bugmann, H
   Hanewinkel, M
AF Zamora-Pereira, Juan Carlos
   Yousefpour, Rasoul
   Cailleret, Maxime
   Bugmann, Harald
   Hanewinkel, Marc
TI Magnitude and timing of density reduction are key for the resilience to
   severe drought in conifer-broadleaf mixed forests in Central Europe
SO ANNALS OF FOREST SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation to climate change; Net present value; Density reduction;
   Overstorey trees; Altitudinal gradient
ID NORWAY SPRUCE; ABIES-ALBA; PICEA-ABIES; WATER AVAILABILITY; TREE
   MORTALITY; GAP MODELS; GROWTH; CLIMATE; MANAGEMENT; RESPONSES
AB Key message We applied a modified forest gap model (ForClim) to depict changes in stand water transpiration via density reduction as a forest adaptation strategy. This approach is the key to analyzing the ecological resilience to drought, stress-induced mortality, and economic efficiency of managed mixed forest stands in Central Europe. The results show that specific geographic conditions and forest composition define the optimal stand density of drought-resilient forests.
   Context Reducing stand density has been recognized as a valid strategy to increase forest resilience to drought. Moreover, to develop adaptive management strategies (AMS) under climate change, it is crucial to consider not only drought resilience but also the economic efficiency of alternative AMS proposed to alleviate drought effects.
   Aims To analyze how decreased inter-tree competition among overstorey trees affects stand vulnerability to drought and its expected yield.
   Methods We integrated experimental thinning data and historical responses to drought years in a climate-sensitive forest gap model, ForClim. We tested a business as usual (BAU) and three alternative AMS ("do-nothing," low- and high-intensity overstorey removal) in mixed stands of Norway spruce (Picea abies), silver fir (Abies alba), and European beech (Fagus sylvatica) along an elevational gradient of 520-1020 m a.s.l. in Central Europe.
   Results High-intensity overstorey removal in mixed stands of all three species considerably increased forest volume growth resilience to drought and decreased stress-induced mortality by two-thirds vis a vis a "do-nothing" strategy. In sites including only conifer species, forest resilience was equally improved by high- and low-intensity overstorey removal compared to that in the BAU strategy. Regarding the timber economy, high-intensity overstorey removal resulted in a higher economic revenue of mixed stands (similar to 22% higher net present value than other strategies) on the high-elevation sites (> 1000 m a.s.l.).
   Conclusion Modifying forest density and structure by overstorey removal is principally suitable to increase forest resilience to drought and improve its economic efficiency. The magnitude of the effect however depends on the geographical setting and forest composition.
C1 [Zamora-Pereira, Juan Carlos; Yousefpour, Rasoul; Hanewinkel, Marc] Univ Freiburg, Chair Forestry Econ & Forest Planning, Tennenbacherstr 4, D-79106 Freiburg, Germany.
   [Cailleret, Maxime] Univ Aix Marseille, INRAE, UMR Recover, Aix En Provence, France.
   [Cailleret, Maxime; Bugmann, Harald] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Terr Ecosyst, Dept Environm Syst Sci, Forest Ecol, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Cailleret, Maxime] Swiss Fed Inst Forest, Snow & Landscape Res WSL, Birmensdorf, Switzerland.
C3 University of Freiburg; Aix-Marseille Universite; INRAE; Swiss Federal
   Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; Swiss Federal Institutes of
   Technology Domain; Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow & Landscape
   Research
RP Zamora-Pereira, JC (corresponding author), Univ Freiburg, Chair Forestry Econ & Forest Planning, Tennenbacherstr 4, D-79106 Freiburg, Germany.
EM juan.zamora@ife.uni-freiburg.de; rasoul.yousefpour@ife.uni-freiburg.de;
   maxime.cailleret@inrae.fr; harald.bugmann@env.ethz.ch;
   marc.hanewinkel@ife.uni-freiburg.de
RI Bugmann, Harald/A-1252-2008; hanewinkel, marc/E-5639-2011; Yousefpour,
   Rasoul/F-1601-2017
OI Cailleret, Maxime/0000-0001-6561-1943; Bugmann,
   Harald/0000-0003-4233-0094; Zamora-Pereira, Juan
   Carlos/0000-0003-0771-1334; Hanewinkel, Marc/0000-0003-4081-6621
FU Projekt DEAL; ForRISK project (ERA-NET Sumforest); European Union
   [606803]; Federal Office for the Environment FOEN
   [05.0602.PZ/P382-0487]; French National Research Agency A. N.R.
   [ANR-16-SUMF-0001-01]; Federal Ministry for Food and Agriculture BMEL
   [F.K.Z.: 2816ERA04S]; Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)
   [ANR-16-SUMF-0001] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche
   (ANR)
FX Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. Funding for
   this research was provided by the ForRISK project (ERA-NET Sumforest).
   Sumforest was funded by the European Union under Grant Agreement No.
   606803. The ERA-NET Sumforest project ForRISK was funded in Switzerland
   through the Federal Office for the Environment FOEN (Grant No.
   05.0602.PZ/P382-0487), in France through the French National Research
   Agency A. N.R. (Grant No. ANR-16-SUMF-0001-01), and in Germany through
   the Federal Ministry for Food and Agriculture BMEL (F.K.Z.: 2816ERA04S).
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NR 79
TC 18
Z9 18
U1 6
U2 34
PU SPRINGER FRANCE
PI PARIS
PA 22 RUE DE PALESTRO, PARIS, 75002, FRANCE
SN 1286-4560
EI 1297-966X
J9 ANN FOREST SCI
JI Ann. For. Sci.
PD SEP
PY 2021
VL 78
IS 3
AR 68
DI 10.1007/s13595-021-01085-w
PG 28
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA TV5DP
UT WOS:000681744000001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chou, JM
   Xu, Y
   Dong, WJ
   Zhao, WX
   Li, JN
   Li, YM
AF Chou, Jieming
   Xu, Yuan
   Dong, Wenjie
   Zhao, Weixing
   Li, Jiangnan
   Li, Yuanmeng
TI An Economy-Climate Model for Quantitatively Projecting the Impact of
   Future Climate Change and Its Application
SO FRONTIERS IN PHYSICS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; economy-climate model; mechanism; grain production;
   impact assessment
ID RICE PRODUCTION; CHINA; YIELD
AB Quantitatively projecting the impact of future climate change on the socio-economy and exploring its internal mechanism are of great practical significance to adapt to climate change and prevent climate risks. Based on the economy-climate (C-D-C) model, this paper introduces a yield impact of climate change (YICC) model that can quantitatively project the climate change impact. The model is based on the YICC as its core concept and uses the impact ratio of climate change (IRCC) indicator to assess the response of the economic system to climate change over a long period of time. The YICC is defined as the difference between the economic output under changing climate condition and that under assumed invariant climate condition. The IRCC not only reflects the sensitivity of economic output to climate change but also reveals the mechanism of the nonlinear interaction between climate change and non-climatic factors on the socio-economic system. Using the main grain-producing areas in China as a case study, we use the data of the ensemble average of 5 GCMs in CMIP6 to project the possible impact of climate change on grain production in the next 15-30 years under three future scenarios (SSP1-2.6, SSP2-4.5, SSP5-8.5). The results indicate that the long-term climate change in the future will have a restraining effect on production in North region and enhance production in South region. From 2021 to 2035, climate change will reduce production by 0.60-2.09% in North region, and increase production by 1.80-9.01% in South region under three future scenarios. From 2021 to 2050, compared with the climate change impact in 2021-2035, the negative impact of climate change on production in North region will weaken, and the positive impact on production in South region will enhance with the increase in emission concentration. Among them, climate change will reduce grain output in North region by 0.52-1.99%, and increase output in South region by 1.35-9.56% under the three future scenarios. The combination of economic results and climate change research is expected to provide scientific support for further revealing the economic mechanism of climate change impacts.
C1 [Chou, Jieming; Xu, Yuan; Zhao, Weixing; Li, Jiangnan; Li, Yuanmeng] Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, State Key Lab Earth Surface Proc & Resource Ecol, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Chou, Jieming; Dong, Wenjie] Southern Marine Sci & Engn Guangdong Lab Zhuhai, Zhuhai, Peoples R China.
   [Dong, Wenjie] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Atmospher Sci, Zhuhai, Peoples R China.
C3 Beijing Normal University; Southern Marine Science & Engineering
   Guangdong Laboratory; Southern Marine Science & Engineering Guangdong
   Laboratory (Zhuhai); Sun Yat Sen University
RP Xu, Y (corresponding author), Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, State Key Lab Earth Surface Proc & Resource Ecol, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM xuyuan01@mail.bnu.edu.cn
RI dong, wenjie/F-4314-2012; zhao, weixing/H-3154-2013; Xu,
   Yuan/AIE-9104-2022
OI Xu, Yuan/0000-0002-3539-4068; Dong, Wenjie/0000-0002-9635-6292
FU National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFC1509003];
   National Natural Science Foundation of China [42075167]
FX Funding This research was funded by the National Key Research and
   Development Program of China, grant number 2018YFC1509003; the National
   Natural Science Foundation of China, grant number 42075167.
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NR 43
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 2
U2 62
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
SN 2296-424X
J9 FRONT PHYS-LAUSANNE
JI Front. Physics
PD AUG 17
PY 2021
VL 9
DI 10.3389/fphy.2021.723306
PG 14
WC Physics, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Physics
GA UM6SS
UT WOS:000693461000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pruvot-Woehl, S
   Krishnan, S
   Solano, W
   Schilling, T
   Toniutti, L
   Bertrand, B
   Montagnon, C
AF Pruvot-Woehl, Solene
   Krishnan, Sarada
   Solano, William
   Schilling, Tim
   Toniutti, Lucile
   Bertrand, Benoit
   Montagnon, Christophe
TI Authentication of <i>Coffea</i> <i>arabica</i> Varieties through DNA
   Fingerprinting and its Significance for the Coffee Sector
SO JOURNAL OF AOAC INTERNATIONAL
LA English
DT Article
ID GENETIC DIVERSITY; SEED SECTOR; SELECTION; L.
AB Background: Locating the optimal varieties for coffee cultivation is increasingly considered a key condition for sustainable production and marketing. Variety performance varies when it comes to susceptibility to coffee leaf rust and other diseases, adaptation to climate change and high cup quality for specialty markets. But because of poor organization and the lack of a professional coffee seed sector, most existing coffee farms (and even seed lots and nurseries) do not know which varieties they are using. DNA fingerprinting of coffee planting material will contribute to professionalize the coffee seed sector. Objective: The objective of this paper is i) to check in a large scale the robustness of the existing coffee DNA fingerprinting method based on eight Single Sequence Repeats markers (SRR) and ii) to describe how it can help in moving the needle towards a more professional seed sector.
   Method: 2533 samples representing all possible genetic background of Arabica varieties were DNA fingerprinted with 8 SRR markers. The genetic diversity was analyzed and the genetic conformity to varietal references was assessed.
   Results: The DNA fingerprinting method proved to be robust in authenticating varieties and trace back the history of C. arabica breeding and of the movement of C. arabica varieties. The genetic conformity of two important coffee varieties, Marseillesa and Gesha, proved to be 91% and 39% respectively.
   Conclusions: DNA fingerprinting provides different actors in the coffee sector with a powerful new tool-farmers can verify the identity of their cultivated varieties, coffee roasters can be assured that marketing claims related to varieties are correct, and most of all, those looking to establish the a more professional and reliable coffee seed sector have a reliable new monitoring tool to establish and check genetic purity of seed stock and nursery plants.
   Highlights: While C. arabica is primarily self-pollinating, even fixed line varieties appear to be drifting away from their original genetic reference due to uncontrolled cross pollination. A set of 8 SSR markers applied to the largest possible genetically diverse set of samples prove to discriminate between a wide range of varieties Figures confirm that genetic non conformity of coffee varieties can represent up to 61% of checked samples.
C1 [Pruvot-Woehl, Solene; Toniutti, Lucile; Montagnon, Christophe] World Coffee Res, 5 Ave Grand Cherie, F-34270 St Mathieu De Treviers, France.
   [Krishnan, Sarada] Denver Bot Garden, 909 York St, Denver, CO 80206 USA.
   [Solano, William] Trop Agr Res & Higher Educ Ctr CATIE, Turrialba 30501, Costa Rica.
   [Schilling, Tim] World Coffee Res, Babel Community, 70 Ave Republ, F-13000 Marseille, France.
   [Bertrand, Benoit] Ctr Cooperat Int Rech Agron Dev CIRAD, UMR IPME, Montpellier, France.
C3 CATIE - Centro Agronomico Tropical de Investigacion y Ensenanza; CIRAD;
   Universite de Montpellier
RP Montagnon, C (corresponding author), World Coffee Res, 5 Ave Grand Cherie, F-34270 St Mathieu De Treviers, France.
EM christophe.montagnon@rd2vision.com
RI Krishnan, Sarada/AAM-2125-2020; montagnon, christophe/AAQ-9291-2021;
   BERTRAND, Benoît/HOC-7292-2023
OI Solene, Pruvot-Woehl/0000-0002-7349-836X; Krishnan,
   Sarada/0000-0002-2491-4160
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NR 47
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 2
U2 21
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
PI CARY
PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA
SN 1060-3271
EI 1944-7922
J9 J AOAC INT
JI J. AOAC Int.
PD MAR-APR
PY 2020
VL 103
IS 2
BP 325
EP 334
DI 10.1093/jaocint/qsz003
PG 10
WC Chemistry, Analytical; Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Chemistry; Food Science & Technology
GA MO4IJ
UT WOS:000551491300006
PM 33241280
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Smith, SH
   Steenhof, K
   McClure, CJW
   Heath, JA
AF Smith, Shawn H.
   Steenhof, Karen
   McClure, Christopher J. W.
   Heath, Julie A.
TI Earlier nesting by generalist predatory bird is associated with human
   responses to climate change
SO JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; agriculture; Falco sparverius; growing season; minimum
   temperature; NDVI; phenology; prey; spring; winter
ID AMERICAN KESTRELS; BREEDING PHENOLOGY; GREAT TIT; POPULATION; NDVI;
   MIGRATION; SELECTION; DATE; CONSEQUENCES; DISPERSAL
AB 1. Warming temperatures cause temporal changes in growing seasons and prey abundance that drive earlier breeding by birds, especially dietary specialists within homogeneous habitat. Less is known about how generalists respond to climate-associated shifts in growing seasons or prey phenology, which may occur at different rates across land cover types.
   2. We studied whether breeding phenology of a generalist predator, the American kestrel (Falco sparverius), was associated with shifts in growing seasons and, presumably, prey abundance, in a mosaic of non-irrigated shrub/grasslands and irrigated crops/pastures. We examined the relationship between remotely-sensed normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) and abundance of small mammals that, with insects, constitute approximately 93% of kestrel diet biomass. We used NDVI to estimate the start of the growing season (SoGS) in irrigated and non-irrigated lands from 1992 to 2015 and tested whether either estimate of annual SoGS predicted the timing of kestrel nesting. Finally, we examined relationships among irrigated SoGS, weather and crop planting.
   3. NDVI was a useful proxy for kestrel prey because it predicted small mammal abundance and past studies showed that NDVI predicts insect abundance. NDVI-estimated SoGS advanced significantly in irrigated lands (beta = 1.09 +/- 0.30 SE) but not in non-irrigated lands (beta = -0.57 +/- 0.53). Average date of kestrel nesting advanced 15 days in the past 24 years and was positively associated with the SoGS in irrigated lands, but not the SoGS in non-irrigated lands. Advanced SoGS in irrigated lands was related to earlier planting of crops after relatively warm winters, which were more common in recent years.
   4. Despite different patterns of SoGS change between land cover types, kestrel nesting phenology shifted with earlier prey availability in irrigated lands. Kestrels may preferentially track prey in irrigated lands over non-irrigated lands because of higher quality prey on irrigated lands, or earlier prey abundance may release former constraints on other selective pressures to breed early, such as seasonal declines in fecundity or competition for high-quality mates.
   5. This is one of the first examples of an association between human adaptation to climate change and shifts in breeding phenology of wildlife.
C1 [Smith, Shawn H.; Heath, Julie A.] Boise State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, 1910 Univ Dr, Boise, ID 83725 USA.
   [Smith, Shawn H.; Heath, Julie A.] Boise State Univ, Raptor Res Ctr, 1910 Univ Dr, Boise, ID 83725 USA.
   [Steenhof, Karen] Owyhee Desert Studies, 18109 Briar Creek Rd, Murphy, ID 83650 USA.
   [McClure, Christopher J. W.] Peregrine Fund, 5668 West Flying Hawk Lane, Boise, ID 83709 USA.
C3 Boise State University; Boise State University
RP Smith, SH (corresponding author), Boise State Univ, Dept Biol Sci, 1910 Univ Dr, Boise, ID 83725 USA.; Smith, SH (corresponding author), Boise State Univ, Raptor Res Ctr, 1910 Univ Dr, Boise, ID 83725 USA.
EM shawnhsmith2015@gmail.com
RI Smith, Shawn/Z-2800-2019; McClure, Christopher/J-2712-2019; Heath,
   Julie/D-5600-2011
OI McClure, Christopher/0000-0003-1216-7425; Smith,
   Shawn/0000-0002-8159-7245; Heath, Julie/0000-0002-9606-1689
FU National Science Foundation [DEB 1145552, DBI 1263167]; National Science
   Foundation Idaho EPSCoR REU Program [EPS-814387]; Boise State Provost's
   Office Work Study Award; Boise State University's Department of
   Biological Sciences and Raptor Research Center; Golden Eagle Audubon
   Society; Adopt-a-Box; U.S. Geological Survey's Forest and Rangeland
   Ecosystem Science Center; Office Of The Director; Office of Integrative
   Activities [1301792] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
FX We would like to thank Dr. E. Brooks for providing the R script that
   made it possible to run the harmonics analysis and for his helpful
   insights into analysing NDVI data. We thank Dr. N. Glenn for her advice
   on calibrating NDVI data. This research would not have been possible
   without an extensive field crew and special thanks go to Liz Urban,
   Michael Henderson, Schelby Rosebrook, Lauren Kruger, Erin Strasser,
   Alexandra Anderson, Terra Glesson and Cassi Smith for their long hours
   in the field. We would like to thank Dr. J. R. Belthoff and two
   anonymous reviewers for thoughtful comments on earlier drafts. We thank
   The Peregrine Fund's Research Library for help in obtaining literature.
   We appreciate the landowners who allowed us to trap small mammals and
   access the nest boxes on their properties. This research was supported
   by an awards from the National Science Foundation (DEB 1145552 and DBI
   1263167), the National Science Foundation Idaho EPSCoR REU Program
   (EPS-814387), a Boise State Provost's Office Work Study Award, Boise
   State University's Department of Biological Sciences and Raptor Research
   Center, the Golden Eagle Audubon Society, Adopt-a-Box supporters and the
   U.S. Geological Survey's Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center.
   The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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NR 71
TC 29
Z9 31
U1 0
U2 78
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0021-8790
EI 1365-2656
J9 J ANIM ECOL
JI J. Anim. Ecol.
PD JAN
PY 2017
VL 86
IS 1
BP 98
EP 107
DI 10.1111/1365-2656.12604
PG 10
WC Ecology; Zoology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Zoology
GA EF4TR
UT WOS:000390325400011
PM 27871118
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Moore, AD
   Ghahramani, A
AF Moore, Andrew D.
   Ghahramani, Afshin
TI Climate change and broadacre livestock production across southern
   Australia. 3. Adaptation options via livestock genetic improvement
SO ANIMAL PRODUCTION SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE breeding; grazing systems; modelling
ID DECISION-SUPPORT-SYSTEMS; REPRODUCTION TRAITS; GRAZING ENTERPRISES; LAMB
   MORTALITY; HEAT-STRESS; GROWTH; WOOL; PARAMETERS; PASTURE; MODEL
AB Climate change is predicted to reduce the productivity of the broadacre livestock industries across southern Australia; to date there has been no formal evaluation of the potential of genetic improvement in cattle or sheep to ameliorate the impacts of changing climates. We used the GRAZPLAN simulation models to assess selection of five traits of sheep and cattle as adaptation options under the SRES A2 global change scenario. Analysis of the breeding strategies was carried out for 25 representative locations, five livestock enterprises and three future years (2030, 2050, 2070). Uncertainty in future climates was taken into account by considering projected climates from four global circulation models. For three sheep enterprises, breeding for greater fleece growth (at constant body size) was predicted to produce the greatest improvements in forage conversion efficiency, and so it was the most effective genetic adaptation option. For beef cow and steer enterprises, breeding for larger body size was most effective; for beef cows, however, this conclusion relied on per-animal costs (including provision of bulls) remaining stable as body size increases. Increased conception rates proved to be less effective but potentially viable as an adaptation in beef cow and crossbred ewe enterprises. In the southern Australian environments that were analysed, our modelling suggests that breeding for tolerance to heat stress is unlikely to improve the performance of livestock production systems even at 2070. Genetic improvement of livestock was able to recover much less of the impact of climate change on profitability at drier locations where the need for adaptation is likely to be greatest. Combinations of feedbase and livestock genetic adaptations are likely to complement one another as the former alter the amount of forage that can be consumed, while the latter affect the efficiency with which consumed forage is converted to animal products. Climate change impacts on pasture production across southern Australia are likely to have only small effects on methane emissions intensity, as are a range of candidate genetic and feedbase adaptations to climate change; methane emissions per hectare in future climates will therefore be driven mainly by changes in livestock numbers due to alterations in pasture productivity.
C1 [Moore, Andrew D.; Ghahramani, Afshin] CSIRO Climate Adaptat Natl Res Flagship & Plant I, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Moore, AD (corresponding author), CSIRO Climate Adaptat Natl Res Flagship & Plant I, GPO Box 1600, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
EM Andrew.Moore@csiro.au
RI Ghahramani, Afshin/C-4169-2012; Moore, Andrew/D-3418-2009
OI Moore, Andrew/0000-0002-5675-4720; Ghahramani,
   Afshin/0000-0002-9648-4606
FU Australian Government Department of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Forestry
   under its Climate Change Research Program; Meat & Livestock Australia;
   Dairy Australia; Australian Wool Innovation
FX This research was supported by funding from the Australian Government
   Department of Agriculture, Fisheries, and Forestry under its Climate
   Change Research Program; Meat & Livestock Australia; Dairy Australia;
   and Australian Wool Innovation. We are indebted to our colleagues in the
   Southern Livestock Adaptation 2030 research and development program
   (Phil Graham, Melissa Rebbeck, Martin Dunstan, Mike Hyder, Richard
   Eckard, Peter Ball, Doug Alcock, Phil Bowden, Geoff Casburn, Jan
   Edwards, Ruth Corrigan, Jane Court, Clare Edwards, Nathan Ferguson, Jeff
   House, Colin Langford, Greg Meaker, Jim Meckiff, Kieran Ransom and Julia
   Smith) who have shared representative grazing system information with
   us, and to Russell Pattinson for his coordination of the program.
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NR 49
TC 22
Z9 22
U1 1
U2 57
PU CSIRO PUBLISHING
PI CLAYTON
PA UNIPARK, BLDG 1, LEVEL 1, 195 WELLINGTON RD, LOCKED BAG 10, CLAYTON, VIC
   3168, AUSTRALIA
SN 1836-0939
EI 1836-5787
J9 ANIM PROD SCI
JI Anim. Prod. Sci.
PY 2014
VL 54
IS 2
BP 111
EP 124
DI 10.1071/AN13052
PG 14
WC Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 284NT
UT WOS:000329326800001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Eckersley, P
   England, K
   Ferry, L
AF Eckersley, Peter
   England, Kit
   Ferry, Laurence
TI Sustainable development in cities: collaborating to improve urban
   climate resilience and develop the business case for adaptation
SO PUBLIC MONEY & MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Business case; climate adaptation; local government; resilience; wicked
   issues
ID JOINED-UP GOVERNMENT; LOCAL-GOVERNMENT
AB Fragmented governance contexts make it difficult for public bodies to direct and control climate adaptation initiatives. This paper highlights how Newcastle City Council collaborated with local partners to create a shared understanding of how a major storm could affect public services across North East England. This helped the authority to develop a business case to invest in infrastructure that will help to protect future generations from severe weather events.
C1 [Eckersley, Peter] Nottingham Trent Univ, Publ Policy & Management, Nottingham, England.
   [England, Kit] Sniffer, Climate Ready Clyde, Glasgow City Reg Climate Change Adaptat Approach, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.
   [Ferry, Laurence] Univ Durham, Business Sch, Accounting, Durham, England.
C3 Nottingham Trent University; Durham University
RP Eckersley, P (corresponding author), Nottingham Trent Univ, Publ Policy & Management, Nottingham, England.
RI Eckersley, Peter/I-9980-2019
OI Ferry, Laurence/0000-0002-6686-4528; Eckersley,
   Peter/0000-0001-9048-8529
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NR 46
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 14
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0954-0962
EI 1467-9302
J9 PUBLIC MONEY MANAGE
JI Public Money Manage.
PY 2018
VL 38
IS 5
BP 335
EP 344
DI 10.1080/09540962.2018.1477642
PG 10
WC Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration
GA GI2JF
UT WOS:000434195500005
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Swaris, N
   Halwatura, RU
   Amaratunga, D
AF Swaris, Nirma
   Halwatura, Rangika Umesh
   Amaratunga, Dilanthi
TI Policy coherence for resilience in Sri Lanka coherence of climate change
   adaptation (CCA) disaster risk reduction (DRR) and sustainable
   development goals (SDGs)
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RESILIENCE IN THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Policy coherence; Resilience; Climate change adaptations; Disaster risk
   reduction; Sustainable development goals
ID BEHAVIOR
AB PurposePolicy coherence is a complex and tough task for many developing nations because their capacity to examine and deliver evidence-based inputs to policymaking is limited, and policy dialogue platforms need to be effectively used. Resolving these difficulties is a critical requirement for policy consistency. As a result, the study focuses on the level of policy coherence for climate change adaptation (CCA), disaster risk reduction (DRR) and sustainable development goals (SDG) in Sri Lanka and suggests routes for policy coherence for Resilience. This study aims to investigate the coherent approach of CCA, DRR and SDG; to identify concerns in policy documents addressing the coherence of CCA, DRR and SDG in local context; and to propose policy coherence suggestions for resilience in Sri Lanka.Design/methodology/approachMethodology comprises a review and content analysis of 17 policy and legal documents in Sri Lanka and a qualitative study. The qualitative approach consists of semistructured interviews that obtained deep and broad expertise knowledge with ten government representatives and stakeholders. Both content analysis and interview data were analyzed by using NVivo.FindingsIt was discovered that there are several issues with the coherence of policies in Sri Lanka, including the fragmented approach, lack of integration, inadequate coordination, limited resources and lack of monitoring and evaluation. The policies are inspired by international frameworks, and local implementations are not focused, leading to inadequate implementation of policies. The lack of development cooperation for the use of innovative approaches, such as climate-resilient infrastructure and environmentally friendly solutions for CCA and DRR, further aggravates the situation. Another concern is the lack of land use management and responsibility for the development of physical infrastructure for DRR integration with CCA. It is found that there is a limited community involvement which is vital for the implementation of policies. Local implementations are encouraged to fill the gaps in existing policies/acts. The analytical framework of the study is based on a preliminary examination of policy documents, a review of the literature and discussions with practitioners. The framework reflects the current situation of policy integration which addresses strategic, conceptual, institutional, operational and financial coherence. The research suggests pathways for achieving policy coherence in CCA, DRR and SDG in Sri Lanka, such as enhancing the strategic coherence by improving goals to increase the coherence within CCA, DRR and SDG; improving the credibility of the unified approach for developing DRR and CCA risk assessments; intensifying institutional cooperation and stakeholder management; improving the common monitoring and evaluation; establishing implementation strategies; and increasing the community involvement.Research limitations/implicationsThe study on policy coherence in Sri Lanka recommends increasing community and professional involvement, conducting more research, developing a national strategy, increasing capacity building, strengthening international collaboration and fostering multisectoral collaboration. These recommendations can help improve policy coherence between CCA, DRR and SDGs, align policies with national goals and priorities and improve implementation effectiveness. By implementing these recommendations, Sri Lanka can address the challenges of climate change and natural disasters and achieve SDGs.
   Practical implicationsThe study on policy coherence for resilience in Sri Lanka has practical implications, including improved coordination and resource allocation, increased capacity building, improved reputation and sustainability. By integrating CCA, DRR and SDGs, this study can help Sri Lanka become more resilient to climate change and natural disasters, achieve SDGs and become a responsible actor in the international community. These implications can contribute to a more sustainable future and ensure that development goals are achieved in a way that is resilient to climate change and natural disasters.Social implicationsIncreased community participation: the study emphasizes the importance of community involvement in the policy development process. This can help build trust between communities and government agencies, improve transparency and ensure that policies are developed in a way that is responsive to local needs and priorities.Originality/valueBased on the identified existing loopholes in the policies and pathways to policy coherence, the issues in policymaking could be overcome. It could be used to establish strong linkages between policies based on CCA, DRR and SDGs to achieve long-term resilience.
C1 [Swaris, Nirma; Halwatura, Rangika Umesh] Univ Moratuwa, Dept Civil Engn, Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
   [Amaratunga, Dilanthi] Univ Huddersfield, Global Disaster Resilience Ctr, Huddersfield, England.
C3 University Moratuwa; University of Huddersfield
RP Swaris, N (corresponding author), Univ Moratuwa, Dept Civil Engn, Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
EM nirma_swaris@yahoo.com
OI Amaratunga, Dilanthi/0000-0002-1682-5301
FU Department of Civil Engineering at the University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka
FX The authors would like to express sincere gratitude to the Department of
   Civil Engineering at the University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
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NR 37
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 6
U2 15
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI Leeds
PA Floor 5, Northspring 21-23 Wellington Street, Leeds, W YORKSHIRE,
   ENGLAND
SN 1759-5908
EI 1759-5916
J9 INT J DISASTER RESIL
JI Int. J. Disaster Resil. Built Environ.
PD APR 29
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 3
SI SI
BP 450
EP 473
DI 10.1108/IJDRBE-02-2023-0035
EA NOV 2023
PG 24
WC Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA OQ3V6
UT WOS:001106531600001
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Urbanski, J
   Mogi, M
   O'Donnell, D
   DeCotiis, M
   Toma, T
   Armbruster, P
AF Urbanski, Jennifer
   Mogi, Motoyoshi
   O'Donnell, Deborah
   DeCotiis, Mark
   Toma, Takako
   Armbruster, Peter
TI Rapid Adaptive Evolution of Photoperiodic Response during Invasion and
   Range Expansion across a Climatic Gradient
SO AMERICAN NATURALIST
LA English
DT Article
DE rapid adaptation; climate change; invasive species; Aedes albopictus
ID AEDES-ALBOPICTUS DIPTERA; PITCHER-PLANT MOSQUITO; GEOGRAPHIC-VARIATION;
   UNITED-STATES; INVADING POPULATIONS; DIAPAUSE INDUCTION; ADULT SURVIVAL;
   CULICIDAE EGGS; SIZE; TEMPERATURE
AB Understanding the mechanisms of adaptation to spatio-temporal environmental variation is a fundamental goal of evolutionary biology. This issue also has important implications for anticipating biological responses to contemporary climate warming and determining the processes by which invasive species are able to spread rapidly across broad geographic ranges. Here, we compare data from a historical study of latitudinal variation in photoperiodic response among Japanese and U. S. populations of the invasive Asian tiger mosquito Aedes albopictus with contemporary data obtained using comparable methods. Our results demonstrated rapid adaptive evolution of the photoperiodic response during invasion and range expansion across similar to 15 degrees of latitude in the United States. In contrast to the photoperiodic response, size-based morphological traits implicated in climatic adaptation in a wide range of other insects did not show evidence of adaptive variation in Ae. albopictus across either the U. S. (invasive) or Japanese (native) range. These results show that photoperiodism has been an important adaptation to climatic variation across the U. S. range of Ae. albopictus and, in conjunction with previous studies, strongly implicate the photoperiodic control of seasonal development as a critical evolutionary response to ongoing contemporary climate change. These results also emphasize that photoperiodism warrants increased attention in studies of the evolution of invasive species.
C1 [Urbanski, Jennifer; O'Donnell, Deborah; DeCotiis, Mark; Armbruster, Peter] Georgetown Univ, Dept Biol, Washington, DC 20057 USA.
   [Mogi, Motoyoshi] Saga Univ, Div Parasitol, Dept Pathol & Biodefense, Fac Med, Saga 8498501, Japan.
   [Toma, Takako] Univ Ryukyus, Sch Hlth Sci, Fac Med, Nishihara, Okinawa 9030215, Japan.
C3 Georgetown University; Saga University; University of the Ryukyus
RP Armbruster, P (corresponding author), Georgetown Univ, Dept Biol, Washington, DC 20057 USA.
EM paa9@georgetown.edu
FU Georgetown University; National Geographic Society
FX We thank A. Hoffmann for stimulating discussion and D. Berrigan, D. L.
   Denlinger, C. Elsik, M. Hamilton, L. P. Lounibos, M. Poelchau, and two
   anonymous reviewers for helpful comments on versions of the manuscript.
   We thank L. Der for expert technical support in construction of the
   photoperiod chambers and K. Emerson and G. Wimp for assistance with
   statistical analysis. This research was supported by Georgetown
   University and the National Geographic Society.
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NR 70
TC 171
Z9 188
U1 2
U2 158
PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
PI CHICAGO
PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA
SN 0003-0147
EI 1537-5323
J9 AM NAT
JI Am. Nat.
PD APR
PY 2012
VL 179
IS 4
BP 490
EP 500
DI 10.1086/664709
PG 11
WC Ecology; Evolutionary Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Evolutionary Biology
GA 914TK
UT WOS:000301975200008
PM 22437178
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Otto, A
   Göpfert, C
   Thieken, AH
AF Otto, Antje
   Gopfert, Christian
   Thieken, Annegret H.
TI Are cities prepared for climate change? An analysis of adaptation
   readiness in 104 German cities
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation tracking; Adaptation plans; Cluster analysis; City ranking;
   Urban climate policy; Germany
ID ECOSYSTEM-BASED ADAPTATION; URBAN AREAS; TRACKING; EUROPE; RESILIENCE;
   POLICIES; PLANS
AB Cities can be severely affected by climate change. Hence, many of them have started to develop climate adaptation strategies or implement measures to help prepare for the challenges it will present. This study aims to provide an overview of climate adaptation in 104 German cities. While existing studies on adaptation tracking rely heavily on self-reported data or the mere existence of adaptation plans, we applied the broader concept of adaptation readiness, considering five factors and a total of twelve different indicators, when making our assessments. We clustered the cities depending on the contribution of these factors to the overall adaptation readiness index and grouped them according to their total score and cluster affiliations. This resulted in us identifying four groups of cities. First, a pioneering group comprises twelve (mainly big) cities with more than 500,000 inhabitants, which showed high scores for all five factors of adaptation readiness. Second, a set of 36 active cities, which follow different strategies on how to deal with climate adaptation. Third, a group of 28 cities showed considerably less activity toward climate adaptation, while a fourth set of 28 mostly small cities (with between 50,000 and 99,999 inhabitants) scored the lowest. We consider this final group to be pursuing a 'wait-and-see' approach. Since the city size correlates with the adaptation readiness index, we recommend policymakers introduce funding schemes that focus on supporting small cities, to help them prepare for the impact of a changing climate.
C1 [Otto, Antje; Thieken, Annegret H.] Univ Potsdam, Inst Environm Sci & Geog, Karl Liebknecht Str 24-25, D-14476 Potsdam, Germany.
   [Gopfert, Christian] Tech Univ Munich, Inst Energy Efficient & Sustainable Design & Bldg, Arcisstr 21, D-80333 Munich, Germany.
   [Gopfert, Christian] Ruckermainstr 2, D-97070 Wurzburg, Germany.
C3 University of Potsdam; Technical University of Munich
RP Otto, A (corresponding author), Univ Potsdam, Inst Environm Sci & Geog, Karl Liebknecht Str 24-25, D-14476 Potsdam, Germany.
EM anotto@uni-potsdam.de
RI Göpfert, Christian/A-6173-2016; Thieken, Annegret/B-1946-2017
OI Thieken, Annegret/0000-0001-7068-2615; Otto, Antje/0000-0002-4623-3438
FU Germany's Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [FKZ
   01LR1709A1]
FX This study was developed within the framework of the joint research
   project "Urban resilience against extreme weather events-typologies and
   transfer of adaptation strategies in small metropolises and medium-sized
   cities" (ExTrass) funded by Germany's Federal Ministry of Education and
   Research (BMBF, FKZ 01LR1709A1).
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NR 78
TC 22
Z9 22
U1 4
U2 50
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 26
IS 8
AR 35
DI 10.1007/s11027-021-09971-4
PG 25
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA UU4CO
UT WOS:000698746500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lioubimtseva, E
AF Lioubimtseva, Elena
TI The role of inclusion in climate vulnerability assessment and equitable
   adaptation goals in small American municipalities
SO DISCOVER SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Vulnerability; Exposure; Sensitivity; Adaptive capacity; Inclusion;
   Diversity; Equity; Small city; Stakeholder; Planning; United States
ID PERCEIVED VULNERABILITY; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; JUSTICE; IMPACTS; FUTURE;
   CITIES
AB Equity and inclusion considerations are important prerequisites of effective climate adaptation planning, especially at a local scale. This study examines how climate adaptation plans of small American cities and counties consider equity in their climate vulnerability assessments and adaptation planning goals and how consideration of equity in existing adaptation plans relates to the inclusion of diverse categories of stakeholders. Data analysis is based on the content of 23 local climate adaptation plans of small urban and rural municipalities across the United States with populations of less than 300 thousand people. Correlations between conceptualization of vulnerability dimensions, inclusion of 9 categories of stakeholders, and consideration of equity in 12 different domains of climate adaptation planning are examined. The study concludes that municipalities that engage more diverse groups of stakeholders and examine the sensitivity and adaptive capacity of their populations appear to be more attentive to social equity and more likely to offer specific climate adaptation measures focusing on vulnerable groups.
C1 [Lioubimtseva, Elena] Grand Valley State Univ, Geog & Sustainable Planning Dept, Allendale, MI 49401 USA.
C3 Grand Valley State University
RP Lioubimtseva, E (corresponding author), Grand Valley State Univ, Geog & Sustainable Planning Dept, Allendale, MI 49401 USA.
EM lioubime@gvsu.edu
FU Grand Valley State University Libraries Open Access Publishing Support
   Fund
FX I would like to thank Professor Charlotte da Cunha of the University of
   Versailles for fruitful collaboration on methodological frameworks for
   monitoring local climate adaptation plans discussed in our joint papers
   cited here. I am also very thankful to the three reviewers, whose
   insightful comments have helped me to improve the final version of this
   article. I also want to thank all local planning department officials
   who kindly responded to my inquiries about the availability of climate
   adaptation planning documents of their cities and counties. Finally, I
   am grateful to Grand Valley State University Libraries Open Access
   Publishing Support Fund for covering the cost of this publication.
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NR 86
TC 6
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 7
PU SPRINGERNATURE
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
EI 2662-9984
J9 DISCOV SUSTAIN
JI Discov. Sustain.
PD JAN 20
PY 2022
VL 3
IS 1
AR 3
DI 10.1007/s43621-022-00071-0
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA A2DI4
UT WOS:000953285500001
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Asplund, T
   Hjerpe, M
AF Asplund, Therese
   Hjerpe, Mattias
TI Project coordinators' views on climate adaptation costs and benefits -
   justice implications
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; economic aspects; justice implications; co-benefits;
   maladaptation
ID OVERCOMING BARRIERS; CHALLENGES; MANAGEMENT; GOVERNANCE; IMPACTS;
   POLICY; LEVEL; RISK; GAP
AB As local climate adaptation activity increases, so does the number of questions about costs, benefits, financing and the role that economic considerations play in adaptation-related decision-making and policy. Through five cases, covering a range of climate risks and types of adaptation measures, this paper critically examines Swedish project coordinators' perceptions of costs and benefits in already-implemented climate adaptation measures. Our study finds that project coordinators make use of different system boundaries - on temporal, geographical and administrative scales - in their cost/benefit evaluations, making the practice of determining adaptation costs arbitrary and hard to compare. We further demonstrate that the project coordinators interpret costs and benefits in a manner that downplays the intangible environmental and social costs and benefits arising from the adaptation measures, despite their own experience of how such measures negatively impact upon social value. The exclusion of social and environmental costs and benefits has severe implications for justice, as it can bias decisions against people and ecosystems that are affected negatively. Based on the findings, we propose three tentative social justice dilemmas in local climate adaptation planning and implementation: 1. Cost and benefit distribution across scales; 2. The identification and valuation of non-market effects; and 3. The equitable allocation of costs and benefits.
C1 Linkoping Univ, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, Linkoping, Sweden.
   Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate & Policy Res, Linkoping, Sweden.
C3 Linkoping University; Linkoping University
RP Asplund, T (corresponding author), Linkoping Univ, Dept Themat Studies, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
EM therese.asplund@liu.se
OI Asplund, Therese/0000-0001-5549-5897; Hjerpe,
   Mattias/0000-0002-5500-3300
FU Swedish Research Council Formas [942-2015-106]
FX This work supporting is The Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological
   Institute and The Swedish Research Council Formas, [Grant Number
   942-2015-106].
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NR 53
TC 4
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 10
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PD FEB 1
PY 2020
VL 25
IS 2
BP 114
EP 129
DI 10.1080/13549839.2020.1712340
EA JAN 2020
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA KE9PJ
UT WOS:000507016600001
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Araral, E
AF Araral, Eduardo
TI A transaction cost approach to climate adaptation: Insights from Coase,
   Ostrom and Williamson and evidence from the 400-year old zangjeras
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Coase; Ostrom; Williamson; Climate adaptation; Transaction cost;
   Collective action; Local commons; Water resources management; Irrigation
ID WATER-RESOURCES
AB I argue in this paper that transaction cost is central to the analytics of climate adaptation in the local commons. I illustrate this by bringing together insights from Coase on tradability of property rights, Ostrom on institutional design principles for long lived commons and Williamson on transaction cost and governance mechanisms. I call this the COW model on the analytics of climate adaptation, which I illustrate using grounded theory in the case of the 400-year old zangjera irrigation societies in Northern Philippines. The zangjeras are highly vulnerable to climatic risks but has successfully managed to adapt steadily overtime. I argue that their ability to adapt is a function of transaction cost which is associated with some ingenious principles of institutional design such as: (1) clear allocation and tradability of rights and obligations; (2) fairness in the allocation of risks, costs and benefits; (3) reliance on prices and incentives as adaptation mechanisms; (4) adaptive efficiency, i.e. maximization of welfare at least adaptation cost; (5) reliable enforcement mechanisms; and (6) a polycentric structure of governance. I conclude that the COW model can provide a useful foundation for the analytics of climate adaptation. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, Singapore 117548, Singapore.
C3 National University of Singapore
RP Araral, E (corresponding author), Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, 469C Bukit Timah Rd, Singapore 117548, Singapore.
EM ekararal@hotmail.com
RI Araral, Eduardo/L-6009-2019
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NR 27
TC 21
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 47
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD JAN
PY 2013
VL 25
BP 147
EP 156
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2012.08.005
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 062JC
UT WOS:000312914900014
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lickley, M
   Fletcher, S
AF Lickley, Megan
   Fletcher, Sarah
TI Bayesian Estimation of Advanced Warning Time of Precipitation Emergence
SO EARTHS FUTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE time of emergence; uncertainty reduction; precipitation trends; Bayesian
   inference; time of confidence; advanced warning
ID CMIP5; ENSEMBLES
AB Climate models disagree on the direction of precipitation change over about half of the Earth. Current characterizations of expected change use the ensemble mean, which systematically underestimates the magnitude and overestimates the time of emergence (ToE) of precipitation change in regions of high uncertainty. We develop a new approach to estimate both ToE and the potential to update uncertainty in precipitation over time with new observations. Further, we develop two new metrics that increase the usefulness of ToE for adaptation planning. The time of confidence estimates when projections of precipitation emergence will have high confidence. Second, the advance warning time (AWT) indicates how long policymakers will have to prepare for a new precipitation regime after they know change is likely to occur. Our approach uses individual model projections that show change before averaging across models to calculate ToE. It then applies a Bayesian method to constrain uncertainty from climate model ensembles using a perfect model approach. Results demonstrate the potential for widespread and decades-earlier precipitation emergence, with potential for end-of-century emergence to occur across 99% of the Earth compared to 60% in previous estimates. Our method reduces uncertainty in the direction of change across 8% of the globe. We find positive estimates of AWT across most of the Earth; however, in 34% of regions there is potential for no advanced warning before new precipitation regimes emerge. These estimates can guide adaptation planning, reducing the risk that policymakers are unprepared for precipitation changes that occur earlier than expected.
   Understanding if and when precipitation will change in response to anthropogenic warming is needed for policymakers to design adaptation plans. However, climate model projections of precipitation are highly uncertain, with models disagreeing on the direction of change across about half of Earth's surface. We develop a methodology for estimating when we expect future precipitation change to be known with a high degree of confidence. We estimate the time of emergence of new precipitation regimes on individual climate models. We also estimate how much advance warning time policymakers will have between learning that precipitation will likely change and the onset of such change. We demonstrate that precipitation change could be more widespread and sooner than previously expected, but that most regions will have advance warning. Together, our findings provide information that policymakers can use to more effectively adapt to climate change before impacts occur.
   We develop a method to reduce uncertainty in precipitation change by integrating observations If precipitation will change, emergence will be sooner and more widespread than previous estimates In most regions, we expect to have advanced warning time of precipitation emergence
C1 [Lickley, Megan] Georgetown Univ, Earth Commons, Washington, DC 20057 USA.
   [Lickley, Megan] Georgetown Univ, Sch Foreign Serv, Sci Technol & Int Affairs Program, Washington, DC 20057 USA.
   [Fletcher, Sarah] Stanford Univ, Civil & Environm Engn, Stanford, CA USA.
   [Fletcher, Sarah] Stanford Univ, Woods Inst Environm, Stanford, CA USA.
C3 Georgetown University; Georgetown University; Stanford University;
   Stanford University
RP Lickley, M (corresponding author), Georgetown Univ, Earth Commons, Washington, DC 20057 USA.; Lickley, M (corresponding author), Georgetown Univ, Sch Foreign Serv, Sci Technol & Int Affairs Program, Washington, DC 20057 USA.
EM megan.lickley@georgetown.edu
OI Lickley, Megan/0000-0001-5810-8784; /0000-0003-3289-2237
FU NSF [2207036]; National Science Foundation
FX We thank Daniel Gilford, Ben Santer, Noah Diffenbaugh, Amanda Giang,
   Morgan Edwards, Mofan Zhang, and Claudia Tebaldi for helpful
   conversations. This material is based upon work supported by the
   National Science Foundation under Grant 2207036. We acknowledge the
   World Climate Research Programme's Working Group on Coupled Modelling,
   which is responsible for CMIP, and we thank the climate modeling groups
   (listed in Table S1 in Supporting Information S1 of this paper) for
   producing and making available their model output. For CMIP the U.S.
   Department of Energy's Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and
   Intercomparison provides coordinating support and led development of
   software infrastructure in partnership with the Global Organization for
   Earth System Science Portals.
CR [Anonymous], 2014, Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis. Working Group I contribution to the fifth assessment report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
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NR 36
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 6
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
EI 2328-4277
J9 EARTHS FUTURE
JI Earth Future
PD FEB
PY 2024
VL 12
IS 2
AR e2023EF004079
DI 10.1029/2023EF004079
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA GM2G1
UT WOS:001153012600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sales, H
   Alves, ML
   Sampaio, AM
   Nunes, J
   Patto, MCV
AF Sales, Helia
   Alves, Mara Lisa
   Sampaio, Ana Margarida
   Nunes, Joao
   Patto, Maria Carlota Vaz
TI Understanding the phenotypic variability of the olive 'Galega vulgar'
   fruits and oil-related traits across environments
SO SCIENTIA HORTICULTURAE
LA English
DT Article
DE Bioeconomy; Clones' stability; Genetic and environmental effects;
   Genotype-by-environment interactions; Olea europaea L. subsp. europaea
   var. europaea; Phenotypic diversity
ID FATTY-ACID-COMPOSITION; ACCUMULATION; DIVERSITY; STABILITY; SSR
AB 'Galega vulgar', a genetically diverse variety, is the main olive tree variety across Portugal, being broadly cultivated across distinct environments. 'Galega vulgar' is presently being replaced by higher-yielding, although lower-quality, foreign varieties and efforts must be made to counteract this tendency, and to more efficient explore 'Galega vulgar' to the profit of olive tree producers, and the remaining market stakeholders. For that, in the present research, an evaluation of the influence of genetic and environmental factors and their interactions in the phenotypic variability of 'Galega vulgar' was performed, focused mainly on important traits to olive stakeholders (namely, fruit-related traits such as fruit and flesh weight and flesh-to-stone ratios and oil-related traits), towards the selection of the best representatives of the variability found. A three-year in-situ detailed agronomic characterization was conducted taking advantage of a previously defined 'Galega vulgar' collection composed of 595 trees from 95 clones, cultivated across all the Portuguese geographical districts where 'Galega vulgar' has representativeness (10 districts), considering thirteen phenotypic traits. The environment was the main contributor to the phenotypic variability observed on the 'Galega vulgar' variety. Significant differences for almost all the analysed traits were detected across years, trees, and geographical districts, with significant district-by-clone interactions. Of the two most frequent clones, clone C002 was the most stable across the geographical districts under study. The present work provides information on the phenotypic variability of 'Galega vulgar' important fruit and oil related traits across different environments, of utmost importance from the conservation, breeding, resilience, and production perspectives, considering the pressing need to adapt to climate change effects. In addition, since a significant geographic district x clone interaction was observed, the generated knowledge may now contribute to a better adjustment of the right clone for the right region in what respects new orchards establishment. A set of 'Galega vulgar' trees, primarily identified as belonging to the same clones, was selected due to their 'residual' phenotypic variability. These trees will contribute to broadening the genetic basis of a previously defined ex-situ conservation base 'Galega vulgar' collection of trees, to be trialled in a comparative field experiment, under the same environmental conditions. These experiments are needed for a more precise evaluation of the genetic potential of this variety, towards future genetic studies to clarify the complex genetic control of traditional olive breeding targeted traits and to develop molecular selection tools to support precision olive breeding.
C1 [Sales, Helia; Alves, Mara Lisa; Sampaio, Ana Margarida; Nunes, Joao; Patto, Maria Carlota Vaz] Univ Nova Lisboa, Inst Tecnol Quim & Biol Antonio Xavier, Ave Republ,Estacao Agron Nacl, P-2780157 Oeiras, Portugal.
   [Sales, Helia; Nunes, Joao] Oliveira Hosp, Ctr Bio R&D Unit, Assoc BLC3, Technol & Innovat Campus,Rua Nossa Senhora da Conc, P-3405155 Lagares, Portugal.
C3 National Institute for Agricultural Research Portugal; Universidade Nova
   de Lisboa
RP Sales, H (corresponding author), Univ Nova Lisboa, Inst Tecnol Quim & Biol Antonio Xavier, Ave Republ,Estacao Agron Nacl, P-2780157 Oeiras, Portugal.; Sales, H (corresponding author), Oliveira Hosp, Ctr Bio R&D Unit, Assoc BLC3, Technol & Innovat Campus,Rua Nossa Senhora da Conc, P-3405155 Lagares, Portugal.
EM helia.sales@itqb.unl.pt
RI ; Vaz Patto, Maria Carlota/C-8775-2011
OI Sampaio, Ana Margarida/0000-0002-2008-8527; Vaz Patto, Maria
   Carlota/0000-0002-8469-7508; Sales, Helia/0000-0003-3812-5127
FU WinBio Project "Waste & Interior Bioeconomy"; Da Ciencias Empresas para
   o Desenvolvimento da Bio-economia Circular e Sustentavel no Interior
   under Programa Operacional Tematico Competitividade e
   Internacionalizacao - COMPETE 2020 through the European Regional
   Development Fund (ERDF) [POCI-01-0246-FEDER-181335]; FCT (Fundacao para
   a Ciencia e a Tecnologia) , MCTES (Ministerio da Ciencia, Tecnologia e
   Ensino Superior); Association BLC3 through the PhD grant
   [SFRH/BDE/102401/2014]; Centre Bio RD Unit [UIDB/05083/2020]; R&D Unit
   GREEN-IT-Bioresources for Sustainability [UIDB/04551/2020,
   UIDP/04551/2020]; Conservacao e Melhoramento Genetico Vegetal da
   Oliveira Program [PDR2020-7.8.4-FEADER-042744]; LS4FUTURE Associated
   Laboratory [LA/P/0087/2020]; Centro Portugal Regional Operational
   Program (Centro2020) under the PORTUGAL 2020 Partnership Agreement,
   through the European Social Fund (ESF) [CENTRO-04-3559-FSE-000146]
FX This work was supported by WinBio Project "Waste & Interior &
   Bioeconomy": da Ciencias Empresas para o Desenvolvimento da Bio-economia
   Circular e Sustentavel no Interior, POCI-01-0246-FEDER-181335, under
   Programa Operacional Tematico Competitividade e Internacionalizacao -
   COMPETE 2020, through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) ;
   FCT (Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia) , MCTES (Ministerio da
   Ciencia, Tecnologia e Ensino Superior) , and the Association BLC3
   through the PhD grant [SFRH/BDE/102401/2014] ; the Centre Bio R & D Unit
   (UIDB/05083/2020) , and the R & D Unit GREEN-IT-Bioresources for
   Sustainability (UIDB/04551/2020 and UIDP/04551/2020) ; Conservacao e
   Melhoramento Genetico Vegetal da Oliveira Program
   [PDR2020-7.8.4-FEADER-042744] ; and LS4FUTURE Associated Laboratory
   (LA/P/0087/2020) . Also, contributing to conclude this research was the
   research contract of H.S. funded by CENTRO-04-3559-FSE-000146-Centro
   Portugal Regional Operational Program (Centro2020) , under the PORTUGAL
   2020 Partnership Agreement, through the European Social Fund (ESF) .
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NR 49
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 3
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0304-4238
EI 1879-1018
J9 SCI HORTIC-AMSTERDAM
JI Sci. Hortic.
PD FEB 15
PY 2024
VL 326
AR 112738
DI 10.1016/j.scienta.2023.112738
EA DEC 2023
PG 11
WC Horticulture
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA EM5L6
UT WOS:001139355400001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bi, X
   Chang, BR
   Hou, F
   Yang, ZH
   Fu, Q
   Li, B
AF Bi, Xu
   Chang, Bianrong
   Hou, Fen
   Yang, Zihan
   Fu, Qi
   Li, Bo
TI Assessment of Spatio-Temporal Variation and Driving Mechanism of
   Ecological Environment Quality in the Arid Regions of Central Asia,
   Xinjiang
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE ecological quality; mountain-basin system; MODIS data products;
   spatio-temporal changes; driving mechanism
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; IMPERVIOUS SURFACE; HEALTH-ASSESSMENT; MODIS LAI; INDEX;
   LAND; WETLAND; ECOSYSTEMS; GRASSLANDS; PATTERNS
AB Grassland ecosystems are increasingly threatened by pressures from climate change and intensified human activity, especially in the arid region of Central Asia. A comprehensive understanding of the ecological environment changes is crucial for humans to implement environmental protection measures to adapt to climate change and alleviate the contradiction between humans and land. In this study, fractional vegetation coverage (FVC), leaf area index (LAI), gross primary productivity of vegetation (GPP), land surface temperature (LST), and wetness (WET) were retrieved from Moderate-Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite remote sensing products in 2008 and 2018. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to establish the MODIS data-based ecological index (MODEI) in the study area, and the spatial differentiation characteristics and driving mechanism of ecological quality in the last ten years were explored. The results showed that: (1) FVC, GPP, LAI, and WET had positive effects on the ecological environment, while LST had a negative impact on the ecological environment. FVC and GPP were more significant than other indicators. (2) The MODEI showed a spatial pattern of "excellent in the north and poor in the south" and changed from north to south in the study area. (3) From 2008 to 2018, the average MODEI of Fuyun County increased from 0.292 to 0.303, indicating that the ecological quality in Fuyun County became better overall. The improved areas were mainly located in the summer pastures at higher elevations. In comparison, the deteriorated areas were concentrated in the spring and autumn pastures and winter pastures at lower elevations. The areas where the ecological environment had obviously improved and degraded were distributed along the banks of the Irtysh River and the Ulungur River. (4) With the increase in precipitation and the decrease in grazing pressure, the MODEI of summer pasture was improved. The deterioration of ecological environment quality in spring and autumn pastures and winter pastures was related to the excessive grazing pressure. The more significant changes in the MODEI on both sides of the river were associated with implementing the herdsmen settlement project. On the one hand, the implementation of newly settled villages increased the area of construction land on both sides of the river, which led to the deterioration of ecological quality; on the other hand, due to the increase in cropland land and the planting of artificial grasses along the river, the ecological quality was improved. The study offers significant information for managers to make more targeted ecological restoration efforts in ecologically fragile areas.
C1 [Bi, Xu; Hou, Fen] Shanxi Univ Finance & Econ, Coll Resources & Environm, Taiyuan 030006, Peoples R China.
   [Bi, Xu; Yang, Zihan; Li, Bo] Beijing Normal Univ, Sch Nat Resources, Fac Geog Sci, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.
   [Chang, Bianrong] Tianjin Agr Univ, Coll Humanities, Tianjin 300384, Peoples R China.
   [Fu, Qi] Soochow Univ, Sch Polit & Publ Adm, Suzhou 215123, Peoples R China.
   [Fu, Qi] Soochow Univ, Collaborat Innovat Ctr New Urbanizat & Social Gov, Suzhou 215123, Peoples R China.
   [Fu, Qi] Soochow Univ, Ctr Chinese Urbanizat Studies, Suzhou 215123, Peoples R China.
C3 Shanxi University Finance & Economics; Beijing Normal University;
   Tianjin Agricultural University; Soochow University - China; Soochow
   University - China; Soochow University - China
RP Li, B (corresponding author), Beijing Normal Univ, Sch Nat Resources, Fac Geog Sci, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.; Fu, Q (corresponding author), Soochow Univ, Sch Polit & Publ Adm, Suzhou 215123, Peoples R China.; Fu, Q (corresponding author), Soochow Univ, Collaborat Innovat Ctr New Urbanizat & Social Gov, Suzhou 215123, Peoples R China.; Fu, Q (corresponding author), Soochow Univ, Ctr Chinese Urbanizat Studies, Suzhou 215123, Peoples R China.
EM geo_bnu@163.com; changbianrong1220@163.com; houyuhoufeng@163.com;
   201631190022@mail.bnu.edu.cn; fuqi@suda.edu.cn; libo@bnu.edu.cn
RI Fu, Qi/ABB-2288-2021
OI Bi, Xu/0000-0002-1569-8523; Fu, Qi/0000-0003-0468-0632
FU National Science and Technology Support Plan of China [2014BAC15B04];
   Scientific and Technological Innovation Programs of Higher Education
   Institutions in Shanxi (STIP) [2019L0480]; Philosophy and Social Science
   Planning Project of Shanxi Province [2020YY082]; Jiangsu Social Science
   Foundation [19GLC016]; Major Projects of Philosophical and Social
   Sciences Research in Colleges and Universities in Jiangsu Province
   [2019SJZDA043]
FX This research was supported by National Science and Technology Support
   Plan of China (No.2014BAC15B04), the Scientific and Technological
   Innovation Programs of Higher Education Institutions in Shanxi (STIP,
   2019L0480), the Philosophy and Social Science Planning Project of Shanxi
   Province in 2020 (2020YY082), the Jiangsu Social Science Foundation
   (19GLC016), and the Major Projects of Philosophical and Social Sciences
   Research in Colleges and Universities in Jiangsu Province
   (2019SJZDA043).
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NR 70
TC 17
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U2 129
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 18
IS 13
AR 7111
DI 10.3390/ijerph18137111
PG 23
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA TH3PC
UT WOS:000672004100001
PM 34281046
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Harmeling, S
AF Harmeling, Sven
BE Duyck, S
   Jodoin, S
   Johl, A
TI Climate change impacts Human rights in climate adaptation and loss and
   damage
SO ROUTLEDGE HANDBOOK OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND CLIMATE GOVERNANCE
SE Routledge Handbooks
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
C1 [Harmeling, Sven] Int Climate Policy Germanwatch, Bonn, Germany.
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NR 93
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 1
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-315-31257-6; 978-1-138-23245-7
J9 ROUTL HANDBK
PY 2018
BP 90
EP 109
D2 10.4324/9781315312576
PG 20
WC Environmental Studies; International Relations; Law
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; International Relations; Government &
   Law
GA BM6TR
UT WOS:000467372900009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nursey-Bray, M
AF Nursey-Bray, Melissa
TI Towards socially just adaptive climate governance: the transformative
   potential of conflict
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; adaptive governance; conflict; social justice
ID ENVIRONMENTAL SCARCITY; NATURAL DISASTERS; CHANGE ADAPTATION; VIOLENT
   CONFLICT; CIVIL CONFLICT; WATER; MANAGEMENT; RESOLUTION; RESOURCES;
   SECURITY
AB Conflict is an important factor in ongoing climate change debates and its role in management is under increasing scrutiny. In this paper, I present the results of an advanced discourse analysis that analyses trends in the relationship between conflict and climate change. I present two primary discourses dominate discussion: (i) climate as a security risk and (ii) climate as one of many factors affecting power relations that may lead to conflict. Both narratives implicitly or explicitly discuss climate conflict as a cause-outcome relationship, and further primarily construct conflict and climate change within normative frames. Yet, conflict has transformative potential and can be incorporated into management in ways that harness its capacity to drive innovation and lead to more robust and just adaptive governance. I argue for a shift in the discursive frame from a cause-outcome-oriented approach to a process-driven approach, one that treats conflict as an integral part of adaptive governance processes, thus being more just and equitable. Such a shift in focus can lead to positive on ground climate adaptation outcomes, in ways that respect rather than are counterintuitive to dominant political and societal imbalances and institutional structures.
C1 [Nursey-Bray, Melissa] Univ Adelaide, Geog Environm & Populat, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
C3 University of Adelaide
RP Nursey-Bray, M (corresponding author), Univ Adelaide, Geog Environm & Populat, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
EM melissa.nursey-bray@adelaide.edu.au
RI Nursey-Bray, Melissa/J-8183-2019
OI Nursey-Bray, Melissa/0000-0002-4121-5177
FU Faculty of Arts, University of Adelaide
FX Thank you to my colleagues in the department of Geography, Environment
   and Population who critiqued this article when I gave it as a paper and
   thus strengthened it as a text. My thanks also to Rob Palmer who proofed
   (many times) this article as well as gave criticism of the content.
   Thank you to the Faculty of Arts, University of Adelaide, for supporting
   my application for study leave and for the Faculty Research Grant Scheme
   award which allowed me to do the research necessary for writing this
   article. Finally, thanks to the reviewers of this manuscript and earlier
   versions thereof, the paper is much stronger as a result.
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NR 124
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 1
U2 34
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PY 2017
VL 22
IS 2
BP 156
EP 171
DI 10.1080/13549839.2016.1181618
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA EO3UN
UT WOS:000396619900002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Rickards, L
   Howden, M
   Crimp, S
AF Rickards, Lauren
   Howden, Mark
   Crimp, Steven
BE Fuhrer, J
   Gregory, PJ
TI Channelling the Future? The Use of Seasonal Climate Forecasts in Climate
   Adaptation
SO CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACT AND ADAPTATION IN AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
SE CABI Climate Change Series
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID MURRAY-DARLING BASIN; DECISION-SUPPORT; PLANETARY BOUNDARIES; ADAPTIVE
   CAPACITY; COPING STRATEGIES; RISK-MANAGEMENT; FARMERS; INFORMATION;
   KNOWLEDGE; RAINFALL
C1 [Rickards, Lauren] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Sustainable Soc Inst, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia.
   [Howden, Mark; Crimp, Steven] CSIRO Climate Adaptat Flagship & Ecosyst Sci, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
C3 University of Melbourne; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Rickards, L (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Sustainable Soc Inst, Ground Floor Alice Hoy Bldg Blg 162 Monash Rd, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia.
EM lauren.rickards@unimelb.edu.au; Mark.Howden@csiro.au;
   steven.crimp@csiro.au
RI Crimp, Steven/D-6995-2011; Howden, Stuart/C-1138-2008
OI Howden, Stuart/0000-0002-0386-9671; Rickards, Lauren/0000-0001-6088-3448
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NR 139
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 6
PU CABI PUBLISHING-C A B INT
PI WALLINGFORD
PA CABI PUBLISHING, WALLINGFORD 0X10 8DE, OXON, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-78064-289-5
J9 CABI CLIM CHANGE SER
PY 2014
VL 5
BP 233
EP 252
D2 10.1079/9781780642895.0000
PG 20
WC Agronomy; Environmental Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BC7QZ
UT WOS:000355150000017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Morrison, TH
   Barnett, J
   Gurney, GG
   Lau, J
   Barnes, ML
   Cinner, J
   Hettiarachchi, M
   Cohen, P
AF Morrison, Tiffany H.
   Barnett, Jon
   Gurney, Georgina G.
   Lau, Jacqueline
   Barnes, Michele L.
   Cinner, Josh
   Hettiarachchi, Missaka
   Cohen, Pip
TI Overcoming lock-in of science-policy responses to reef heating
SO MARINE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Marine heatwaves; Coral reefs; Governance; Vulnerability; Ocean
   adaptation; Tropical coasts; Climate change; Ocean warming
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; GREAT-BARRIER-REEF; FOOD SECURITY;
   CORAL-REEFS; COASTAL FISHERIES; GOVERNANCE; RESILIENCE; MANAGEMENT;
   ECOSYSTEMS; CAPACITY
AB Marine heating is the long-term climate-induced warming of oceans. Marked by more frequent, longer and widespread marine heatwave events, the severity of marine heating is generating catastrophic impacts on reef peoples and ecosystems. Here, we examine the range of policy solutions proposed to address reef heating. We find that, until recently, science-informed policy solutions were dominated by recommendations for more 'inclusive adaptation' and more 'usable' science. While these are laudable goals, such a narrow and locally-focused set of solutions suggests many researchers, policymakers, and funders have restricted their responses to the highly visible symptoms of reef heating, thereby locking in a particular science-policy pathway. Science-policy lock-in is concerning because it can popularise solutions that place the burden of response on to already vulnerable groups, avoid tackling deeper structural drivers of change, and overlook a wider range of possible solutions. In response, we showcase emerging research trends proposing a broader and more impactful agenda for reef science and policy. Such an agenda is explicitly designed to expand the policy solution space to secure a wider, more effective, and more just range of responses to ongoing marine heating for reef peoples and ecosystems.
C1 [Morrison, Tiffany H.; Cohen, Pip] James Cook Univ, Coll Sci & Engn, Townsville 4810, Australia.
   [Morrison, Tiffany H.; Barnett, Jon; Hettiarachchi, Missaka] Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog Earth & Atmospher Sci, Parkville 3010, Australia.
   [Morrison, Tiffany H.] Wageningen Univ & Res, Environm Policy Grp, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Gurney, Georgina G.; Lau, Jacqueline] James Cook Univ, Coll Arts Soc & Educ, Townsville 4810, Australia.
   [Gurney, Georgina G.] Univ Tasmania, Sch Geog Planning & Spatial Sci, Hobart 7005, Australia.
   [Gurney, Georgina G.] Univ Tasmania, Inst Marine Sci, Ctr Marine Socioecol, Hobart 7005, Australia.
   [Barnes, Michele L.] Univ Sydney, Fac Engn, Sch Project Management, Camperdown, NSW 2006, Australia.
   [Cinner, Josh] Univ Sydney, Sch Geosci, Thriving Oceans Res Hub, Camperdown, NSW 2006, Australia.
   [Hettiarachchi, Missaka] World Wildlife Fund, Environm & Disaster Management Program, Washington, DC USA.
   [Cohen, Pip] WorldFish, POB 438, Honiara, Solomon Islands.
   [Hettiarachchi, Missaka; Cohen, Pip] Turning Tides Marine Tenure Initiat, Pipers River, Australia.
C3 James Cook University; University of Melbourne; Wageningen University &
   Research; James Cook University; University of Tasmania; University of
   Tasmania; University of Sydney; University of Sydney; World Wildlife
   Fund; CGIAR; Worldfish
RP Morrison, TH (corresponding author), James Cook Univ, Coll Sci & Engn, Townsville 4810, Australia.
EM tiffany.morrison@unimelb.edu.au
RI Gurney, Georgina/E-1782-2017; Barnes, Michele/ABE-7497-2020; Morrison,
   Tiffany/D-4460-2012
OI Morrison, Tiffany/0000-0001-5433-037X
FU Science for Nature and People Partnership; Australian Research Council
   Discovery Program [DP220103921]; Centre of Excellence Program
   [CE140100020]; Laureate Fellowship Program [FL180100040]; DECRA
   Fellowship Program [DE210101918, DE190101583]; Australian Research
   Council [FL180100040] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
FX This work was supported by funding for the Science for Nature and People
   Partnership (a partnership of The Nature Conservancy and the Wildlife
   Conservation Society) to THM and PC, and the Australian Research Council
   Discovery Program (grant no. DP220103921) to THM, Centre of Excellence
   Program (grant no. CE140100020) to THM, JC and PC, Laureate Fellowship
   Program to JB (FL180100040), and DECRA Fellowship Program to GGG (grant
   no. DE210101918) and MLB (grant no. DE190101583).
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SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; International Relations
GA I8S2V
UT WOS:001332892600001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Balzter, H
   Macul, M
   Delaney, B
   Tansey, K
   Espirito-Santo, F
   Ofoegbu, C
   Petrovskii, S
   Forchtner, B
   Nicholes, N
   Payo, E
   Heslop-Harrison, P
   Burns, M
   Basell, L
   Egberts, E
   Stockley, E
   Desorgher, M
   Upton, C
   Whelan, M
   Yildiz, A
AF Balzter, Heiko
   Macul, Mateus
   Delaney, Beth
   Tansey, Kevin
   Espirito-Santo, Fernando
   Ofoegbu, Chidiebere
   Petrovskii, Sergei
   Forchtner, Bernhard
   Nicholes, Nicholes
   Payo, Emilio
   Heslop-Harrison, Pat
   Burns, Moya
   Basell, Laura
   Egberts, Ella
   Stockley, Emma
   Desorgher, Molly
   Upton, Caroline
   Whelan, Mick
   Yildiz, Ayse
TI Loss and Damage from Climate Change: Knowledge Gaps and
   Interdisciplinary Approaches
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE loss and damage; climate change impacts; climate change adaptation;
   interdisciplinary; global adaptation gap; loss and damage fund; COP27
ID TIME-SERIES; BIODIVERSITY; OPPORTUNITIES; PARTNERSHIPS; CONSERVATION;
   ECOSYSTEMS; MODELS
AB Loss and damage from climate change have risen to a prominent position on the international agenda. At COP27 in 2022, the Conference of the Parties (COP) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) ratified a decision to establish a loss and damage fund to compensate low- and middle-income countries that are suffering negative impacts from climate change. The fund is meant to address the Global Adaptation Gap, which describes the rising cost of adaptation needed to cope with climate change impacts due to delayed action to curb greenhouse gas emissions and remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere. This essay highlights issues around loss and damage from climate change from a variety of natural and social science perspectives. From three months of discussions, an interdisciplinary perspective and research agenda on this topic have crystallised, which is outlined here. Given that the implementation of the loss and damage fund still needs negotiation and commitment from signatories to the UNFCCC, it is timely now to address some important knowledge gaps on how loss and damage can be measured, quantified, valued, understood, communicated, and adapted to. Hence, it is necessary to understand the complex interactions between people, politics, nature, and climate in this interdisciplinary context.
C1 [Balzter, Heiko; Macul, Mateus; Delaney, Beth; Tansey, Kevin; Espirito-Santo, Fernando; Ofoegbu, Chidiebere] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Sch Geog Geol & Environm, Space Pk Leicester,92 Corp Rd, Leicester LE4 5SP, England.
   [Balzter, Heiko] Univ Leicester, Natl Ctr Earth Observat, Space Pk Leicester,92 Corp Rd, Leicester LE4 5SP, England.
   [Petrovskii, Sergei] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Sch Comp & Math Sci, Leicester LE1 7RH, England.
   [Forchtner, Bernhard; Nicholes, Nicholes] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Sch Media Commun & Sociol, Univ Rd, Leicester LE1 7RH, England.
   [Payo, Emilio] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Dept Genet & Genome Biol, Space Pk Leicester,92 Corp Rd, Leicester LE4 5SP, England.
   [Heslop-Harrison, Pat] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Dept Genet & Genome Biol, Univ Rd, Leicester LE1 7RH, England.
   [Burns, Moya] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Sch Biol Sci, Univ Rd, Leicester LE1 7RH, England.
   [Basell, Laura; Egberts, Ella; Stockley, Emma] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Sch Archaeol & Ancient Hist, Univ Rd, Leicester LE1 7RH, England.
   [Desorgher, Molly; Upton, Caroline; Whelan, Mick] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Sch Geog Geol & Environm, Univ Rd, Leicester LE1 7RH, England.
   [Yildiz, Ayse] Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Sch Business, London Rd, Leicester LE2 7RH, England.
C3 University of Leicester; University of Leicester; University of
   Leicester; University of Leicester; University of Leicester; University
   of Leicester; University of Leicester; University of Leicester;
   University of Leicester; University of Leicester
RP Balzter, H (corresponding author), Univ Leicester, Inst Environm Futures, Sch Geog Geol & Environm, Space Pk Leicester,92 Corp Rd, Leicester LE4 5SP, England.; Balzter, H (corresponding author), Univ Leicester, Natl Ctr Earth Observat, Space Pk Leicester,92 Corp Rd, Leicester LE4 5SP, England.
EM hb91@le.ac.uk; mdsm1@leicester.ac.uk; beth_delaney@outlook.com;
   kjt7@le.ac.uk; fdbes1@le.ac.uk; ofoegbu.c@gmail.com; sp237@le.ac.uk;
   bf79@le.ac.uk; sen8@le.ac.uk; epg8@le.ac.uk; phh4@le.ac.uk;
   mlb40@le.ac.uk; l.basell@le.ac.uk; e.egberts@le.ac.uk; evs13@le.ac.uk;
   md512@le.ac.uk; cu5@leicester.ac.uk; mjw72@le.ac.uk; ay111@le.ac.uk
RI Ofoegbu, Chidiebere/Q-8372-2019; Delaney, Beth/KLD-4558-2024; Egberts,
   Ella/KBA-7315-2024; Forchtner, Bernhard/JXN-4054-2024; Heslop-Harrison,
   J.S. (Pat)/C-9207-2009
OI Tansey, Kevin/0000-0002-9116-8081; Ofoegbu,
   Chidiebere/0000-0002-8920-9411; Stockley, Emma
   Victoria/0009-0009-2089-4519; Heslop-Harrison, J.S.
   (Pat)/0000-0002-3105-2167
FU Natural Environment Research Council; NERC [NE/R016518/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX The Environmental Futures Cafe was supported by the University of
   Leicester. H.B. was supported by the Natural Environment Research
   Council through the National Centre for Earth Observation. The APC was
   funded by UK Research and Innovation.
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   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
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UT WOS:001045737700001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

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   Muhumuza, Edgar
   Kobusinge, Judith
   Magambo, Betty
   Kagezi, Godfrey Hubby
   Danquah, Eric Yirenkyi
   Kizito, Elizabeth Balyejusa
   Kyalo, Gerald
   Iyamulemye, Emmanuel
   Arinaitwe, Geofrey
TI Viability of Deficit Irrigation Pre-Exposure in Adapting Robusta Coffee
   to Drought Stress
SO AGRONOMY-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; Coffea canephora; drought tolerance; drought
   stress recovery; heat stress adaptation; priming by deficit watering
ID GENETIC DIVERSITY; CANEPHORA PIERRE
AB Coffea canephora has high but inadequately exploited genetic diversity. This diversity, if well exploited, can sustain coffee productivity amidst climate change effects. Drought and heat stress are major global threats to coffee productivity, quality, and tradable volumes. It is not well understood if there is a selectable variation for drought stress tolerance in Robusta coffee half-sibs as a result of watering deficit pre-exposure at the germination stage. Half-sib seeds from selected commercial clones (KR5, KR6, KR7) and a pipeline clone X1 were primed with deficit watering at two growth stages followed by recovery and later evaluated for tolerance to watering deficit stress in three different temperature environments by estimation of plant growth and wilt parameters. Overall, the KR7 family performed the best in terms of the number of individuals excelling for tolerance to deficit watering. In order of decreasing tolerance, the 10 most promising individuals for drought and heat tolerance were identified as: 14.KR7.2, 25.X1.1, 35.KR5.5, 36.KR5.6, 41.KR7.5, 46.KR6.4, 47.KR6.5, 291.X1.3, 318.X1.3, and 15.KR7.3. This is the first prospect into the potential of C. canephora half-sibs' diversity as an unbound source of genetic variation for abiotic stress tolerance breeding.
C1 [Sseremba, Godfrey; Musoli, Pascal; Bitalo, Daphne Nyachaki; Atwijukire, Evans; Mulindwa, Joseph; Aryatwijuka, Naome; Muhumuza, Edgar; Kobusinge, Judith; Magambo, Betty; Kagezi, Godfrey Hubby; Arinaitwe, Geofrey] Natl Agr Res Org, Coffee Res Inst 1Nat, POB 185, Mukono, Uganda.
   [Sseremba, Godfrey; Tongoona, Pangirayi Bernard; Eleblu, John Saviour Yaw; Melomey, Leander Dede; Danquah, Eric Yirenkyi] Univ Ghana Legon, West Africa Ctr Crop Improvement, PMB LG30, Accra, Ghana.
   [Aryatwijuka, Naome; Kizito, Elizabeth Balyejusa] Uganda Christian Univ, Fac Agr Sci, Dept Agr, POB 4, Mukono, Uganda.
   [Kyalo, Gerald; Iyamulemye, Emmanuel] Uganda Coffee Dev Author, POB 7267, Kampala, Uganda.
RP Sseremba, G (corresponding author), Natl Agr Res Org, Coffee Res Inst 1Nat, POB 185, Mukono, Uganda.; Sseremba, G (corresponding author), Univ Ghana Legon, West Africa Ctr Crop Improvement, PMB LG30, Accra, Ghana.
EM gsseremba16@gmail.com
RI Sseremba, Godfrey/KYR-6470-2024; Tongoona, Pangirayi/GSJ-0016-2022;
   Eleblu, John/AAI-9438-2020; Bitalo, Daphne/Q-4350-2018
OI Danquah, Eric/0000-0002-7870-0432; Bitalo, Daphne/0000-0002-3396-5920;
   Sseremba, Godfrey/0000-0001-9625-0570; Eleblu, John/0000-0002-4011-1704
FU TWAS/UNESCO; DAAD under the Postdoctoral Fellowships in Sub-Saharan
   Africa at DAAD [91817875]; Sida [20-354 RG/BIO/AF/AC_G-FR3240314179];
   Uganda Coffee Development Authority (UCDA)
FX This research was funded by TWAS/UNESCO and Sida grant number 20-354
   RG/BIO/AF/AC_G-FR3240314179 for research equipment, DAAD under the
   Postdoctoral Fellowships in Sub-Saharan Africa at DAAD supported Centres
   grant number 91817875 and Uganda Coffee Development Authority (UCDA).
   The APC was funded by UCDA.
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NR 52
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 10
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4395
J9 AGRONOMY-BASEL
JI Agronomy-Basel
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 13
IS 3
AR 674
DI 10.3390/agronomy13030674
PG 14
WC Agronomy; Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Plant Sciences
GA A7VK4
UT WOS:000957156800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dieperink, C
   Koop, SHA
   Witjes, M
   Van Leeuwen, K
   Driessen, PPJ
AF Dieperink, Carel
   Koop, Stef H. A.
   Witjes, Mado
   Van Leeuwen, Kees
   Driessen, Peter P. J.
TI City-to-city learning to enhance urban water management: The
   contribution of the City Blueprint Approach
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE City -to -city learning; Water governance; City Blueprint; Governance
   capacity; Social learning; Twinning; City networks
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; POLICY TRANSFER; CITIES; GOVERNANCE; WASTE;
   PARTNERSHIPS; CHALLENGES; STRATEGIES; PROTECTION; RESOURCES
AB Cities face several water challenges which ask for more pro-active management approaches. One option that cities have is to start networking and build learning alliances with other cities. Forming meaningful alliances however asks for clear and easily accessible city-matching methodologies which are based on a standardised assessment approach and the presence of structured and large databases. The City Blueprint Approach is an example of such a methodology. Aim of this paper is to demonstrate the potential of this approach as a substantive methodology for enhancing learning on urban water management. This is done by illustrating the use of the approach in four cities, which were studied in the H2020 project POWER (Political and sOcial awareness on Water EnviRonmental challenges) and by comparing the results found with good practices present in the City Blueprint database. These good practices however cannot simply be copy-pasted from one city to another. We therefore outline in what way more in-depth city-to-city (C2C) learning results can be achieved and be tailored to best-fit particular urban areas. The paper concludes with some suggestions for enhancing the potential for C2C learning in urban water management networks.
C1 [Dieperink, Carel; Koop, Stef H. A.; Witjes, Mado; Van Leeuwen, Kees] Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Princetonlaan 8a, NL-3584 CB Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Koop, Stef H. A.; Van Leeuwen, Kees; Driessen, Peter P. J.] KWR Water Res Inst, Groningenhaven 7, NL-3433 PE Nieuwegein, Netherlands.
   [Witjes, Mado] Archimedeslaan 6, NL-3584 BA Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Dieperink, Carel] Netherlands Inst Ecol NIOO, Droevendaalsesteeg 10, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Utrecht University; Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts & Sciences;
   Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW)
RP Dieperink, C (corresponding author), Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Princetonlaan 8a, NL-3584 CB Utrecht, Netherlands.
EM c.dieperink@uu.nl
RI Driessen, Peter/M-6751-2013; Dieperink, Carel/M-4458-2013
FU POWER project; European Commission [687809]; H2020 - Industrial
   Leadership [687809] Funding Source: H2020 - Industrial Leadership
FX This research was partially funded by the POWER project; the European
   Commission is acknowledged for funding POWER in H2020-Water under Grant
   Agreement No. 687809.
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NR 105
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 12
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD APR
PY 2023
VL 135
AR 104216
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2023.104216
EA FEB 2023
PG 11
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA C7TH4
UT WOS:000963893900001
OA hybrid, Green Submitted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Junqueira, JR
   Serrao-Neumann, S
   White, I
AF Junqueira, Juliana Reu
   Serrao-Neumann, Silvia
   White, Iain
TI Developing and testing a cost-effectiveness analysis to prioritize green
   infrastructure alternatives for climate change adaptation
SO WATER AND ENVIRONMENT JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE decision-making; flooding; land use planning; low-impact development
   (LID); nature-based solutions; stormwater management
ID URBAN WATER MANAGEMENT; LOW IMPACT DEVELOPMENT; BENEFIT-ANALYSIS;
   PERFORMANCE; DESIGN
AB Green infrastructure has been increasingly identified as an option to help manage climate change impacts in urban areas, although its implementation is still not widely promoted in urban planning. This is because of the lack of detailed analysis for decision-makers regarding construction and maintenance costs for different types and how effective various measures are at managing precipitation at a catchment scale. This paper contributes to fill this gap in knowledge by developing a green infrastructure cost-effectiveness ranking index (GICRI) able to evaluate the stormwater runoff volume reduction of multiple green infrastructure alternatives under different climate change scenarios, over differing spatial configurations and combining this performance data with their construction and maintenance costs. After applying this model over two case study areas, this paper provides three main insights. First, climate change projections have a significant impact on green infrastructure cost-effectiveness. Second, as green infrastructure cost-effectiveness is influenced by the spatial scale, there are different challenges for larger cities and smaller regional towns. Building on this, the paper argues that GICRI can be a simple and fast heuristic to increase the use of green infrastructure by informing decision-makers regarding how and where to prioritize investment or where greater modelling is needed.
C1 [Junqueira, Juliana Reu; Serrao-Neumann, Silvia; White, Iain] Univ Waikato, Sch Social Sci, Environm Planning Programme, Hamilton, New Zealand.
   [Serrao-Neumann, Silvia] Griffith Univ, Cities Res Inst, Brisbane, Australia.
   [Junqueira, Juliana Reu] Univ Waikato, Sch Social Sci, Environm Planning Programme, Knighton Rd 1, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.
C3 University of Waikato; Griffith University; University of Waikato
RP Junqueira, JR (corresponding author), Univ Waikato, Sch Social Sci, Environm Planning Programme, Knighton Rd 1, Private Bag 3105, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.
EM jj152@students.waikato.ac.nz
RI Serrao-Neumann, Silvia/K-2470-2012; White, Iain/N-8461-2014
OI Reu Junqueira, Juliana/0000-0002-2218-4862
FU University of Waikato
FX University of Waikato
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NR 47
TC 5
Z9 6
U1 9
U2 28
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1747-6585
EI 1747-6593
J9 WATER ENVIRON J
JI Water Environ. J.
PD MAY
PY 2023
VL 37
IS 2
BP 242
EP 255
DI 10.1111/wej.12832
EA NOV 2022
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Limnology; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology; Water
   Resources
GA AT1M4
UT WOS:000892026100001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mallen, E
   Joseph, HA
   McLaughlin, M
   English, DQ
   Olmedo, C
   Roach, M
   Tirdea, C
   Vargo, J
   Wolff, M
   York, E
AF Mallen, Evan
   Joseph, Heather A.
   McLaughlin, Megan
   English, Dorette Quintana
   Olmedo, Carmen
   Roach, Matt
   Tirdea, Carmen
   Vargo, Jason
   Wolff, Matt
   York, Emily
TI Overcoming Barriers to Successful Climate and Health Adaptation
   Practice: Notes from the Field
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptive capacity; climate change adaptation; resilience; evaluation
ID PUBLIC-HEALTH; RESILIENCE; MANAGEMENT; CALIFORNIA; FRAMEWORK; EXPOSURE;
   IMPACTS
AB State and local public health agencies are at the forefront of planning and responding to the health challenges of climate hazards but face substantial barriers to effective climate and health adaptation amidst concurrent environmental and public health crises. To ensure successful adaptation, it is necessary to understand and overcome these barriers. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Climate-Ready States and Cities Initiative (CRSCI) provides funding to state and local health departments to anticipate and respond to health impacts from climate change using the Building Resilience Against Climate Effects (BRACE) framework. This paper explores the barriers to and enablers of successful adaptation projects among BRACE West CRSCI grantees, including Arizona, California, Oregon, and the city and county of San Francisco. The barriers included competing demands such as the COVID-19 pandemic, dependence on partners with similar challenges, staff and leadership turnover, uncertain and complex impacts on at-risk populations, and inadequate resources. The enablers included effective partnerships, leadership support, dedicated and skilled internal staff, and policy windows enabling institutional change and reprioritization. These findings highlight effective strategies in the field that state and local health departments may use to anticipate potential barriers and establish their work in an environment conducive to successful adaptation.
C1 [Mallen, Evan; Joseph, Heather A.; McLaughlin, Megan] US Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Climate & Hlth Program, Atlanta, GA 30333 USA.
   [English, Dorette Quintana; Vargo, Jason] Calif Dept Publ Hlth, Climate Change & Hlth Equ Sect, Off Hlth Equ, Sacramento, CA 95814 USA.
   [Olmedo, Carmen; Wolff, Matt] San Francisco Dept Publ Hlth, Populat Hlth Div, San Francisco, CA 94102 USA.
   [Roach, Matt; Tirdea, Carmen] Arizona Dept Hlth Serv, Off Environm Hlth, Climate & Hlth Program, Phoenix, AZ 85007 USA.
   [York, Emily] Oregon Hlth Author, Publ Hlth Div, Oregon Climate & Hlth Program, Portland, OR 97232 USA.
C3 Centers for Disease Control & Prevention - USA; California Department of
   Public Health; San Francisco Department of Public Health; Arizona
   Department of Health Services
RP Mallen, E (corresponding author), US Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Climate & Hlth Program, Atlanta, GA 30333 USA.
EM qxd5@cdc.gov; hbj7@cdc.gov; qxd4@cdc.gov; dqe1@att.net;
   carmen.olmedo@sfdph.org; matthew.roach@azdhs.gov;
   carmen.tirdea@azdhs.gov; jason.vargo@sf.frb.org; matt.wolff@sfdph.org;
   emily.a.york@dhsoha.state.or.us
RI McLaughlin, Maura/AFM-9313-2022
OI Mallen, Evan/0000-0001-6151-752X; Joseph, Heather/0000-0003-0470-6759;
   Vargo, Jason/0000-0002-4785-6936
FU Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Climate-Ready States and
   Cities Initiative grant [CDC Ue1 EH001045]
FX The authors of this paper were funded by the Centers for Disease Control
   and Prevention (CDC Ue1 EH001045) Climate-Ready States and Cities
   Initiative grant to implement the Building Resilience Against Climate
   Effects (BRACE) framework.
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NR 69
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 3
U2 9
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 19
IS 12
AR 7169
DI 10.3390/ijerph19127169
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA 2K6CP
UT WOS:000816421700001
PM 35742418
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Robayo-Avendano, A
   Prato-Garcia, D
AF Robayo-Avendano, Angelica
   Prato-Garcia, Dorian
TI A simplified strategy based on the house of quality to prioritize
   farming practices under variable weather conditions
SO QUALITY MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE agri-food sustainability; agroecology; farming practices; house of
   quality; quality management
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS; AGRICULTURAL
   INTENSIFICATION; CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE; CROP YIELD; FUNCTION
   DEPLOYMENT; DECISION-MAKING; IMPACTS; MANAGEMENT; SOIL
AB This work describes for the first time a strategy based on the house of quality analysis (HOQ) to select a farming practice adaptable to variable weather conditions (VWC). Five basic requirements: water, soil, fertilizers, insecticides, and herbicides, together with six agricultural practices: organic farming (OF), agroecology (AE), conservation agriculture (CA), genetically-modified varieties (GMV), intensified agriculture (IA), and climate smart agriculture (CSA) were correlated, assessed, and prioritized. HOQ concluded that water and soil are essential for the development of a crop, whereas the need of agrochemicals was less noticeable because they could be substituted by the use of sustainable practices. OF and AE resulted more convenient because they use sustainable methods to manage a crop. The efficacy of CA and GMV to face VWC was limited by factors like the weather conditions of the site, the type of crop, and costs. IA and CSA were satisfactory when financing for the development is available. The synergy observed among OF, AE, and CA would ease transition and/or their simultaneous adoption; it would improve sustainability, productivity, and profitability for the farmer as long as the needs of the region, management of resources, and interested parties are taken into account.
C1 [Robayo-Avendano, Angelica] Univ Santiago Cali, Fac Ingn, Campus Pampalinda, Cali, Valle Del Cauca, Colombia.
   [Prato-Garcia, Dorian] Univ Nacl Colombia, Fac Ingn & Adm, Carrera 32 12-00 Chapinero,Via Candelaria Palmira, Palmira, Valle Del Cauca, Colombia.
C3 Universidad Santiago de Cali; Universidad Nacional de Colombia
RP Prato-Garcia, D (corresponding author), Univ Nacl Colombia, Fac Ingn & Adm, Carrera 32 12-00 Chapinero,Via Candelaria Palmira, Palmira, Valle Del Cauca, Colombia.
EM dpratog@unal.edu.co
FU Universidad Santiago de Cali [830-621119-1025, 10-2019]
FX Authors thank the Universidad Santiago de Cali for the support provided
   to Project No. 830-621119-1025 through the 10-2019 call for research
   proposal within the program Strengthening of Research in Industrial
   Engineering.
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NR 85
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1068-6967
EI 2575-6222
J9 QUAL MANAG J
JI Qual. Manag. J.
PD JAN 2
PY 2022
VL 29
IS 1
BP 34
EP 50
DI 10.1080/10686967.2021.2003728
PG 17
WC Management
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA C8Z1O
UT WOS:001292183100004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Allegretti, G
AF Allegretti, Giovanni
TI Common Patterns in Coping with Under-Representation in Participatory
   Processes: Evidence from a Mutual Learning Space for Portuguese Local
   Authorities (LAs)
SO INNOVATION-THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE participatory processes; inclusiveness; community of practices; Portugal
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; DIGITAL DIVIDE; COMMUNITY; INCLUSION
AB Over the past decade, Portugal became one of the countries most committed to involving citizens in public decision-making, using 'open door' approaches based on participants' self-selection. To what extent are such practices concerned with inclusiveness? The article is built on the first stage of a two-fold collaborative research to map strategies shaped by Portuguese municipalities for coping with underrepresented actors in participatory processes. The exploratory analysis - funded by the Network of Participatory Municipalities of Portugal (RAP) - reveals common patterns: (1) pursuing inclusion of underrepresented actors is not a policy for fostering a high diversification of actors in spaces of social dialogue, but just a tool for caring of marginalised groups; (2) 'co-design' of inclusionary policies with the targeted social actors is not a common method; (3) there is limited coordination between different policy sectors of each local authority; (4) the majority of 58 participation web-portals are imagined as mere instrumental spaces for organising their democratic innovations, but under-estimate their potential as 'mirrors' of the community and of the different underrepresented groups targeted. The dialogue opened among RAP members on the two surveys reveals a potential for imagining and co-designing shared solutions through the next stages of the collaborative research.
C1 [Allegretti, Giovanni] Univ Coimbra, Ctr Social Studies, Coimbra, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Coimbra
RP Allegretti, G (corresponding author), Univ Coimbra, Ctr Social Studies, Coimbra, Portugal.
EM giovanni.allegretti@ces.uc.pt
OI Allegretti, Giovanni/0000-0001-6234-5168
FU COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) [CA17135]
FX This article is based upon work from COST Action `Constitution-making
   and deliberative democracy' (CA17135), supported by COST (European
   Cooperation in Science and Technology).
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NR 148
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 7
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1351-1610
EI 1469-8412
J9 INNOVATION-ABINGDON
JI Innovation-Eur. J. Soc. Sci. Res.
PD DEC 10
PY 2021
VL 34
IS 5
SI SI
BP 729
EP 765
DI 10.1080/13511610.2021.1997573
EA DEC 2021
PG 37
WC Sociology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Sociology
GA YN8QA
UT WOS:000743449000001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Amundsen, H
   Dannevig, H
AF Amundsen, Helene
   Dannevig, Halvor
TI Looking back and looking forward-adapting to extreme weather events in
   municipalities in western Norway
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Extreme weather events; Western Norway; Municipality;
   Barriers
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; OVERCOMING BARRIERS; KNOWLEDGE; FRAMEWORK;
   AGENDA; LEVEL
AB In October 2014, an extreme precipitation event hit western Norway, which caused flooding, landslides and severe damage to infrastructure and houses. Climate model projections for western Norway show that heavy precipitation events, such as the one in 2014, will increase in frequency and intensity in the future. This paper discusses barriers to proactive adaptation to high-impact weather events in two municipalities in western Norway. Interviews were conducted with representatives from municipalities in this region to understand the adaptation measures the municipalities had implemented after this event and the barriers to proactive adaptation to extreme events in the future. We found that the key barriers to proactive adaptation are lack of resources, lack of knowledge and lack of willingness to adapt. The magnitude of the event meant that only a few of the informants expected the municipality to be hit by such an extreme event again in the near future, and as such, they did not see a need for major adaptation measures. Further, some assumed that the municipality was sufficiently protected because their areas either were not directly affected or were secured after the event. Finally, some interviewees assumed that it is not possible to adapt to such high-magnitude events.
C1 [Amundsen, Helene] CICERO Ctr Int Climate Res, Gaustadalleen 21, N-0349 Oslo, Norway.
   [Dannevig, Halvor] Western Norway Res Inst, Norwegian Res Ctr Sustainable Climate Change Adap, POB 183, Sogndal, Norway.
   [Dannevig, Halvor] POB 163, N-6851 Sogndal, Norway.
RP Dannevig, H (corresponding author), Western Norway Res Inst, Norwegian Res Ctr Sustainable Climate Change Adap, POB 183, Sogndal, Norway.; Dannevig, H (corresponding author), POB 163, N-6851 Sogndal, Norway.
EM heleamu@gmail.com; hda@vestforsk.no
RI Amundsen, Helene/G-4966-2019; Dannevig, Halvor/P-3477-2019
FU Research Council of Norway [255037]
FX This paper is part of a research project, Translating Weather Extremes
   into the Future-A Case for Norway (TWEX), financed by the Research
   Council of Norway (project no. 255037). We would like to thank all
   informants for their time. We would also like to thank Jana Sillmann for
   comments on earlier versions of this paper, as well as Eilif Ursin Reed
   for help with the figure, and two anonymous reviewers for helpful
   comments.
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NR 56
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 13
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 21
IS 4
AR 108
DI 10.1007/s10113-021-01834-7
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA WL1YB
UT WOS:000710208300002
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Marcus, H
   Hanna, L
AF Marcus, Hannah
   Hanna, Liz
TI Barriers to Climate Disaster risk Management for Public Health: Lessons
   from a Pilot Survey of National Public Health Representatives
SO DISASTER MEDICINE AND PUBLIC HEALTH PREPAREDNESS
LA English
DT Article
DE emergency preparedness; climate change; public health
AB Objectives: This study sought to examine current national disaster risk management capacities, and identify governance barriers to strengthening national preparedness for responding to public health emergencies, associated with the anticipated climate-driven intensification of natural disaster cycles. Methods: A mixed-methods online survey, assessing broader governance constraints to climate change adaptation (CCA) for public health, was distributed to representatives of national public health associations, and societies of 82 member countries under the World Federation of Public Health Associations. Specific questions relevant to disaster risk management capacities and barriers were analyzed as part of a narrowed focus on the CCA subdomain of emergency preparedness. Results: Existence of some technology, infrastructure, and/ or human resources, necessary to develop early warning and other surveillance systems for climate-related health risks was reported by 9 out of 11 responding countries. However, 7 reported persistent limitations and/ or regional discrepancies. Most significant identified barriers to strengthening emergency preparedness at the national level included governance coordination challenges, and, in the case of many developing countries, technical, medical, and human resource shortages. Conclusions: The development of new frameworks for intersectoral governance and large-scale resource mobilization will prove crucial to ongoing efforts to strengthen national climate-health resiliency and prepare for disaster-associated health threats.
C1 [Marcus, Hannah] Univ Alberta, Sch Publ Hlth, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
   [Marcus, Hannah; Hanna, Liz] World Federat Publ Hlth Assoc, Environm Hlth Working Grp, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Hanna, Liz] Australian Natl Univ, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
C3 University of Alberta; Australian National University
RP Hanna, L (corresponding author), World Federat Publ Hlth Assoc, Environm Hlth Working Grp, Geneva, Switzerland.; Hanna, L (corresponding author), Australian Natl Univ, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
EM liz.hanna@anu.edu.au
CR [Anonymous], 2017, PREHOSPITAL DISASTER, V32, P351, DOI 10.1017/S1049023X17006823
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   World Federation of Public Health Associations, CLIMATE CHANGE HLTH
NR 10
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 4
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 1935-7893
EI 1938-744X
J9 DISASTER MED PUBLIC
JI Dis. Med. Public Health Prep.
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 16
IS 4
BP 1351
EP 1354
AR PII S1935789321001622
DI 10.1017/dmp.2021.162
EA AUG 2021
PG 4
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA 6N1ZK
UT WOS:000757099800001
PM 34407908
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Baccar, M
   Bergez, JE
   Couture, S
   Sekhar, M
   Ruiz, L
   Leenhardt, D
AF Baccar, Mariem
   Bergez, Jacques-Eric
   Couture, Stephane
   Sekhar, Muddu
   Ruiz, Laurent
   Leenhardt, Delphine
TI Building Climate Change Adaptation Scenarios with Stakeholders for Water
   Management: A Hybrid Approach Adapted to the South Indian Water Crisis
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE participatory approach; farming system sustainability; natural resource
   management; management policy; groundwater overexploitation; tropics
ID PARTICIPATORY APPROACH; FARM PONDS; VULNERABILITY; EFFICIENCY; DYNAMICS;
   RESOURCE; INSIGHTS; POLICY
AB Climate change threatens the sustainability of agriculture and natural resources. Adaptive solutions must be designed locally with stakeholders. We developed the Approach for Building Adaptation Scenarios with Stakeholders (ABASS), which aims to identify adaptation policies and corresponding scenarios of natural resource management in the context of climate change. Its originality is the combination of different existing participatory methods, organized in three phases. In step 1, experts identify local environmental problems on a map and build the assumption tree of local climate change effects. In step 2, experts identify stakeholders. Step 3 leads to the construction of adaptation scenarios with stakeholders in two phases. First, in a participatory workshop gathering numerous stakeholders, the assumption tree is presented to help stakeholders identify potential policies that address the effects of climate change. Then, using the map produced in step 1, each group of stakeholders separately translates each potential policy into a detailed scenario. We applied ABASS to the context of groundwater overexploitation in South India. Two policies at the farm level emerged as consensual: (i) ponds to harvest runoff water and (ii) drip irrigation to conserve water; but their implementation highlights the differences of opinion among stakeholders.
C1 [Baccar, Mariem; Bergez, Jacques-Eric; Leenhardt, Delphine] Univ Toulouse, INRAE, AGIR, F-31326 Castanet Tolosan, France.
   [Couture, Stephane] INRA, MIAT, F-31326 Castanet Tolosan, France.
   [Sekhar, Muddu; Ruiz, Laurent] Indian Inst Sci, Indo French Cell Water Sci, Bangalore 560012, Karnataka, India.
   [Ruiz, Laurent] INRAE, Inst Agro, SAS, F-35000 Rennes, France.
   [Ruiz, Laurent] UPS, CNRS, IRD, GET, F-31400 Toulouse, France.
C3 Universite de Toulouse; INRAE; INRAE; Indian Institute of Science (IISC)
   - Bangalore; INRAE; Institut Agro; Centre National de la Recherche
   Scientifique (CNRS); Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD);
   Universite de Toulouse; Universite Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier
RP Baccar, M (corresponding author), Univ Toulouse, INRAE, AGIR, F-31326 Castanet Tolosan, France.
EM mariem.baccar@inrae.fr; jacques-eric.bergez@inrae.fr;
   stephane.couture@inrae.fr; muddu@iisc.ac.in; laurent.ruiz@inrae.fr;
   delphine.burger-leenhardt@inrae.fr
RI IFCWS, LMI/C-5187-2013; Muddu, Sekhar/E-6215-2010
OI Sekhar, Muddu/0000-0001-9326-1813; Pandey, Alok
   Kumar/0000-0001-5604-3243
FU project ATCHA [ANR-16-CE03-0006]
FX The study was funded by the project ATCHA ANR-16-CE03-0006.
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NR 58
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 0
U2 13
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD AUG
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 15
AR 8459
DI 10.3390/su13158459
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TW2FT
UT WOS:000682223600001
OA gold, Green Published, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Valdivieso, P
   Neudorfer, P
   Andersson, KP
AF Valdivieso, Patricio
   Neudorfer, Pablo
   Andersson, Krister P.
TI Causes and Consequences of Local Government Efforts to Reduce Risk and
   Adapt to Extreme Weather Events: Municipal Organizational Robustness
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE local governments; critical infrastructure investment; capacities;
   political leadership attributes; municipal organizational robustness;
   governance; Chile
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE; COLLECTIVE ACTION;
   CHANGE POLICY; GOVERNANCE; CHILE; MANAGEMENT; IMPACTS; LEVEL;
   BUREAUCRATS
AB This research article investigates the causes and consequences of municipal institutional arrangements for the provision of resilient critical infrastructure in municipalities. The study explains how the municipal organizational robustness and external institutional dynamics moderate the relation between capacities, leadership, and local government investment decisions. We examine hypotheses on moderating effects with regression methods, using data from 345 Chilean municipalities over a nine-year period, and analyzing the evidence with support of qualitative data. Our results reveal that municipal organizational robustness-operational rules, planning, managerial flexibility and integration, and accountability-is the most quantitatively outstanding moderating factor. The evidence leads us to deduce that efforts to support local governments in the emerging policy domain of resilient critical infrastructure require special attention to the robustness of municipal institutional arrangements. The results are valid for countries where the local governments have responsibilities to fulfill and their decisions have consequences for the adaptation. Since one of the objectives of the Special Issue "Bringing Governance Back Home-Lessons for Local Government Regarding Rapid Climate Action" is to explore how action is enabled or constrained by institutional relations in which the actors are embedded, this study contributes to achieving the goal.
C1 [Valdivieso, Patricio; Neudorfer, Pablo] Univ Austral Chile UACh, Fac Econ & Adm Sci, Valdivia 5090000, Chile.
   [Andersson, Krister P.] Univ Colorado, Inst Behav Sci, Boulder, CO 80303 USA.
C3 Universidad Austral de Chile; University of Colorado System; University
   of Colorado Boulder
RP Valdivieso, P (corresponding author), Univ Austral Chile UACh, Fac Econ & Adm Sci, Valdivia 5090000, Chile.
EM pvaldivf@gmail.com; pablo.neudorfer@uach.cl; krister@colorado.edu
RI andersson, krister/R-7554-2019; Valdivieso, Patricio/F-1865-2016
OI Andersson, Krister/0000-0002-9320-8155; Neudorfer,
   Pablo/0000-0003-2218-3760; Valdivieso, Patricio/0000-0001-9950-6041
FU National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development (FONDECYT),
   National Research Agency of Chile [1181282]; National Science Foundation
   [DEB-1114984, SMA-328688, SES-1757136, DGE-1650115]; Belmont Forum
   [T2S-789]
FX This research was funded by the National Fund for Scientific and
   Technological Development (FONDECYT), National Research Agency of Chile,
   grant number 1181282; National Science Foundation, grant numbers
   DEB-1114984, SMA-328688, SES-1757136, and DGE-1650115; the Belmont
   Forum, grant number T2S-789.
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NR 206
TC 3
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 16
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 14
AR 7980
DI 10.3390/su13147980
PG 43
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TO7YZ
UT WOS:000677123200001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maquiling, KSM
   De La Sala, S
   Rabé, P
AF Maquiling, Karl Sam M.
   De La Sala, Safira
   Rabe, Paul
TI Urban resilience in the aftermath of tropical storm Washi in the
   Philippines: The role of autonomous household responses
SO ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING B-URBAN ANALYTICS AND CITY SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban governance; disaster management; climate change adaptation;
   survivor and community led response; Sendong
AB Existing knowledge regarding the role of household adaptation in pursuing urban resilience, especially in developing countries, is limited. Upon this rationale, the study provides in-depth empirical evidence on how resilience is framed, pursued, and realized from the perspective of low-income households in the Philippines. The study adopted a mixed-methods strategy to expound on the dynamics that affect resilience-building measures at the household level. The quantitative tools were chosen to provide empirical evidence on how residents in selected areas understand resilience and the actions undertaken to realize desired outcomes. The findings were further examined through analysis of data gathered from key informant interviews, relevant local policies, and regulations. Key findings show that autonomous household responses are intended, albeit intuitively, as resilience-building measures from the need to address risks immediately. These measures are undertaken independently and can provide direct benefits to the household. However, they may become counterproductive when analyzed from the point of view of collective resilience. The key to addressing this is institutional interventions that allow flexible modes of resilience that could enable households to pursue better resilience-building measures. Autonomous household responses, transitioning to a more collective level approach, challenge the distribution of decision-making processes and could result in framing appropriate urban resilience policies, strategies, and measures.
C1 [Maquiling, Karl Sam M.] Mindanao Dev Author, Old Airport Bldg,KM 9 Davao, Davao Del Sur 8000, Philippines.
   [De La Sala, Safira; Rabe, Paul] Erasmus Univ, Rotterdam Inst Housing & Urban Dev Studies, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
C3 Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl Erasmus MC; Erasmus University
   Rotterdam
RP Maquiling, KSM (corresponding author), Mindanao Dev Author, Old Airport Bldg,KM 9 Davao, Davao Del Sur 8000, Philippines.
EM karlmaqs@gmail.com
RI Maquiling, Karl/AAN-1639-2021; De La Sala, Safira/AAH-2328-2021
OI Maquiling, Karl Sam/0000-0002-8564-9700; De La Sala,
   Safira/0000-0002-8314-6165
FU Orange Knowledge Programme
FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for
   the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This
   article is based on the first author's master's thesis. He received a
   scholarship from the Orange Knowledge Programme. The author received no
   additional financial support for the research or authorship of this
   article.
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NR 23
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 36
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 2399-8083
EI 2399-8091
J9 ENVIRON PLAN B-URBAN
JI Env. Plan. B-Urban Anal. CIty Sci.
PD JUN
PY 2021
VL 48
IS 5
BP 1025
EP 1041
AR 2399808321998693
DI 10.1177/2399808321998693
EA MAR 2021
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies; Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban
   Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Public Administration;
   Urban Studies
GA SS7QN
UT WOS:000628950800001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ramalho, J
AF Ramalho, Jordana
TI Worlding aspirations and resilient futures: Framings of risk and
   contemporary city-making in Metro Cebu, the Philippines
SO ASIA PACIFIC VIEWPOINT
LA English
DT Article
DE disaster risk reduction and management; Philippines; resilience; urban
   slums; worlding; urban development
ID GOVERNMENTALITY; BIOPOLITICS
AB In the Philippines, calls for creating 'global', 'sustainable' and 'resilient' cities are placing urban poor communities in increasingly precarious positions. These communities have long been the targets of urban development and 'modernisation' efforts; more recently the erasure of informal settlements from Philippine cities is being bolstered at the behest of climate change adaptation and disaster risk management (DRM) agendas. In Metro Cebu, flood management has been at the heart of DRM and broader urban development discussions, and is serving as justification for the demolition and displacement of informal settler communities in areas classed as 'danger zones'. Using Kusno's (2010) interpretation of the 'exemplary centre' as a point of departure, this paper interrogates the relationship between DRM, worlding aspirations (Roy and Ong, 2011) and market-oriented urbanisation in Cebu, and considers the socio-spatial implications of these intersecting processes for urban poor communities. Through analysing the contradictions inherent in framings of certain bodies and spaces as being 'of risk' or 'at risk' over others, I argue that the epistemologies of modernity, disaster risk and resilience endorsed and propagated by the state are facilitating processes of displacement and dispossession that serve elite commercial interests under the auspices of disaster resilience and pro-poor development.
C1 [Ramalho, Jordana] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Geog & Environm, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England.
C3 University of London; London School Economics & Political Science
RP Ramalho, J (corresponding author), London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Geog & Environm, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England.
EM j.r.ramalho@lse.ac.uk
RI Ramalho, Jordana/AAP-4315-2021
OI Ramalho, Jordana/0000-0003-4614-968X
FU ESRC Postgraduate Award [ES/J500070/1]; FORGE
FX This paper draws on research conducted for my PhD, funded by an ESRC
   Postgraduate Award (ES/J500070/1) offered by the Department of
   Geography, London School of Economics and Political Science, for a
   thesis provisionally entitled: "Risk, Resilience and Responsibilisation:
   Gendered Participation and Empowerment in Informal Settlements of Metro
   Cebu, the Philippines'. Many thanks to Sylvia Chant, Gareth Jones,
   Austin Zeiderman, Lisa Tilley, Juanita Elias, and Lena Rethel for their
   helpful comments on earlier drafts. I am especially grateful to FORGE,
   Regina Yoma, and the many people in the Philippines whose time and
   support made this study possible.
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Z9 18
U1 1
U2 15
PU WILEY
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PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1360-7456
EI 1467-8373
J9 ASIA PAC VIEWP
JI Asia Pac. Viewp.
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PY 2019
VL 60
IS 1
SI SI
BP 24
EP 36
DI 10.1111/apv.12208
PG 13
WC Area Studies; Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies; Geography
GA HR1HD
UT WOS:000462880500004
OA Green Published, hybrid, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Bekele, F
   Phillips-Mora, W
AF Bekele, Frances
   Phillips-Mora, Wilbert
BE AlKhayri, JM
   Jain, SM
   Johnson, DV
TI Cacao (<i>Theobroma cacao</i> L.) Breeding
SO ADVANCES IN PLANT BREEDING STRATEGIES: INDUSTRIAL AND FOOD CROPS, VOL 6
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Diversity; Genetic gain; Genomics; Genotype x environment interaction;
   Hybrids; Molecular breeding
ID QUANTITATIVE TRAIT LOCI; INTERNATIONAL-COCOA-GENEBANK; WITCHES-BROOM
   DISEASE; MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION; SWOLLEN-SHOOT VIRUS; SINGLE
   NUCLEOTIDE POLYMORPHISM; GENETIC-LINKAGE MAP; BLACK POD DISEASE; BEAN
   QUALITY TRAITS; PHYTOPHTHORA-PALMIVORA
AB The suboptimal productivity in cocoa farmers' fields, particularly those of small-holders who produce over 80% of the global supply, and the demand for cocoa that meets stringent quality and flavor criteria necessitate enhanced breeding methods and outcomes. Progress in cacao breeding has been hindered by a long-generation cycle, limitations in land availability for large-scale breeding trials, and challenging abiotic and biotic stress factors, including several major diseases. Cacao tends to be outbreeding and cocoa production is often reduced by the incompatibility status of planting material and pollination inefficiency. The complex breeding mechanisms in cacao and difficulty in predicting the performance of promising selections as parents also pose challenges to breeders. Reciprocal recurrent selection schemes have been most successful to date. The advent of breeding with genomics and the unravelling of the cacao genome portend unprecedented advancements in cocoa breeding. This chapter explores the past, present and future prospects of cacao breeding, and describes how the use of traditional breeding allied with molecular and genomic approaches can empower cocoa breeders to meet the need for improved planting material with high productivity and yield efficiency, disease resistance, climate change adaptations, nutraceutical value and superior flavor and quality attributes.
C1 [Bekele, Frances] Univ West Indies, Cocoa Res Ctr CRC, St Augustine, Trinidad Tobago.
   [Phillips-Mora, Wilbert] Ctr Agron Trop Invest & Ensenanza Trop Agr Res &, Turrialba, Costa Rica.
C3 University West Indies Mona Jamaica; University West Indies Saint
   Augustine
RP Bekele, F (corresponding author), Univ West Indies, Cocoa Res Ctr CRC, St Augustine, Trinidad Tobago.
EM frances.bekele@sta.uwi.edu; wphillip@catie.ac.cr
RI Bekele, Frances/HNR-9641-2023
OI Bekele, Frances/0000-0002-4345-4358
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NR 423
TC 21
Z9 23
U1 0
U2 8
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
BN 978-3-030-23265-8; 978-3-030-23264-1
PY 2019
BP 409
EP 487
DI 10.1007/978-3-030-23265-8_12
D2 10.1007/978-3-030-23265-8
PG 79
WC Agronomy; Genetics & Heredity
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Genetics & Heredity
GA BP6DJ
UT WOS:000558932100013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kazemi, N
   Sharifzadeh, M
   Ahmadvand, M
AF Kazemi, Neda
   Sharifzadeh, Maryam
   Ahmadvand, Mostafa
TI Protecting Walnut Orchards against Frost: A Test of Extended Theory of
   Planned Behavior
SO WEATHER CLIMATE AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
ID UNDERSTANDING FARMERS INTENTION; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; INFORMATION
   USE; COLD-HARDINESS; CHANGE BELIEFS; MODELS; CONSERVATION; DECISIONS;
   HEALTH; RISK
AB Cold stress is a major environmental constraint that limits nut productivity worldwide. Late spring frost is identified as a yield-reducing factor in Persian walnut production as well. Despite significant improvements in cold and freezing tolerance methods, orchardists have not taken advantage of these recommended protection methods. This study examined determinants of walnut orchardists' frost-protection behavior, using the extended theory of planned behavior (TPB) as a conceptual framework. Based on TPB assumptions, frost-protection behavior is mediated by a series of constructs. The purpose of this research was to examine the role of TPB variables (extended by orchard-system profile) in meeting the necessities of performing active and passive methods of frost protection. A total of 91 orchardists completed a baseline questionnaire that included the TPB constructs. The present investigation was carried out in the major walnut growing site of Sepidan County, western Fars Province, Iran. The results from the hierarchical multiple regression showed that the behavioral attitude, perceived behavioral control (PBC), intention, orchard-system profile, and interaction of orchard-system features and PBC were significant predictors of frost-protection behavior in the prospective sample. Results of the present study provided evidence that the extended TPB is a useful framework for understanding orchardists' frost-protection behavior.
C1 [Kazemi, Neda; Sharifzadeh, Maryam; Ahmadvand, Mostafa] Univ Yasuj, Dept Rural Dev Management, Yasuj, Iran.
C3 Yasouj University
RP Sharifzadeh, M (corresponding author), Univ Yasuj, Dept Rural Dev Management, Yasuj, Iran.
EM m.sharifzadeh@yu.ac.ir
RI Kazemi, Neda/AAA-3455-2020; Ahmadvand, Mostafa/HPD-2984-2023;
   Sharifzadeh, Maryam/HTM-3506-2023
OI Ahmadvand, Mostafa/0000-0001-8852-5861; Sharifzadeh,
   Maryam/0000-0001-6854-3923
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NR 75
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 17
PU AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
PI BOSTON
PA 45 BEACON ST, BOSTON, MA 02108-3693 USA
SN 1948-8327
EI 1948-8335
J9 WEATHER CLIM SOC
JI Weather Clim. Soc.
PD OCT
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 4
BP 709
EP 722
DI 10.1175/WCAS-D-18-0009.1
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA GR8OA
UT WOS:000442982200001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jerneck, A
AF Jerneck, Anne
TI Taking gender seriously in climate change adaptation and sustainability
   science research: views from feminist debates and sub-Saharan
   small-scale agriculture
SO SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Development; Distribution; Empowerment; Environment; Inequality; Poverty
ID WOMENS EMPOWERMENT; RESEARCH AGENDA; FOOD SECURITY; VULNERABILITY;
   ENVIRONMENT; RESILIENCE; POVERTY; JUSTICE; POLICY; CHALLENGES
AB People, places, and production contributing the least to climate change will suffer the most. This calls for adaptation as a key climate change response. But adaptation is surrounded by problems. Finance is uncertain and fragmented, mainstreaming into development is complicated, and technical solutions often overshadow existing social relations and institutions. From a gender perspective, and as a critical research initiative to support the building of sustainability science as an umbrella field, this article raises three pertinent questions on adaptation in the global South: what is its purpose, how can development inform it, and what institutions in terms of rights and responsibilities are core to it? Focusing on sub-Saharan small-scale agriculture, three main points emerge. Regarding the purpose, adaptation should be a transformative pathway out of poverty, ill-health, and food insecurity. Regarding development, adaptation can learn from how development theory, policy, and practice have addressed women, gender, and environment in varied settings and debates. Regarding core institutions, adaptation must address gender regimes that regulate access to, use of, and control over resources, especially those defining land distribution, labour division, and strategic decision-making power. To conclude, I propose gender-informed research questions for further inquiry.
C1 [Jerneck, Anne] Lund Univ, Lund Univ Ctr Sustainabil Studies, Box 170, S-22100 Lund, Sweden.
C3 Lund University
RP Jerneck, A (corresponding author), Lund Univ, Lund Univ Ctr Sustainabil Studies, Box 170, S-22100 Lund, Sweden.
EM anne.jerneck@lucsus.lu.se
OI jerneck, anne/0000-0002-1429-8739
FU Rush for Land in Africa [2012/7689]; Swedish Research Council Formas
   through the Linnaeus grants LUCID, Lund University Centre of Excellence
   for integration of Social and Natural Dimensions of Sustainability
   [259-2008-1718]
FX I am grateful to colleagues in the LUCID consortium who commented on an
   early draft of this article. I also like to thank an anonymous reviewer
   for insightful and constructive comments. The research was funded by the
   Swedish Research Council Formas through the Linnaeus grants LUCID, Lund
   University Centre of Excellence for integration of Social and Natural
   Dimensions of Sustainability (259-2008-1718) and The Rush for Land in
   Africa (2012/7689).
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NR 131
TC 33
Z9 37
U1 0
U2 31
PU SPRINGER JAPAN KK
PI TOKYO
PA SHIROYAMA TRUST TOWER 5F, 4-3-1 TORANOMON, MINATO-KU, TOKYO, 105-6005,
   JAPAN
SN 1862-4065
EI 1862-4057
J9 SUSTAIN SCI
JI Sustain. Sci.
PD MAR
PY 2018
VL 13
IS 2
BP 403
EP 416
DI 10.1007/s11625-017-0464-y
PG 14
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FY4PU
UT WOS:000426807800013
PM 30147786
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Privitera, R
   Palermo, V
   Martinico, F
   Fichera, A
   La Rosa, D
AF Privitera, Riccardo
   Palermo, Valentina
   Martinico, Francesco
   Fichera, Alberto
   La Rosa, Daniele
TI Towards lower carbon cities: urban morphology contribution in climate
   change adaptation strategies
SO EUROPEAN PLANNING STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; energy; carbon sequestration; urban morphology;
   sustainable cities; transformability assessment
ID ENERGY-CONSUMPTION; UNITED-STATES; GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE; AREAS; SYSTEMS;
   TRANSFORMABILITY; SEQUESTRATION; PERFORMANCE; ENVIRONMENT; RESILIENCE
AB Non-urbanized areas (NUAs) play an important role in reducing the effects of climate change by providing both carbon storage and sequestration. Urban areas are responsible for the emission of 60% of global greenhouse gas, 50% of which are produced by buildings. During the past decades, increasing urban growth and sprawl processes produced several urban layouts characterized by different morphological features and a common lack of sustainable energy and environmental solutions. Investigating the relationship between urban morphology, energy demand and carbon emission/sequestration represents a relevant topic for urban planning practices implemented to face urban climate change effects. This study proposes a method for a transformability assessment aimed at investigating the transformation suitability of different urban morphology types. The case study is the metropolitan area of Catania (Italy), characterized by an impressive urban growth since the 1960s. The proposed method identification of limits and options for increasing sustainability of urban areas considering the contribution of both NUAs and built-up areas. This approach allows to identify appropriate planning tools for new layouts of urban fabrics while increasing the objectivity of the decision process. In the framework of climate change mitigation and adaptation, the outcomes of this research may lead to innovative urban planning practices.
C1 [Privitera, Riccardo; Palermo, Valentina; Martinico, Francesco; La Rosa, Daniele] Univ Catania, Dept Civil Engn & Architecture, Via Santa Sofia 64, I-95123 Catania, Italy.
   [Fichera, Alberto] Univ Catania, Dept Ind Engn, Catania, Italy.
C3 University of Catania; University of Catania
RP Privitera, R (corresponding author), Univ Catania, Dept Civil Engn & Architecture, Via Santa Sofia 64, I-95123 Catania, Italy.
EM riccardo.privitera@darc.unict.it
RI Palermo, Valentina/AAW-9279-2020; Fichera, Alberto/E-6528-2014;
   Privitera, Riccardo/IAQ-2136-2023; La Rosa, Daniele/A-8331-2012
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Z9 25
U1 15
U2 110
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0965-4313
EI 1469-5944
J9 EUR PLAN STUD
JI Eur. Plan. Stud.
PY 2018
VL 26
IS 4
BP 812
EP 837
DI 10.1080/09654313.2018.1426735
PG 26
WC Environmental Studies; Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban
   Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Public Administration;
   Urban Studies
GA FW0OE
UT WOS:000424993800010
DA 2025-01-10
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   Hall, Carlton R.
TI Assessing the impacts of sea-level rise and precipitation change on the
   surficial aquifer in the low-lying coastal alluvial plains and barrier
   islands, east-central Florida (USA)
SO HYDROGEOLOGY JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Numerical modeling; Saltwater intrusion; Surficial
   aquifer; USA
ID SEAWATER INTRUSION; SALTWATER INTRUSION; CLIMATE-CHANGE; GROUND-WATER;
   LAND-COVER; OLIGOHALINE MARSH; RECHARGE; SIMULATION; CHALLENGES;
   SALINITY
AB A three-dimensional variable-density groundwater flow and salinity transport model is implemented using the SEAWAT code to quantify the spatial variation of water-table depth and salinity of the surficial aquifer in Merritt Island and Cape Canaveral Island in east-central Florida (USA) under steady-state 2010 hydrologic and hydrogeologic conditions. The developed model is referred to as the 'reference' model and calibrated against field-measured groundwater levels and a map of land use and land cover. Then, five prediction/projection models are developed based on modification of the boundary conditions of the calibrated 'reference' model to quantify climate change impacts under various scenarios of sea-level rise and precipitation change projected to 2050. Model results indicate that west Merritt Island will encounter lowland inundation and saltwater intrusion due to its low elevation and flat topography, while climate change impacts on Cape Canaveral Island and east Merritt Island are not significant. The SEAWAT models developed for this study are useful and effective tools for water resources management, land use planning, and climate-change adaptation decision-making in these and other low-lying coastal alluvial plains and barrier island systems.
C1 [Xiao, Han; Wang, Dingbao; Medeiros, Stephen C.] Univ Cent Florida, Dept Civil Environm & Construct Engn, 12800 Pegasus Dr, Orlando, FL 32816 USA.
   [Hagen, Scott C.] Louisiana State Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Ctr Computat & Technol, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA.
   [Hall, Carlton R.] Integrated Mission Support Serv IMSS LLC, Ecol Program, IMSS 300, Kennedy Space Ctr, FL 32899 USA.
C3 State University System of Florida; University of Central Florida;
   Louisiana State University System; Louisiana State University; National
   Aeronautics & Space Administration (NASA); Kennedy Space Center
RP Wang, DB (corresponding author), Univ Cent Florida, Dept Civil Environm & Construct Engn, 12800 Pegasus Dr, Orlando, FL 32816 USA.
EM Dingbao.Wang@ucf.edu
RI Wang, Dingbao/B-6948-2012
OI Wang, Dingbao/0000-0003-4822-7485; Medeiros, Stephen/0000-0003-0264-5868
FU NASA Kennedy Space Center, Ecological Program; Climate Adaptation
   Science Investigators (CASI) project [IHA-SA-13-006]; Louisiana Sea
   Grant Laborde Chair Endowment
FX This research was funded in part by the NASA Kennedy Space Center,
   Ecological Program, Climate Adaptation Science Investigators (CASI)
   project (Award: IHA-SA-13-006) and the Louisiana Sea Grant Laborde Chair
   Endowment.
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NR 48
TC 20
Z9 25
U1 2
U2 60
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
SN 1431-2174
EI 1435-0157
J9 HYDROGEOL J
JI Hydrogeol. J.
PD NOV
PY 2016
VL 24
IS 7
BP 1791
EP 1806
DI 10.1007/s10040-016-1437-4
PG 16
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Water Resources
GA EA1GO
UT WOS:000386340700012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wang, YP
   Akbari, H
AF Wang, Yupeng
   Akbari, Hashem
TI Analysis of urban heat island phenomenon and mitigation solutions
   evaluation for Montreal
SO SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban heat island; Sky view factor; Simulation; Policy
ID THERMAL ENVIRONMENT; DESIGN; TEMPERATURE; BUILDINGS; COMFORT; CLIMATE;
   AREAS
AB Urban climate change in cold-climate cities of Canada is an important consideration for global climate moderation, energy consumption, citizen safety and wellbeing. Recently, many Canadian cities have started to pay attention to climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies. They need policy-relevant data and analysis in these efforts. The current data mostly focuses on the consideration of greenhouse gas emissions levels rather than providing specific adaptation strategies on the urban scale.
   In this research, we analyze and demonstrate how street vegetation planting, albedo and urban canopy characteristics affect urban climate in a specific Canadian city, Montreal. We use ENVI-met (a three-dimensional computer model which analyzes micro-scale thermal interactions within urban environments) to calculate the sky view factor (SVF) for a 300 m x 300 m section of the city, and simulate the environmental conditions including air temperature (Ta), human weighted mean radiant temperature (MRTh-w), wind speed, and physiologically equivalent temperature (PET) at the community scale. These simulation comparisons demonstrate the effects on each environmental factor for a typical summer day and provide hints for mitigation of the urban heat island (UHI) and new urban development. The effectiveness of each UHI mitigation strategy is evaluated for providing guidelines for policy development. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Wang, Yupeng] Xi An Jiao Tong Univ, Sch Human Settlements & Civil Engn, Xian Shi, Shaanxi Sheng, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Yupeng; Akbari, Hashem] Concordia Univ, Dept Bldg Civil & Environm Engn, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
C3 Xi'an Jiaotong University; Concordia University - Canada
RP Wang, YP (corresponding author), Xi An Jiao Tong Univ, Sch Human Settlements & Civil Engn, Xian Shi, Shaanxi Sheng, Peoples R China.
EM wang-yupeng@outlook.com
RI Wang, Yupeng/LSL-1342-2024
OI Wang, Yupeng/0000-0003-4193-5649
FU Natural Resources and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC); NSERC
FX This research was funded by a Discovery grant from the Natural Resources
   and Engineering Council of Canada (NSERC) and partially funded by an
   NSERC Postdoctoral Fellowships Program. The authors wish to express
   appreciate to Professor Michael Bruse (University of Mainz, Germany) for
   providing the advanced free environmental simulation program (ENVI-met).
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NR 31
TC 99
Z9 99
U1 9
U2 89
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2210-6707
EI 2210-6715
J9 SUSTAIN CITIES SOC
JI Sust. Cities Soc.
PD OCT
PY 2016
VL 26
BP 438
EP 446
DI 10.1016/j.scs.2016.04.015
PG 9
WC Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Energy & Fuels
GA EE1DJ
UT WOS:000389320800035
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Falconer, L
   Sparboe, LO
   Dale, T
   Hjollo, SS
   Stavrakidis-Zachou, O
   Bergh, O
   James, P
   Papandroulakis, N
   Puvanendran, V
   Siikavuopio, SI
   Hansen, OJ
   Ytteborg, E
AF Falconer, Lynne
   Sparboe, Lars Olav
   Dale, Trine
   Hjollo, Solfrid Saetre
   Stavrakidis-Zachou, Orestis
   Bergh, Oivind
   James, Philip
   Papandroulakis, Nikos
   Puvanendran, Velmurugu
   Siikavuopio, Sten Ivar
   Hansen, Oyvind Johannes
   Ytteborg, Elisabeth
TI Diversification of marine aquaculture in Norway under climate change
SO AQUACULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Aquaculture readiness level; ARL (R); Challenging conditions index; CCI;
   Climate action; Species diversification
ID TEMPERATURE; GROWTH; TOLERANCE; SHIFTS; OXYGEN
AB Recently there has been increased interest in species diversification in aquaculture as a strategy to adapt to climate change. Since species diversification is a long-term strategy, climate change and future farming conditions must be considered. The aim of this study was to evaluate how changing temperatures under different IPCC climate scenarios may affect marine aquaculture species diversification in Norway. Since farm conditions vary between locations, this study focused on four geographic areas (South, West, North and Arctic) and three farms within each area. Using a climate model downscaling of three climate scenarios (Shared Socioeconomic Pathways; SSP1-2.6, SSP2-4.5, and SSP5-8.5), daily temperatures from the years 2020-2099 were evaluated at each farm location to identify challenging conditions for 34 species. A Challenging Conditions Index (CCI) was developed based on species thermal tolerances to compare the 34 potential aquaculture species. The results showed differences in the number of challenging days (hot and cold) between areas, and even within areas, highlighting the need to consider site-specific conditions. For warm-water species more commonly farmed in the Mediterranean (e.g. European seabass, gilthead seabream), the calibrated model projections at the investigated Norwegian farm sites suggest that cold temperatures would still be challenging. Differences in the number of challenging days between the climate scenarios become more apparent towards the mid and end of century, though all scenarios show interannual variation rather than a constant change in conditions over time. Hence, any species selected for diversification purposes will have to be able to tolerate a range of temperature conditions, and species with narrower tolerance ranges could be a risk. These findings underline the importance of considering the interannually varying conditions that species will be exposed to rather than focusing solely on long-term averages. Establishing a new large-scale commercial aquaculture species takes a considerable amount of time and resources. Therefore, to support interpretation of the results and further studies on diversification under climate change, this study also introduces Aquaculture Readiness Level (ARL (R)) as a consistent evaluation of the research and development status, progress towards commercialisation and climate action orientated production. As species will have to be able to tolerate a range of temperature conditions over different years, the level of knowledge, resources, and innovation will have to be continually enhanced to improve adaptive capacity.
C1 [Falconer, Lynne] Univ Stirling, Inst Aquaculture, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland.
   [Sparboe, Lars Olav] Akvaplan niva, Hjalmar Johansens Gate 14, N-9007 Tromso, Norway.
   [Dale, Trine] Norwegian Inst Water Res NIVA, Thormohlengate 53 D, N-5006 Bergen, Norway.
   [Hjollo, Solfrid Saetre; Bergh, Oivind] Inst Marine Res, Box 1870 Nordnes, N-5817 Bergen, Norway.
   [Hjollo, Solfrid Saetre] Bjerknes Ctr Climate Res, Bergen, Norway.
   [Stavrakidis-Zachou, Orestis; Papandroulakis, Nikos] HCMR, Inst Marine Biol Biotechnol & Aquaculture, AquaLabs, Iraklion, Greece.
   [James, Philip; Puvanendran, Velmurugu; Siikavuopio, Sten Ivar; Hansen, Oyvind Johannes; Ytteborg, Elisabeth] Nofima, Muninbakken 9-13,Box 6122 Langnes, NO-9291 Tromso, Norway.
C3 University of Stirling; Akvaplan-niva; Norwegian Institute for Water
   Research (NIVA); Institute of Marine Research - Norway; Bjerknes Centre
   for Climate Research; Hellenic Centre for Marine Research; Nofima
RP Falconer, L (corresponding author), Univ Stirling, Inst Aquaculture, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland.
EM lynne.falconer1@stir.ac.uk
RI Puvanendran, Velmurugu/AAN-7205-2020; Ytteborg, Elisabeth/J-1032-2017;
   Papandroulakis, Nikos/A-9992-2013
OI Dale, Trine/0009-0006-6956-6717; Falconer, Lynne/0000-0002-1899-1290
FU UK Research and Innovation Future Leaders Fellowship [MR/V021613/1];
   Norwegian Research Council [194050]; ArcticHub [869580]
FX We thank Joachim Stoss (Sterling White Halibut) , Cartron Point
   Shellfish LTD (New Quay, Burrin, Ireland) , Matt Slater (Alfred Wegener
   Institute, Germany) for their input. We also thank Dr. Robinson Hordoir,
   Institute of Marine Research for performing the downscaled climate
   simulations, and the aquaculture companies who provided temperature
   data. This work was supported by the UK Research and Innovation Future
   Leaders Fellowship (MR/V021613/1) , the Norwegian Research Council (No.
   194050, Insight) , and ArcticHub (European Unions Horizon 2020 research
   and innovation programme under grant agreement No 869580) .
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NR 78
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 5
U2 5
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0044-8486
EI 1873-5622
J9 AQUACULTURE
JI Aquaculture
PD DEC 15
PY 2024
VL 593
AR 741350
DI 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2024.741350
EA JUL 2024
PG 19
WC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA ZH1C7
UT WOS:001274304200001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Arif, M
   Jan, T
   Munir, H
   Rasul, F
   Riaz, M
   Fahad, S
   Adnan, M
   Mian, IA
   Amanullah
AF Arif, Muhammad
   Jan, Talha
   Munir, Hassan
   Rasul, Fahd
   Riaz, Muhammad
   Fahad, Shah
   Adnan, Muhammad
   Mian, Ishaq Ahmad
   Amanullah
BE Venkatramanan, V
   Shah, S
   Prasad, R
TI Climate-Smart Agriculture: Assessment and Adaptation Strategies in
   Changing Climate
SO GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: AGRICULTURE PERSPECTIVES
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Climate change; Climate-smart agriculture; Adaptation; Mitigation; Food
   security
ID WATER-USE EFFICIENCY; AIR CO2 ENRICHMENT; TEMPERATURE STRESS;
   BRASSICA-NAPUS; FOOD SECURITY; SOIL-EROSION; INSECT PESTS; RICE FIELDS;
   NO-TILL; TOLERANCE
AB Climate change is the most critical threat to food security amid increasing crop demand. This increasing demand for food has been previously tried to be met through the use of synthetic fertilizers and effective application of weed- and pest-controlling chemicals. However, these methods of increasing crop productivity rely on finite resources and are often unsustainable. They are now proven to be posing a great threat to the environment and causing a negative change in the planet's natural climate. Fortunately, the threat has been realized by scientists, and the world has started to lay the foundations for sustainable intensification of agriculture and to heighten the resilience of crops to climate change. The solutions discovered so far are numerous with many of them not yet tested. Climate change assessment is the first priority in this regard. Much of the recent researches have demonstrated a multi-scale and multidimensional nature of climate change to assess the potential effects of climate change on agriculture and the options for adaptation. These options for adaptation have been different in different regions of the world with clear differences among strategies in rich and poor countries. The pressure for adaptation is greatest in poor countries where the adaptive capacity is least abundant. Adaptation to climate change could be autonomous (market-driven) or planned. Both of these adaptation strategies are driven by certain measures. Some adaptation strategies are easily achieved with the help of existing technologies, some need development of new technologies while others just need policy and institutional/market reforms. Numerous researchers have tried to assess and give tools for the potential impact of climate change which are largely based on modelling techniques. Indeed, models are useful tools for assessing this potential impact and evaluating the options for adaptation, yet they do not match the level of real solutions that could be brought about by efficient adaptive human agency. The importance of agriculture as performance is useful in counterbalancing the modelling approaches towards mitigating the negative impacts of climate change. The adaptation and mitigation strategies are and should be social phenomena which need social attendance in the form of improved and sustainable agricultural practices and could help agriculture contribute less to the changing climate. This chapter will focus on numerous strategies that could be adapted to assess and cope with the negative impacts of changing climate on agriculture.
C1 [Arif, Muhammad; Jan, Talha; Amanullah] Univ Agr, Dept Agron, Peshawar, Pakistan.
   [Munir, Hassan; Rasul, Fahd] Univ Agr Faisalabad, Dept Agron, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
   [Riaz, Muhammad] Govt Coll Univ, Dept Environm Sci & Engn, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
   [Fahad, Shah; Adnan, Muhammad] Univ Swabi, Dept Agr Sci, Swabi, Pakistan.
   [Mian, Ishaq Ahmad] Univ Agr, Dept Soil & Environm Sci, Peshawar, Pakistan.
C3 University of Agriculture Faisalabad; Agricultural University Peshawar;
   University of Agriculture Faisalabad; Government College University
   Faisalabad; University of Agriculture Faisalabad; Agricultural
   University Peshawar
RP Arif, M (corresponding author), Univ Agr, Dept Agron, Peshawar, Pakistan.
EM marifkhan75@aup.edu.pk
RI ARIF, MUHAMMAD/AAK-9573-2021; Munir, Hassan/D-3390-2014; Adnan,
   Muhammad/AFB-8795-2022; rasul, fahd/H-6016-2011
OI Imran, Dr. Imran/0000-0002-9459-0130; Fahad, Shah/0000-0002-7525-0296;
   adnan, muhammad/0000-0001-9081-2229; Riaz, Muhammad/0000-0001-8074-3063;
   rasul, fahd/0000-0002-7813-2981
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NR 110
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 10
U2 81
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG SINGAPORE PTE LTD
PI SINGAPORE
PA 152 BEACH ROAD, #21-01/04 GATEWAY EAST, SINGAPORE, 189721, SINGAPORE
BN 978-981-13-9570-3; 978-981-13-9569-7
PY 2020
BP 351
EP 377
DI 10.1007/978-981-13-9570-3_12
D2 10.1007/978-981-13-9570-3
PG 27
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Environmental Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BP6NP
UT WOS:000560077000013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dalmaris, E
   Ramalho, CE
   Poot, P
   Veneklaas, EJ
   Byrne, M
AF Dalmaris, Eleftheria
   Ramalho, Cristina E.
   Poot, Pieter
   Veneklaas, Erik J.
   Byrne, Margaret
TI A climate change context for the decline of a foundation tree species in
   south-western Australia: insights from phylogeography and species
   distribution modelling
SO ANNALS OF BOTANY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Eucalyptus wandoo; Myrtaceae; evolution; forest decline;
   haplotypes; last glacial maximum; LGM; phylogeography; refugia; species
   distribution modelling; tree decline
ID LAST GLACIAL MAXIMUM; COALESCENT THEORY; GENETIC-VARIATION; CHLOROPLAST
   DNA; CPDNA VARIATION; CONSERVATION; POPULATION; PATTERNS; MORTALITY;
   REFUGIA
AB Background and Aims A worldwide increase in tree decline and mortality has been linked to climate change and, where these represent foundation species, this can have important implications for ecosystem functions. This study tests a combined approach of phylogeographic analysis and species distribution modelling to provide a climate change context for an observed decline in crown health and an increase in mortality in Eucalyptus wandoo, an endemic tree of south-western Australia.
   Methods Phylogeographic analyses were undertaken using restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of chloroplast DNA in 26 populations across the species distribution. Parsimony analysis of haplotype relationships was conducted, a haplotype network was prepared, and haplotype and nucleotide diversity were calculated. Species distribution modelling was undertaken using Maxent models based on extant species occurrences and projected to climate models of the last glacial maximum (LGM).
   Key Results A structured pattern of diversity was identified, with the presence of two groups that followed a climatic gradient from mesic to semi-arid regions. Most populations were represented by a single haplotype, but many haplotypes were shared among populations, with some having widespread distributions. A putative refugial area with high haplotype diversity was identified at the centre of the species distribution. Species distribution modelling showed high climatic suitability at the LGM and high climatic stability in the central region where higher genetic diversity was found, and low suitability elsewhere, consistent with a pattern of range contraction.
   Conclusions Combination of phylogeography and paleo-distribution modelling can provide an evolutionary context for climate-driven tree decline, as both can be used to cross-validate evidence for refugia and contraction under harsh climatic conditions. This approach identified a central refugial area in the test species E. wandoo, with more recent expansion into peripheral areas from where it had contracted at the LGM. This signature of contraction from lower rainfall areas is consistent with current observations of decline on the semi-arid margin of the range, and indicates low capacity to tolerate forecast climatic change. Identification of a paleo-historical context for current tree decline enables conservation interventions to focus on maintaining genetic diversity, which provides the evolutionary potential for adaptation to climate change.
C1 [Dalmaris, Eleftheria; Poot, Pieter; Veneklaas, Erik J.; Byrne, Margaret] Univ Western Australia, Sch Plant Biol, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
   [Ramalho, Cristina E.; Poot, Pieter; Byrne, Margaret] Western Australian Dept Pk & Wildlife, Sci & Conservat Div, Bentley, WA 6983, Australia.
C3 University of Western Australia
RP Ramalho, CE (corresponding author), Western Australian Dept Pk & Wildlife, Sci & Conservat Div, Locked Bag 104,Bentley Delivery Ctr, Bentley, WA 6983, Australia.
EM cristina.ramalho@dpaw.wa.gov.au
RI Veneklaas, Erik/C-8907-2009; Poot, Pieter/B-3457-2011; Dalmaris,
   Eleftheria/HNQ-3980-2023; Byrne, Margaret/H-8198-2015
OI Poot, Pieter/0000-0001-7721-0696; Byrne, Margaret/0000-0002-7197-5409;
   Ramalho, Cristina/0000-0001-6538-2060
FU Australian Research Council [LP0347692]; Department of Parks and
   Wildlife; Cooperative Research Centre for Plant-based Management of
   Dryland Salinity; Australian Research Council [LP0347692] Funding
   Source: Australian Research Council
FX We thank Bronwyn MacDonald for assistance, and Jerome Chopard for
   adjusting the code script for HAPLO. This work was supported by an
   Australian Research Council Linkage grant LP0347692. Scholarship support
   for E.D. was provided by the Department of Parks and Wildlife, and the
   Cooperative Research Centre for Plant-based Management of Dryland
   Salinity.
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NR 71
TC 24
Z9 25
U1 1
U2 50
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0305-7364
EI 1095-8290
J9 ANN BOT-LONDON
JI Ann. Bot.
PD NOV
PY 2015
VL 116
IS 6
SI SI
BP 941
EP 952
DI 10.1093/aob/mcv044
PG 12
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA CW6UX
UT WOS:000365134800009
PM 25851142
OA Green Published, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rais, A
   van de Kuilen, JWG
   Pretzsch, H
AF Rais, Andreas
   van de Kuilen, Jan-Willem G.
   Pretzsch, Hans
TI Growth reaction patterns of tree height, diameter, and volume of
   Douglas-fir (<i>Pseudotsuga menziesii</i> [Mirb.] Franco) under acute
   drought stress in Southern Germany
SO EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Stress resilience; Stress resistance; Drought stress event;
   Morphological variability; Adaptation to climate change; Stress
   mitigation; Silvicultural prescriptions
ID PINUS-SYLVESTRIS L.; NORWAY SPRUCE; BRITISH-COLUMBIA; WATER RELATIONS;
   WOOD DENSITY; FOREST TREES; WEED-CONTROL; CLIMATE; SOIL; INCREMENT
AB Climate change in Central Europe may come along with acute drought stress, which can severely reduce growth and vitality of forest trees and whole stands. For a tree species such as Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii [Mirb.] Franco) which is cultivated far beyond its natural range in Europe, knowledge of its behaviour under stress is crucial for the cultivation of Douglas-fir in view of a changing climate. Because of its easy accessibility, growth response to stress was mainly studied based on diameter growth at breast height. In long-term experiments on one dry and one moist site in Southern Germany, stem analyses of 133 mature and even-aged Douglas-firs were performed. The short-term growth reaction pattern under acute drought stress of 2003 had not only consequences on diameter but more pronounced effects can be observed when studying tree height: Respecting the different age trends by previous detrending, height increment only reacted more sensitive on the dry site. We also showed that extrapolating a particular decline in basal area increment to the whole stem can result in misunderstandings. However, results were less biased, when original data were smoothed or short-term assessment of volume growth was based on basal area measurements. By means of a linear mixed model approach, the influence of site, tree, and stand characteristics on Lloret's indices of resistance and resilience (Lloret et al. in Oikos 120:1909-1920. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0706.2011.19372.x, 2011) were analysed. For Douglas-fir, site played a crucial role and became more important considering the age trend. On the contrary, the positive influence of site quality on drought tolerance decreased with data processing. However, more growing space by thinning can advance tree resistance and resilience regarding height, diameter, and volume growth. Large individual crown volume improved the growth pattern under drought, and large stand density impaired it. Douglas-fir is obviously equipped with a morphological variability, which fosters lateral rather than vertical growth allocation under severe stress. Silviculture can mitigate stress through the choice of the site and through lower stand densities by thinning. Our refined stress response analysis confirmed a favourable growth and resilience of Douglas-fir even under extreme drought events.
C1 [Rais, Andreas; Pretzsch, Hans] Tech Univ Munich, Chair Forest Growth & Yield Sci, D-85354 Freising Weihenstephan, Germany.
   [Rais, Andreas; van de Kuilen, Jan-Willem G.] Tech Univ Munich, Holzforsch Munchen, D-80797 Munich, Germany.
   [van de Kuilen, Jan-Willem G.] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Civil Engn & Geosci, Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Technical University of Munich; Technical University of Munich; Delft
   University of Technology
RP Rais, A (corresponding author), Tech Univ Munich, Chair Forest Growth & Yield Sci, Hans Carl von Carlowitz Pl 2, D-85354 Freising Weihenstephan, Germany.
EM rais@hfm.tum.de
RI Pretzsch, Hans/AAC-5565-2019; Pretzsch, Hans/K-3716-2014
OI Rais, Andreas/0000-0001-8305-8678; van de Kuilen,
   Jan-Willem/0000-0001-6974-3783; Pretzsch, Hans/0000-0002-4958-1868
FU Bavarian State Ministry for Nutrition, Agriculture, and Forestry [X36]
FX We thank the Bavarian State Ministry for Nutrition, Agriculture, and
   Forestry for funding the project X36 entitled "Relationship between
   spacing and wood quality of Douglasfir in Bavaria". We also thank
   Ulricke Nickles, Fabian Dawo, Johanna Lintl, Gerhard Schutze, Thomas
   Zimmerer, Ralf Polzer, and the students of the Fachoberschule Triesdorf,
   Forstwirtschaft for their strong support during collecting the data.
   Thanks are also due to Ulrich Kern for the graphical artwork and the
   anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments.
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NR 75
TC 70
Z9 75
U1 1
U2 119
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 1612-4669
EI 1612-4677
J9 EUR J FOREST RES
JI Eur. J. For. Res.
PD NOV
PY 2014
VL 133
IS 6
BP 1043
EP 1056
DI 10.1007/s10342-014-0821-7
PG 14
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA AR6WJ
UT WOS:000343721100007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bettinger, P
   Clutter, M
   Siry, J
   Kane, M
   Pait, J
AF Bettinger, P.
   Clutter, M.
   Siry, J.
   Kane, M.
   Pait, J.
TI Broad implications of southern United States pine clonal forestry on
   planning and management of forests
SO INTERNATIONAL FORESTRY REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE forest management; tree improvement; environment; clonal technology
ID LOBLOLLY-PINE; TAEDA L.; SOMATIC EMBRYOGENESIS; TREE IMPROVEMENT;
   GENETIC GAINS; PLANTATIONS; BIOTECHNOLOGY; STRATEGIES; DEPLOYMENT;
   SEQUESTRATION
AB Forest management activities are designed not only to meet the growing economic and commodity production needs of the human population, but also to maintain, conserve, and protect ecological and social values. This paper presents a set of broad implications of advances in tree cloning technology on forest management and planning, and how these advances relate to socio-economic and environmental concerns of a growing human population. The discussion is divided into topics that present socio-economic and political issues and topics that present environmental issues. On the production side, there are difficulties in initiating embryogenic tissue of cloned trees, and genetic variation may still occur during the tissue culture process. However, if production issues can be overcome, tree cloning techniques may possibly accelerate forest tree selection processes and reduce cloned seedling costs. The silviculture applied to clonal tree plantations may differ from current seed orchard-based plantations as it relates to site preparation, planting density, thinning opportunities, intermediate treatments, and final rotation age. These alternatives need to be assessed, yet it seems that clonal tree plantations could result in a higher rate of return for a forest investment, due to higher growth rates and more uniform tree characteristics. Plantations composed of cloned seedlings may also result in wood quality traits that are more consistent, although manufacturing processes may have to take into account higher levels of juvenile wood. Matching desired genetic characteristics of trees to site conditions is a challenge, although limited results suggest low levels of response differences of clonal plantations to changing environmental conditions. Maintaining genetic diversity and managing risks associated with mass infestation of trees from diseases and insects are other issues for forest management and planning. And politically, forest managers must address the notion that the natural genetic pool may become polluted. These issues are important at the stand and the landscape level, as losses (for example) due to disease can be catastrophic in forests with limited genetic variability. The potential impact of climate change might suggest conservation strategies that differ from tree breeding objectives for timber production, although fast-growing trees may help reduce CO, from the atmosphere, since biomass accumulation is related to the diameter and height of trees. Clonal forestry research efforts may also be valuable in identifying tree varieties that are more adaptable to climate change, should naturally-regenerated stands become affected on a large scale.
C1 [Bettinger, P.; Clutter, M.; Siry, J.; Kane, M.] Univ Georgia, Warnell Sch Forestry & Nat Resources, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
   [Pait, J.] CellFor Corp, Atlanta, GA USA.
C3 University System of Georgia; University of Georgia
RP Bettinger, P (corresponding author), Univ Georgia, Warnell Sch Forestry & Nat Resources, Athens, GA 30602 USA.
EM pbettinger@warnell.uga.edu
RI Bettinger, Pete/H-2189-2018
OI Bettinger, Pete/0000-0002-5454-3970
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NR 82
TC 41
Z9 51
U1 0
U2 35
PU COMMONWEALTH FORESTRY ASSOC
PI CRAVEN ARRMS
PA CRIB, DINCHOPE, CRAVEN ARRMS SY7 9JJ, SHROPSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1465-5489
EI 2053-7778
J9 INT FOREST REV
JI Int. For. Rev.
PY 2009
VL 11
IS 3
BP 331
EP 345
DI 10.1505/ifor.11.3.331
PG 15
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 501HN
UT WOS:000270372300004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hu, ZK
   Zhu, CW
   Chen, XY
   Bonkowski, M
   Griffiths, B
   Chen, FJ
   Zhu, JG
   Hu, SJ
   Hu, F
   Liu, MQ
AF Hu, Zhengkun
   Zhu, Chunwu
   Chen, Xiaoyun
   Bonkowski, Michael
   Griffiths, Bryan
   Chen, Fajun
   Zhu, Jianguo
   Hu, Shuijin
   Hu, Feng
   Liu, Manqiang
TI Responses of rice paddy micro-food webs to elevated CO<sub>2</sub> are
   modulated by nitrogen fertilization and crop cultivars
SO SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
LA English
DT Article
DE Global change; Crop cultivar; Rhizosphere; Soil food webs; Root
   microbiome; Soil fauna
ID SOIL NEMATODE COMMUNITIES; BELOW-GROUND COMMUNITIES; ATMOSPHERIC CO2;
   CLIMATE-CHANGE; ENRICHMENT FACE; MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI; SEASONAL-CHANGES;
   CARBON-DIOXIDE; GLOBAL CHANGE; PLANT-GROWTH
AB Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations (eCO(2)) often increase plant growth but simultaneously lead to the nitrogen (N) limitation in soil. The corresponding mitigation strategy such as supplementing N fertilizer and growing high-yielding cultivars at eCO(2) would further modify soil ecosystem structure and function. Little attention has, however, been directed toward assessing the responses of soil food web. We report results from a long-term free air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiment in a rice paddy agro-ecosystem that examined the responses of soil micro-food webs to eCO(2) and exogenous nitrogen fertilization (eN) in the rhizosphere of two rice cultivars with distinctly weak and strong responses to eCO(2). Soil micro-food web parameters, including microfauna (protists and nematodes) and soil microbes (bacteria and fungi from phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) analysis), as well as soil C and N variables, were determined at the heading and ripening stages of rice. Results showed that eCO(2) effects on soil micro food webs depended strongly on N fertilization, rice cultivar and growth stage. eCO(2) stimulated the fungal energy channel at the ripening stage, as evidenced by increases in fungal biomass (32%), fungi:bacteria ratio (18%) and the abundance of fungivorous nematodes (64%), mainly due to an enhanced carbon input. The eN fueled the bacterial energy channel by increasing the abundance of flagellates and bacterivorous nematodes, likely through alleviating the N-limitation of plants and rhizosphere under eCO(2). While eCO(2) decreased the abundance of herbivorous nematodes under the weak-responsive cultivar by 59% and 47% with eN at the heading and ripening stage, respectively, the numbers of herbivorous nematodes almost tripled (x2.9; heading) and doubled (x1.6; ripening) under the strong responsive cultivar with eCO(2) at eN due to higher root quantity and quality. Structural equation model (SEM) showed that lower trophic-level organisms were affected by bottom-up forces of altered soil resources induced by eCO(2) and eN, and effects on higher trophic level organisms were driven by bottom up cascades with 69% of the variation being explained. Taken together, strategies to adapt climate change by growing high-yielding crop cultivars under eCO(2) may face a trade-off by negative soil feedbacks through the accumulation of root-feeding crop pest species. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Hu, Zhengkun; Chen, Xiaoyun; Hu, Shuijin; Hu, Feng; Liu, Manqiang] Nanjing Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Soil Ecol Lab, Nanjing 210095, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Hu, Zhengkun; Chen, Xiaoyun; Hu, Feng; Liu, Manqiang] Nanjing Agr Univ, Jiangsu Prov Key Lab Organ Solid Waste Utilizat, Nanjing 210095, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Zhu, Chunwu; Zhu, Jianguo] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Soil Sci, State Key Lab Soil & Sustainable Agr, Nanjing 210008, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Bonkowski, Michael] Univ Cologne, Inst Zool, Ctr Excellence Plant Sci CEPLAS, Terr Ecol, D-50674 Cologne, Germany.
   [Griffiths, Bryan] Crop & Soil Syst Res Grp, SRUC, Edinburgh EH9 3JG, Midlothian, Scotland.
   [Chen, Fajun] Nanjing Agr Univ, Coll Plant Protect, Nanjing 210095, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Hu, Shuijin] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Entomol & Plant Pathol, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
C3 Nanjing Agricultural University; Nanjing Agricultural University;
   Chinese Academy of Sciences; Nanjing Institute of Soil Science, CAS;
   University of Cologne; Nanjing Agricultural University; North Carolina
   State University
RP Liu, MQ (corresponding author), Nanjing Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Nanjing 210095, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
EM liumq@njau.edu.cn
RI Hu, Feng/IAN-4009-2023; Griffiths, Bryan/B-2998-2010; Liu,
   Manqiang/G-6566-2012; Bonkowski, Michael/C-3700-2013
OI Griffiths, Bryan/0000-0001-8721-4797; Liu, Manqiang/0000-0001-6654-7795;
   Bonkowski, Michael/0000-0003-2656-1183; Hu, Shuijin/0000-0002-3225-5126;
   Hu, Zhengkun/0000-0002-5697-6518
FU Natural Science Foundation of China [31261140364, 31170487, 31272051];
   National Basic Research Program [2014CB954500]; Fundamental Research
   Funds for the Central University of China [KYTZ201404]; Scottish
   Government Rural and Environment, Science and Analytical Services
   Division
FX This study was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China
   (31261140364, 31170487, 31272051), National Basic Research Program
   (2014CB954500), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central
   University of China (KYTZ201404). Bryan Griffiths acknowledges funding
   from the Scottish Government Rural and Environment, Science and
   Analytical Services Division. We thank Misses Wenqing Fan, Juan Gui, Xi
   Xu and Ting Liu, and Mr. Chenglong Ye for their help in sampling,
   measurements and data analysis. We would also like to express our
   sincere appreciation to the anonymous referees for their valuable
   comments. The authors declare no competing financial interests.
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NR 84
TC 28
Z9 31
U1 20
U2 321
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0038-0717
EI 1879-3428
J9 SOIL BIOL BIOCHEM
JI Soil Biol. Biochem.
PD NOV
PY 2017
VL 114
BP 104
EP 113
DI 10.1016/j.soilbio.2017.07.008
PG 10
WC Soil Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA FH9QK
UT WOS:000411546600012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Johnson, KK
   Lewis, DJ
AF Johnson, Kelsey K.
   Lewis, David J.
TI Weather variability risks slow climate adaptation: An empirical analysis
   of forestry
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; Forestry; Weather variability; Econometric model;
   Land -use modeling
ID ADJUSTMENT COSTS; CHANGE IMPACTS; LAND-USE; TEMPERATURE; SEEDLINGS;
   ROTATION; DAMAGES; MARKET
AB The timing of climate adaptation decisions can have substantial consequences for the assessment of climate damages. Since weather variability can create risks for natural resource management that differ across adaptation choices, such variability has the potential to alter the speed of climate adaptation. This paper estimates the effect of weather variability on the timing of adaptation decisions of forest landowners in the Eastern United States. A discrete-choice econometric model of forest management is estimated and used in a bio-economic simulation that shows how variability in cold temperatures can significantly slow the rate of adapting from coldtolerant natural hardwood forests to cold-sensitive, but highly valuable pine plantations. The range of weather variability in climate projections and across the landscape generates large differences in adaptation timing. Ignoring projected future decreases in weather variability results in a large downward bias in estimating future paths of climate adaptation. Since pine plantations produce fewer non-market ecosystem services than natural hardwood forests, an important source of future conservation uncertainty is the economic response of private forest landowners to changing weather variability.
C1 [Johnson, Kelsey K.] Boise State Univ, Dept Human Environm Syst, Boise, ID 83725 USA.
   [Lewis, David J.] Oregon State Univ, Dept Appl Econ, Corvallis, OR 97330 USA.
C3 Boise State University; Oregon State University
RP Johnson, KK (corresponding author), Boise State Univ, Dept Human Environm Syst, Boise, ID 83725 USA.
EM kelseyjohnson428@boisestate.edu
RI ; Lewis, David/I-5700-2013
OI Johnson, Kelsey/0000-0002-7825-9878; Lewis, David/0000-0002-2161-4189
FU National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2017-67023- 26275]; U.S.D.A.
   Forest Service Southern Research Station [18JV1133015523,
   23JV11330180-027]; Emery N. Castle Chair in Resource and Rural Economics
FX We thank Christian Langpap, David Kling, Steve Dundas, JunJie Wu, the
   editor, two anonymous reviewers, and seminar participants at the
   University of Tennessee, Oregon State University, and the 2021 AERE
   summer conference for helpful comments. We thank the National Institute
   of Food and Agriculture (# 2017-67023- 26275) for funding support. Lewis
   also acknowledges funding support from the U.S.D.A. Forest Service
   Southern Research Station (#18JV1133015523 and #23JV11330180-027) and
   the Emery N. Castle Chair in Resource and Rural Economics. Any errors
   remain our own.
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SN 0095-0696
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WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TN3I4
UT WOS:001241899300001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Toubali, S
   Ait-El-Mokhtar, M
   Boutasknit, A
   Anli, M
   Ait-Rahou, Y
   Benaffari, W
   Ben-Ahmed, H
   Mitsui, T
   Baslam, M
   Meddich, A
AF Toubali, Salma
   Ait-El-Mokhtar, Mohamed
   Boutasknit, Abderrahim
   Anli, Mohamed
   Ait-Rahou, Youssef
   Benaffari, Wissal
   Ben-Ahmed, Hela
   Mitsui, Toshiaki
   Baslam, Marouane
   Meddich, Abdelilah
TI Root Reinforcement Improved Performance, Productivity, and Grain
   Bioactive Quality of Field-Droughted Quinoa (<i>Chenopodium quinoa</i>)
SO FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE biostimulants; root-shoot-grain circuit; seed quality; drought
   tolerance; antioxidants; pseudocereal; soil health; endogenous
   mycorrhiza
ID ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI; PHOENIX-DACTYLIFERA L.; DATE PALM;
   ANTIOXIDANT ACTIVITY; OXIDATIVE STRESS; ABIOTIC STRESS; NUTRITIONAL
   QUALITY; ORGANIC AMENDMENTS; COMPOST ADDITION; BEAN-PLANTS
AB Modern agriculture is facing multiple and complex challenges and has to produce more food and fiber to feed a growing population. Increasingly volatile weather and more extreme events such as droughts can reduce crop productivity. This implies the need for significant increases in production and the adoption of more efficient and sustainable production methods and adaptation to climate change. A new technological and environment-friendly management technique to improve the tolerance of quinoa grown to maturity is proposed using native microbial biostimulants (arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; AMF) alone, in the consortium, or in combination with compost (Comp) as an organic matter source under two water treatments (normal irrigation and drought stress (DS)). Compared with controls, growth, grain yield, and all physiological traits under DS were significantly decreased while hydrogen peroxide, malondialdehyde, and antioxidative enzymatic functions were significantly increased. Under DS, biofertilizer application reverted physiological activities to normal levels and potentially strengthened quinoa's adaptability to water shortage as compared to untreated plants. The dual combination yielded a 97% improvement in grain dry weight. Moreover, the effectiveness of microbial and compost biostimulants as a biological tool improves grain quality and limits soil degradation under DS. Elemental concentrations, particularly macronutrients, antioxidant potential (1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging activity), and bioactive compounds (phenol and flavonoid content), were accumulated at higher levels in biofertilizer-treated quinoa grain than in untreated controls. The effects of AMF + Comp on post-harvest soil fertility traits were the most positive, with significant increases in total phosphorus (47%) and organic matter (200%) content under drought conditions. Taken together, our data demonstrate that drought stress strongly influences the physiological traits, yield, and quality of quinoa. Microbial and compost biostimulation could be an effective alternative to ensure greater recovery capability, thereby maintaining relatively high levels of grain production. Our study shows that aboveground stress responses in quinoa can be modulated by signals from the microbial/compost-treated root. Further, quinoa grains are generally of higher nutritive quality when amended and inoculated with AMF as compared to non-inoculated and compost-free plants.
C1 [Toubali, Salma; Ait-El-Mokhtar, Mohamed; Boutasknit, Abderrahim; Anli, Mohamed; Ait-Rahou, Youssef; Benaffari, Wissal; Meddich, Abdelilah] Cadi Ayyad Univ, Ctr Agrobiotechnol & Bioengn, Ctr AgroBiotech URL CNRST 05, Res Unit Labelled CNRST,Physiol Abiotic Stresses, Marrakech, Morocco.
   [Toubali, Salma; Ait-El-Mokhtar, Mohamed; Boutasknit, Abderrahim; Anli, Mohamed; Ait-Rahou, Youssef; Benaffari, Wissal; Meddich, Abdelilah] Cadi Ayyad Univ, Fac Sci Semlalia, Lab Agro Food Biotechnol & Valorizat Plant Biores, Marrakech, Morocco.
   [Toubali, Salma; Boutasknit, Abderrahim; Anli, Mohamed; Benaffari, Wissal; Ben-Ahmed, Hela; Meddich, Abdelilah] Lab Mixte Tunisomarocain LMTM Physiol & Biotechn, Tunis, Tunisia.
   [Mitsui, Toshiaki; Baslam, Marouane] Niigata Univ, Fac Agr, Lab Biochem, Niigata, Japan.
C3 Cadi Ayyad University of Marrakech; Cadi Ayyad University of Marrakech;
   Niigata University
RP Meddich, A (corresponding author), Cadi Ayyad Univ, Ctr Agrobiotechnol & Bioengn, Ctr AgroBiotech URL CNRST 05, Res Unit Labelled CNRST,Physiol Abiotic Stresses, Marrakech, Morocco.; Meddich, A (corresponding author), Cadi Ayyad Univ, Fac Sci Semlalia, Lab Agro Food Biotechnol & Valorizat Plant Biores, Marrakech, Morocco.; Meddich, A (corresponding author), Lab Mixte Tunisomarocain LMTM Physiol & Biotechn, Tunis, Tunisia.; Baslam, M (corresponding author), Niigata Univ, Fac Agr, Lab Biochem, Niigata, Japan.
EM mbaslam@gs.niigata-u.ac.jp; a.meddich@uca.ma
RI Mitsui, Toshiaki/R-6736-2019; BASLAM, Marouane/K-9312-2014; Ait El
   Mokhtar, Mohamed/AFD-0969-2022; ANLI, Mohamed/GPX-6509-2022; Benaffari,
   Wissal/AHC-1876-2022
FU Tuniso-Moroccan Mixed Laboratories (LMTM) of Plant Physiology and
   Biotechnology; Climate Change LPBV2C; FOSC project (Sus-Agri-CC) from
   the European Union [N862555]; JSPS KAKENHI [20K15425]; Niigata
   University; Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [20K15425] Funding
   Source: KAKEN
FX The present study was supported by the Tuniso-Moroccan Mixed
   Laboratories (LMTM) of Plant Physiology and Biotechnology and Climate
   Change LPBV2C and FOSC project (Sus-Agri-CC) from the European Union's
   Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement
   N862555. This work was also funded by Grant-in-Aid for Early-Career
   Scientists to MB (JSPS KAKENHI grant number 20K15425) and Grant for
   Promotion of KAAB Projects (Niigata University).
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NR 141
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 6
U2 28
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
SN 1664-462X
J9 FRONT PLANT SCI
JI Front. Plant Sci.
PD MAR 18
PY 2022
VL 13
AR 860484
DI 10.3389/fpls.2022.860484
PG 20
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA 0I4EB
UT WOS:000779373300001
PM 35371170
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Xu, Y
   Chou, JM
   Yang, F
   Sun, MY
   Zhao, WX
   Li, JN
AF Xu, Yuan
   Chou, Jieming
   Yang, Fan
   Sun, Mingyang
   Zhao, Weixing
   Li, Jiangnan
TI Assessing the Sensitivity of Main Crop Yields to Climate Change Impacts
   in China
SO ATMOSPHERE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; economy&#8211; climate model; crop yield; sensitivity;
   impact
ID WATER-RESOURCES; TEMPERATURE; WHEAT; AGRICULTURE; GROWTH; TRENDS; RISK;
   US
AB Quantitatively assessing the spatial divergence of the sensitivity of crop yield to climate change is of great significance for reducing the climate change risk to food production. We use socio-economic and climatic data from 1981 to 2015 to examine how climate variability led to variation in yield, as simulated by an economy-climate model (C-D-C). The sensitivity of crop yield to the impact of climate change refers to the change in yield caused by changing climatic factors under the condition of constant non-climatic factors. An 'output elasticity of comprehensive climate factor (CCF)' approach determines the sensitivity, using the yields per hectare for grain, rice, wheat and maize in China's main grain-producing areas as a case study. The results show that the CCF has a negative trend at a rate of -0.84/(10a) in the North region, while a positive trend of 0.79/(10a) is observed for the South region. Climate change promotes the ensemble increase in yields, and the contribution of agricultural labor force and total mechanical power to yields are greater, indicating that the yield in major grain-producing areas mainly depends on labor resources and the level of mechanization. However, the sensitivities to climate change of different crop yields to climate change present obvious regional differences: the sensitivity to climate change of the yield per hectare for maize in the North region was stronger than that in the South region. Therefore, the increase in the yield per hectare for maize in the North region due to the positive impacts of climate change was greater than that in the South region. In contrast, the sensitivity to climate change of the yield per hectare for rice in the South region was stronger than that in the North region. Furthermore, the sensitivity to climate change of maize per hectare yield was stronger than that of rice and wheat in the North region, and that of rice was the highest of the three crop yields in the South region. Finally, the economy-climate sensitivity zones of different crops were determined by the output elasticity of the CCF to help adapt to climate change and prevent food production risks.
C1 [Xu, Yuan; Chou, Jieming; Yang, Fan; Sun, Mingyang; Zhao, Weixing; Li, Jiangnan] Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, State Key Lab Earth Surface Proc & Resource Ecol, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.
C3 Beijing Normal University
RP Chou, JM (corresponding author), Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, State Key Lab Earth Surface Proc & Resource Ecol, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.
EM xuyuan01@mail.bnu.edu.cn; choujm@bnu.edu.cn;
   yangfan_bnu@mail.bnu.edu.cn; 201821051163@mail.bnu.edu.cn;
   201921051146@mail.bnu.edu.cn; 201921051150@mail.bnu.edu.cn
RI zhao, weixing/H-3154-2013; Xu, Yuan/AIE-9104-2022
OI chou, jieming/0000-0003-3343-3673; Xu, Yuan/0000-0002-3539-4068
FU National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFC1509003,
   2016YFA0602703]; National Natural Science Foundation of China [42075167]
FX This research was funded by the National Key Research and Development
   Program of China, grant number 2018YFC1509003, and 2016YFA0602703; the
   National Natural Science Foundation of China (42075167).
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NR 56
TC 16
Z9 18
U1 8
U2 111
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4433
J9 ATMOSPHERE-BASEL
JI Atmosphere
PD FEB
PY 2021
VL 12
IS 2
AR 172
DI 10.3390/atmos12020172
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA QM9WN
UT WOS:000622123600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bennett, AE
   Classen, AT
AF Bennett, Alison E.
   Classen, Aimee T.
TI Climate change influences mycorrhizal fungal-plant interactions, but
   conclusions are limited by geographical study bias
SO ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate changes; ecosystems; elevated carbon dioxide; mycorrhizal fungi;
   plants; precipitation change; warming
ID SOIL CARBON POOLS; GLOBAL CHANGE; COMMUNITY COMPOSITION; ECOSYSTEM
   RESPONSES; ROOT COLONIZATION; ATMOSPHERIC CO2; WARMING ALTERS; FOREST;
   PHOSPHORUS; DIFFERENTIATION
AB Climate change is altering the interactions among plants and soil organisms in ways that will alter the structure and function of ecosystems. We reviewed the literature and developed a map of studies focused on how the three most common types of mycorrhizal fungi (arbuscular mycorrhizal [AM], ectomycorrhizal [EcM], and ericoid mycorrhizal [ErM] fungi) respond to elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations (eCO(2)), climatic warming, and changes in the distribution of precipitation. Broadly, we ask how do mycorrhizal fungi respond to climate change, how do these responses vary by fungal type, and how do mycorrhizal traits influence plant adaptation, movement, or extinction in response to climatic change? First, we found that 92% of studies were conducted in the northern hemisphere, and plant host, ecosystem type and study location were only correlated with each other in the northern hemisphere because studies across all mycorrhizal fungal types were only common in the northern hemisphere. Second, we show that temperature and rainfall variability had more variable effects than eCO(2) on mycorrhizal fungal structures, but these effects were context dependent. Third, while mycorrhizal fungal types vary in their responses to climate change, it appears that warming leads to more variable responses in ectomycorrhizal than in arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi. Finally, we discuss common traits of mycorrhizal fungi that could aid in fungal and plant adaption to climate change. We posit that mycorrhizal fungi can buffer plant hosts against extinction risk, they can facilitate or retard the dispersal success of plants moving away from poor environments, and, by buffering host plants, they can enable host plant adaptation to new climates. All of these influences are, however, context dependent a finding that reflects the complex traits of mycorrhizal fungi as a group, the diversity of plant species they associate with and the variation in ecosystems in which they reside. Overall, while we point out many gaps in our understanding of the influence of climate changes on mycorrhizal fungi, we also highlight the large number of opportunities for researching plant and mycorrhizal fungal responses to and mitigation of climate changes.
C1 [Bennett, Alison E.] Ohio State Univ, Dept Evolut Ecol & Organismal Biol, Columbus, OH 43210 USA.
   [Classen, Aimee T.] Univ Vermont, Rubenstein Sch Environm & Nat Resources, Burlington, VT 05405 USA.
   [Classen, Aimee T.] Univ Vermont, Gund Inst Environm, Burlington, VT 05405 USA.
   [Classen, Aimee T.] Univ Copenhagen, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, Ctr Macroecol Evolut & Climate, DK-2100 Copenhagen O, Denmark.
C3 University System of Ohio; Ohio State University; University of Vermont;
   University of Vermont; University of Copenhagen
RP Bennett, AE (corresponding author), Ohio State Univ, Dept Evolut Ecol & Organismal Biol, Columbus, OH 43210 USA.
EM bennett.1242@osu.edu
RI Classen, Aimee/C-4035-2008
OI Classen, Aimee/0000-0002-6741-3470
FU U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and
   Environmental Research, Terrestrial Ecosystem Sciences Program
   [DE-SC0010562]; Carlsberg Foundation; Ohio State University; U.S.
   Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0010562] Funding Source: U.S.
   Department of Energy (DOE)
FX We thank Jarlath O'Neil-Dunne and the Spatial Analysis Laboratory at UVM
   for mapping our mycorrhizal distributions under warming. The A. T.
   Classen lab is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of
   Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, Terrestrial
   Ecosystem Sciences Program under Award Number DE-SC0010562 and the
   Carlsberg Foundation. The A. E. Bennett lab is supported by the Ohio
   State University. We thank Philip Smith, Kenna Rewcastle, and two
   anonymous reviewers for comments that improved the manuscript.
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NR 96
TC 99
Z9 112
U1 20
U2 268
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0012-9658
EI 1939-9170
J9 ECOLOGY
JI Ecology
PD APR
PY 2020
VL 101
IS 4
AR e02978
DI 10.1002/ecy.2978
PG 11
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LV0CG
UT WOS:000538111800010
PM 31953955
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McMahon, C
   Edgar, HWJ
   Barley, JP
   Hanna, REB
   Brennan, GP
   Fairweather, I
AF McMahon, Connor
   Edgar, Hillary W. J.
   Barley, Jason P.
   Hanna, Robert E. B.
   Brennan, Gerard P.
   Fairweather, Ian
TI Control of <i>Nematodirus</i> spp. infection by sheep flock owners in
   Northern Ireland
SO IRISH VETERINARY JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Nematodirus spp.; Survey; Questionnaire; Northern Ireland; Faecal egg
   count reduction test; Egg hatch behaviour
ID ANTHELMINTIC RESISTANCE; BENZIMIDAZOLE RESISTANCE; SCOTTISH SHEEP;
   CLIMATE-CHANGE; N. FILICOLLIS; BATTUS; PARASITES; PREVALENCE; SPATHIGER;
   SAMPLES
AB Background: To address a lack of information on the control of ovine helminth parasites in Northern Ireland (NI), a number of research projects have been undertaken, dealing with gastrointestinal nematodes, tapeworms and liver fluke. This investigation concerns Nematodirus and concentrates on three aspects of disease: farm management strategies for its control, derived from the results of a Questionnaire; the efficacy of treatment used by farmers, as determined by a coprological survey; and the hatching requirements of Nematodirus eggs, that is, whether prolonged chilling is a pre-requisite for hatching.
   Results: A Questionnaire was sent to 252 sheep farmers in NI in March 2012 (covering the years 2009-2012) and replies were received from 228 farmers. Under-dosing, inaccurate calibration of equipment and inappropriate product choice were poor practices identified. Following this survey, the efficacy of treatment of Nematodirus spp. in sheep flocks was evaluated in April and May 2012. Sampling kits were sent to 51 flock owners, all of whom returned pre-and post-anthelmintic dosing faecal samples to the laboratory for analysis. At the time of treatment, 41 flocks were positive for Nematodirus (as diagnosed by the presence of eggs). Reduced benzimidazole efficacy was detected in 35.7% of flocks tested (n = 28). Although only involving a small number of flocks, reduced efficacy of levamisole treatment was detected in 50%, of avermectins in 33% and of moxidectin in 75% of flocks tested (n = 2, 6 and 4, respectively). In the egg hatch experiment, carried out under "chilled" and "non-chilled" conditions, 43% of the eggs in the "non-chilled" group were able to hatch, compared to 100% in the "chilled" group.
   Conclusions: The identification of inefficient control strategies argues for continued education of stockholders, in order to improve their management programmes. This is particularly important where the practices might impact on the development of anthelmintic resistance, which has been shown to exist on NI farms. The appropriate choice of anthelmintic is a vital part of this plan. The ability of eggs to hatch under non-chilled conditions demonstrates a flexibility in hatching behaviour. This may represent an adaptation to climate change and account for the recent emergence of a second, autumnal peak of infection.
C1 [McMahon, Connor; Brennan, Gerard P.; Fairweather, Ian] Queens Univ Belfast, Sch Biol Sci, Parasite Therapeut Res Grp, Med Biol Ctr, 97 Lisburn Rd, Belfast BT9 7BL, Antrim, North Ireland.
   [Edgar, Hillary W. J.; Barley, Jason P.; Hanna, Robert E. B.] Agri Food & Biosci Inst AFBI Stormont, Vet Sci Div, Belfast BT4 3SD, Antrim, North Ireland.
C3 Queens University Belfast; Agri-Food & Biosciences Institute
RP Fairweather, I (corresponding author), Queens Univ Belfast, Sch Biol Sci, Parasite Therapeut Res Grp, Med Biol Ctr, 97 Lisburn Rd, Belfast BT9 7BL, Antrim, North Ireland.
EM i.fairweather@qub.ac.uk
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NR 55
TC 4
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 22
PU BMC
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 0368-0762
EI 2046-0481
J9 IRISH VET J
JI Irish Vet. J.
PD OCT 19
PY 2017
VL 70
AR 31
DI 10.1186/s13620-017-0109-6
PG 11
WC Veterinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Veterinary Sciences
GA FK4NP
UT WOS:000413472400001
PM 29075480
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gao, GY
   Fu, BJ
   Wang, S
   Liang, W
   Jiang, XH
AF Gao, Guangyao
   Fu, Bojie
   Wang, Shuai
   Liang, Wei
   Jiang, Xiaohui
TI Determining the hydrological responses to climate variability and land
   use/cover change in the Loess Plateau with the Budyko framework
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Streamflow; Runoff coefficient; Climate variability; Land use/cover
   change; Elasticity method; Loess Plateau
ID YELLOW-RIVER BASIN; WATER YIELD; VEGETATION RESTORATION; ANNUAL
   STREAMFLOW; GLOBAL PATTERN; SOIL-EROSION; IMPACTS; RUNOFF;
   AFFORESTATION; BALANCES
AB Understanding and quantifying the impacts of land use/cover change and climate variability on hydrological responses are important to the design of water resources and land use management strategies for adaptation to climate change, especially in water-limited areas. The elasticity method was used to detect the responses of streamflow and runoff coefficient to various driving factors in 15 main catchments of the Loess Plateau, China between 1961 and 2009. The elasticity of streamflow (Q) and runoff coefficient (R-c) to precipitation (P), potential evapotranspiration (E-0), and catchment characteristics (represented by the parameter m in Fu's equation) were derived based on the Budyko hypothesis. There were two critical values of m = 2 and E-0/P = 1 for the elasticity of Q and R-c. The hydrological responses were mainly affected by catchment characteristics in water-limited regions (E-0/P > 1), and in humid areas (E-0/P < 1), climate conditions played a more important role for cases of m > 2 whereas catchment characteristics had a greater impact for cases of m < 2. The annual Q and R-c in 14 of the 15 catchments significantly decreased with average reduction of 0.87 mm yr(-1) and 0.18% yr(-1), respectively. The mean elasticities of Q to P, E-0 and m were 2.66,- 1.66 and -3.17, respectively. The contributions of land use/cover change and P reduction to decreased Q were 64.75% and 41.55%, respectively, while those to decreased R-c were 75.68% and 32.06%, respectively. In contrast, the decreased E-0 resulted in 6.30% and 7.73% increase of Q and R-c, respectively. The contribution of land use/cover changes was significantly and positively correlated with the increase in the percentage of the soil and water conservation measures area (p < 0.05). The R-c significantly and linearly decreased with the vegetation coverage (p < 0.01). Moreover, the R-c linearly decreased with the percentage of measures area in all catchments (eight of them were statistically significant with p < 0.05). (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Gao, Guangyao; Fu, Bojie; Wang, Shuai] Chinese Acad Sci, Res Ctr Ecoenvironm Sci, State Key Lab Urban & Reg Ecol, Beijing 100085, Peoples R China.
   [Gao, Guangyao; Fu, Bojie; Wang, Shuai] Joint Ctr Global Change Studies, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.
   [Liang, Wei] Shaanxi Normal Univ, Coll Tourism & Environm, Xian 710062, Peoples R China.
   [Jiang, Xiaohui] NW Univ Xian, Coll Urban & Environm Sci, Xian 710027, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Research Center for Eco-Environmental
   Sciences (RCEES); Shaanxi Normal University; Northwest University Xi'an
RP Fu, BJ (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Res Ctr Ecoenvironm Sci, State Key Lab Urban & Reg Ecol, Beijing 100085, Peoples R China.
EM bfu@rcees.ac.cn
RI Fu, Bojie/B-1493-2009; jiang, xiaohui/GWZ-4110-2022; Gao,
   Guangyao/B-3869-2012; wang, shuai/B-2334-2017
OI wang, shuai/0000-0003-1595-9858
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41390464, 41471094,
   91325201]; Chinese Academy of Sciences [GJHZ 1502]; Young Scientists
   Fund of RCEES [RCEES-QN-20130053F]
FX This research was financially supported by the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China (41390464, 41471094 and 91325201), the Chinese
   Academy of Sciences (GJHZ 1502) and the Young Scientists Fund of RCEES
   (RCEES-QN-20130053F). We are grateful to the Ecological Environment
   Database of Loess Plateau, the Yellow River Conservancy Commission, and
   the National Meteorological Information Center for permitting us access
   to the hydrological and meteorological data. We thank the anonymous
   reviewers for their constructive comments that improved the overall
   quality of the manuscript.
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NR 57
TC 190
Z9 212
U1 17
U2 282
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD JUL 1
PY 2016
VL 557
BP 331
EP 342
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.03.019
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DK7VZ
UT WOS:000375136200035
PM 27016681
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Liu, LL
   Zhu, Y
   Tang, L
   Cao, WX
   Wang, EL
AF Liu, Leilei
   Zhu, Yan
   Tang, Liang
   Cao, Weixing
   Wang, Enli
TI Impacts of climate changes, soil nutrients, variety types and management
   practices on rice yield in East China: A case study in the Taihu region
SO FIELD CROPS RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Rice productivity; APSIM-Oryza model; Climate condition; Soil nutrient;
   Variety; Management
ID LAND-USE CHANGE; ORGANIC-CARBON; GRAIN-YIELD; SPATIAL VARIABILITY; CROP
   PRODUCTION; WHEAT; NITROGEN; TRENDS; TEMPERATURE; MAIZE
AB Separation of the influencing factors (climate, soil, variety, management) affecting crop yield could provide valuable insight into how crop responds to climate change and how crop yield can be enhanced in the future. In this study, we reported the changes of climatic conditions, soil nutrients, variety types and management practices in the Taihu region (a typical rice growing zone) of east China in two periods (the 1980s and the 2000s), and simulated the changes of rice (Oryza sativa L) yields under different scenarios by using the APSIM-Oryza model. The contributions of the influencing factors in rice growing system were also calculated. The results revealed that there was a warming trend in the rice growing period in the Taihu region. However, the precipitation and sunshine hours in the rice growing season showed a decreasing trend in the past 30 years. Compared with the soil nutrients in the 19805, the mean concentrations of soil organic carbon, total nitrogen, available phosphorus and potassium in the 2000s in the Taihu region were increased by 15.85%, 79.55%, 124.55% and 10.37%, respectively. The rice varieties in the 1980s could be described as the 'panicle weight type', while in the 2000s as the 'panicle number type'. The differences in management practices between 1980s and 2000s were mainly attributed to the fertilization and irrigation methods. From the 1980s to 2000s, the average rice yield in the Taihu region increased by 46.3%. The individual contribution of the climate change, soil improvement, variety updating and management progress on rice productivity was estimated as -19.5%, 12.7%, 21.7% and 34.6%, respectively. In addition, the spatial variation of rice yields in the whole region was reduced from 13.7% to 7.4% with the soil fertility improvement. The results indicate that future adaptations to climate change for rice yields would require either enhanced tolerance to high temperatures in the existing rice varieties or change in the current management practices, while balancing the soil fertility is a continuing process. (C) 2013 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Liu, Leilei; Zhu, Yan; Tang, Liang; Cao, Weixing] Nanjing Agr Univ, Natl Engn & Technol Ctr Informat Agr, Jiangsu Key Lab Informat Agr, Nanjing 210095, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Enli] CSIRO Land & Water, CSIRO Sustainable Agr Flagship, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
C3 Nanjing Agricultural University; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial
   Research Organisation (CSIRO); CSIRO Land & Water
RP Zhu, Y (corresponding author), Nanjing Agr Univ, Natl Engn & Technol Ctr Informat Agr, Jiangsu Key Lab Informat Agr, Nanjing 210095, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
EM yanzhu@njau.edu.cn
RI Tang, Liang/L-2889-2019; Zhu, Yan/AAK-6927-2020; Wang, Enli/K-7478-2012
OI Wang, Enli/0000-0002-6653-5791
FU National High-Tech Research and Development Program of China
   [2013AA100404]; National Science and Technology Support Program of China
   [2011BAD21B03]; National Basic Research Program of China [2009CB118608];
   CSIRO-Chinese Ministry of Education (MOE); Priority Academic Program
   Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PAPD)
FX We gratefully acknowledge the funding support from the National
   High-Tech Research and Development Program of China (2013AA100404), the
   National Science and Technology Support Program of China (2011BAD21B03),
   the National Basic Research Program of China (2009CB118608), the
   CSIRO-Chinese Ministry of Education (MOE) PhD Research Fellowship
   Program, and the Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher
   Education Institutions (PAPD).
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NR 63
TC 48
Z9 56
U1 6
U2 141
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-4290
EI 1872-6852
J9 FIELD CROP RES
JI Field Crop. Res.
PD AUG 1
PY 2013
VL 149
BP 40
EP 48
DI 10.1016/j.fcr.2013.04.022
PG 9
WC Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 197KP
UT WOS:000322850400005
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vaughn, SE
AF Vaughn, Sarah E.
TI Erosion by Design: Rethinking Innovation, Sea Defense, and Credibility
   in Guyana
SO COMPARATIVE STUDIES IN SOCIETY AND HISTORY
LA English
DT Article
DE innovation; historical time; climate adaptation; knowledge economies;
   cultures of engineering; Guyana; soil erosion
ID BUSH PUMP; MAINTENANCE; TECHNOLOGY; SCIENCE
AB This essay explores the intersecting socio-material and ethical demands that engineers confront in adapting sea defenses to climate change in Guyana. It focuses on the tensions in climate adaptation that create the possibilities for theorizing innovation as a key theme of counter-modernities in the Anthropocene. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork, oral histories, and archival research, I show that engineers' decision-making regarding whether or not to innovate sea defenses is a fraught process dependent upon processes of erosion and the ontological (in)stability of specific infrastructures known as groynes. To cope, engineers produce what I call "innovation narratives" to describe how obstacles to climate adaptation are created by combinations of neocolonial empire, shapeshifting ecologies, inconsistent maintenance programs, and fiscal debt. At the same time, their efforts signal an emerging global politics of credibility that is reinforced by desires for more inclusive forms of governance rather than brute power or capitalization.
C1 [Vaughn, Sarah E.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Anthropol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley
RP Vaughn, SE (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Anthropol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
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TC 1
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 4
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 0010-4175
EI 1475-2999
J9 COMP STUD SOC HIST
JI Comp. Stud. Soc. Hist.
PD OCT
PY 2022
VL 64
IS 4
BP 849
EP 877
AR PII S0010417522000329
DI 10.1017/S0010417522000329
EA AUG 2022
PG 29
WC Anthropology; History; Sociology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Anthropology; History; Sociology
GA 5E6WQ
UT WOS:000836480800001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Adhikari, B
   Chalkasra, LSS
AF Adhikari, Bhim
   Safaee Chalkasra, Lolita Shaila
TI Mobilizing private sector investment for climate action: enhancing
   ambition and scaling up implementation
SO JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE FINANCE & INVESTMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; adaptation finance; SMEs; MNCs; B corporations; business
   case for adaptation
ID RISK
AB Private-sector finance has been widely seen as a step to scale up access to resources for ambitious climate action, given the limited availability of public resources. However, there is a knowledge gap about the risks, barriers, and opportunities associated with greater private investment. This paper analyses some important barriers that commonly inhibit private sector investment in climate adaptation action. The analysis draws on case studies of small and medium-sized business (SMEs), multinational companies (MNCs), B corporations and impact investors. Our analysis confirms that private sector actors are willing to invest in climate adaptation, but their investment decisions are constrained by risk profiles associated with climate adaptation projects, the lack of financially viable and bankable projects, and complete knowledge of climate risk that guide adaptation decision. A tailored approach is required to leverage private sector finance, and conducive public policy interventions will facilitate to mobilize different types of private sector actors.
C1 [Adhikari, Bhim; Safaee Chalkasra, Lolita Shaila] Int Dev Res Ctr IDRC, 150 Kent St, Ottawa, ON K1G3H9, Canada.
RP Adhikari, B (corresponding author), Int Dev Res Ctr IDRC, 150 Kent St, Ottawa, ON K1G3H9, Canada.
EM badhikari@idrc.ca
FU International Development Research Centre [107351, 108074, 108270];
   Academy of Finland (AKA) [108074] Funding Source: Academy of Finland
   (AKA)
FX This work was supported by International Development Research Centre
   [grant number 107351, 108074, 108270].
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NR 43
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 2
U2 12
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 2043-0795
EI 2043-0809
J9 J SUSTAIN FINANC INV
JI J. Sustain. Financ. Invest.
PD APR 3
PY 2023
VL 13
IS 2
BP 1110
EP 1127
DI 10.1080/20430795.2021.1917929
EA APR 2021
PG 18
WC Business, Finance; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Business & Economics; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA K4YL2
UT WOS:000655460500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alabsi, AAN
   Wu, Y
   Koko, AF
   Alshareem, KM
   Hamed, R
AF Alabsi, Akram Ahmed Noman
   Wu, Yue
   Koko, Auwalu Faisal
   Alshareem, Khaled Mohammed
   Hamed, Roknizadeh
TI Towards Climate Adaptation in Cities: Indicators of the Sustainable
   Climate-Adaptive Urban Fabric of Traditional Cities in West Asia
SO APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE sustainable indicators; urban fabric; climate adaptation; West Asia
   cities
ID ENERGY USE; MITIGATION; HOT; PRINCIPLES; BUILDINGS; IMPACT; ZONES
AB One of the most important criteria for a city's sustainability is climate adaptation. Simultaneously, traditional cities in West Asia have achieved harmony between architecture and the environment, depending on the experience and culture of the local community, indicating a fundamental stage of adaptation to the environment and climate. This research attempted to study and examine the traditional urban fabric, in order to diagnose its significance and ability to solve contemporary problems, such as the lack of comfortable and suitable urban housing environments in hot-dry climate areas, which cover most of West Asia. We used two research methods to create an integrated vision to investigate the indicators and their effect on urban form. Four case studies in the urban fabric and housing communities of West Asia's hot-dry research areas were chosen for the analytical study. Furthermore, inductive analysis was carried out to determine the most critical sustainability parameters in the particular urban fabric. The climate response parameters of the study cities were evaluated using Ecotect simulation tools, and the determinants of sustainability indicators were quantitatively evaluated to assess each indicator's impact on the sustainability of the urban fabric. Our findings have implications for assessing the relevance of climate adaptation in the sustainability of cities and their effectiveness in combating the impacts of climate change.
C1 [Alabsi, Akram Ahmed Noman; Wu, Yue; Koko, Auwalu Faisal; Hamed, Roknizadeh] Zhejiang Univ, Coll Civil Engn & Architecture, Dept Architecture, Hangzhou 310058, Peoples R China.
   [Alabsi, Akram Ahmed Noman; Alshareem, Khaled Mohammed] Thamar Univ, Fac Engn, Thamar 87246, Yemen.
   [Wu, Yue] Zhejiang Univ, Int Ctr Architecture & Urban Dev Studies, Hangzhou 310058, Peoples R China.
C3 Zhejiang University; Zhejiang University
RP Wu, Y (corresponding author), Zhejiang Univ, Coll Civil Engn & Architecture, Dept Architecture, Hangzhou 310058, Peoples R China.; Wu, Y (corresponding author), Zhejiang Univ, Int Ctr Architecture & Urban Dev Studies, Hangzhou 310058, Peoples R China.
EM 11612071@zju.edu.cn; ywu100@zju.edu.cn; 11812112@zju.edu.cn;
   Khaled.alshareem@tu.edu.ye; h.roknizadej@zju.edu.cn
RI Auwalu Koko, Faisal/AAT-4267-2021; Al- shareem, Khaled/AEL-1069-2022;
   Alabsi, Akram/N-7806-2019
OI Auwalu Koko, Faisal/0000-0003-2425-9941; Alabsi, Akram ahmed
   Noman/0000-0002-3267-2608
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [51778559
   (2018/01-2021/12)]
FX This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China, grant number 51778559 (2018/01-2021/12).
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NR 51
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 27
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2076-3417
J9 APPL SCI-BASEL
JI Appl. Sci.-Basel
PD NOV
PY 2021
VL 11
IS 21
AR 10428
DI 10.3390/app112110428
PG 21
WC Chemistry, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Materials
   Science, Multidisciplinary; Physics, Applied
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Chemistry; Engineering; Materials Science; Physics
GA WX3RA
UT WOS:000718516000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kropf, CM
   Ciullo, A
   Otth, L
   Meiler, S
   Rana, A
   Schmid, E
   McCaughey, JW
   Bresch, DN
AF Kropf, Chahan M.
   Ciullo, Alessio
   Otth, Laura
   Meiler, Simona
   Rana, Arun
   Schmid, Emanuel
   McCaughey, Jamie W.
   Bresch, David N.
TI Uncertainty and sensitivity analysis for probabilistic weather and
   climate-risk modelling: an implementation in CLIMADA v.3.1.0
SO GEOSCIENTIFIC MODEL DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID EPISTEMIC UNCERTAINTIES; ENVIRONMENTAL-MODELS; PROJECTIONS; ADAPTATION;
   RESOLUTION; EXPOSURE; SYSTEMS; DAMAGE
AB Modelling the risk of natural hazards for society, ecosystems, and the economy is subject to strong uncertainties, even more so in the context of a changing climate, evolving societies, growing economies, and declining ecosystems. Here, we present a new feature of the climate-risk modelling platform CLIMADA (CLIMate ADAptation), which allows us to carry out global uncertainty and sensitivity analysis. CLIMADA underpins the Economics of Climate Adaptation (ECA) methodology which provides decision-makers with a fact base to understand the impact of weather and climate on their economies, communities, and ecosystems, including the appraisal of bespoke adaptation options today and in future. We apply the new feature to an ECA analysis of risk from tropical cyclone storm surge to people in Vietnam to showcase the comprehensive treatment of uncertainty and sensitivity of the model outputs, such as the spatial distribution of risk exceedance probabilities or the benefits of different adaptation options. We argue that broader application of uncertainty and sensitivity analysis will enhance transparency and intercomparison of studies among climate-risk modellers and help focus future research. For decision-makers and other users of climate-risk modelling, uncertainty and sensitivity analysis has the potential to lead to better-informed decisions on climate adaptation. Beyond provision of uncertainty quantification, the presented approach does contextualize risk assessment and options appraisal, and might be used to inform the development of storylines and climate adaptation narratives.
C1 [Kropf, Chahan M.; Ciullo, Alessio; Otth, Laura; Meiler, Simona; Schmid, Emanuel; McCaughey, Jamie W.; Bresch, David N.] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Environm Decis, Univ Str 16, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Kropf, Chahan M.; Ciullo, Alessio; Meiler, Simona; McCaughey, Jamie W.; Bresch, David N.] Fed Off Meteorol & Climatol MeteoSwiss, Operat Ctr 1, POB 257, CH-8058 Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Rana, Arun] Frankfurt Sch Finance & Management Gemeinniitzige, Adickesallee 32-34, D-60322 Frankfurt, Germany.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; Federal
   Office of Meteorology & Climatology (MeteoSwiss)
RP Kropf, CM (corresponding author), Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Environm Decis, Univ Str 16, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
EM chahan.kropf@usys.ethz.ch
RI kumar, arun/AAC-5048-2021; Bresch, David N./D-5298-2018; Kropf,
   Chahan/O-4777-2016
OI Bresch, David N./0000-0002-8431-4263; Kropf, Chahan/0000-0002-3761-2292;
   McCaughey, Jamie W./0000-0003-1490-5022; Schmid,
   Emanuel/0000-0002-6814-7215; Meiler, Simona/0000-0002-4475-087X
FU Horizon 2020 (CASCADES) [821010, (820712)]
FX This research has been supported by Horizon 2020 (CASCADES (grant no.
   821010) and RECEIPT (grant no. 820712)).
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NR 87
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 3
U2 14
PU COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
PI GOTTINGEN
PA BAHNHOFSALLEE 1E, GOTTINGEN, 37081, GERMANY
SN 1991-959X
EI 1991-9603
J9 GEOSCI MODEL DEV
JI Geosci. Model Dev.
PD SEP 23
PY 2022
VL 15
IS 18
BP 7177
EP 7201
DI 10.5194/gmd-15-7177-2022
PG 25
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology
GA 4U9NQ
UT WOS:000859112700001
OA Green Submitted, Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dahli, K
   Cheggaga, N
AF Dahli, Khadidja
   Cheggaga, Nawal
TI Novel approach to sandstorm-resilient solar tracking system for optimal
   energy generation
SO ENERGY SOURCES PART A-RECOVERY UTILIZATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS
LA English
DT Article
DE Desert environments; solar power generation; solar tracking; wind data;
   sandstorm-resistant
ID WIND LOADS; CLIMATIC CONDITIONS; DUST; PERFORMANCE; SAND; TRANSPORT;
   MODULES; EVENTS; DESIGN; ARRAYS
AB Sandstorms pose several challenges for solar power generation in desert environments, such as dust accumulation, surface abrasion, structural stress, long-term degradation, and potential deterioration. This study aims to address these challenges by proposing a sandstorm-resistant solar tracking system that does not require complex and costly protection mechanisms, cleaning, or maintenance practices. Instead, we present an innovative approach to protect solar systems from sandstorms by integrating wind data readings into conventional solar tracking tools. Initially, sandstorms are detected when the wind speed exceeds a predetermined threshold. Then, the tracker adjusts its position based on wind direction data to reduce exposure and prevent damage. The system will resume regular tracking once the wind speed drops below the specified threshold. Our research indicates that positioning the tracker at a 20 degrees angle and exposing it to the wind at an attack angle of 100 degrees can reduce wind pressure on solar panels and minimize dust accumulation, thereby safeguarding the panels during sandstorms. The results show that the proposed tracking system consumed only 0.26-2.24% of the generated energy throughout the day, which is lower than other solar tracking systems and protective mechanisms. This efficient design has the potential to influence the future of photovoltaic (PV) systems and contribute to climate change adaptation and the economic feasibility of PV systems in desert environments.
C1 [Dahli, Khadidja; Cheggaga, Nawal] Univ Saad Dahlab Blida 1, Fac Technol, Elect & Remote Control Syst Lab, LabSET, Blida, Algeria.
RP Dahli, K; Cheggaga, N (corresponding author), Univ Saad Dahlab Blida 1, Fac Technol, Elect & Remote Control Syst Lab, LabSET, Blida, Algeria.
EM khadi.dja22977@gmail.com; cheggaga_nawal@univ-blida.dz
OI Dahli, Khadidja/0000-0001-9649-070X
FU no funding associated with the work; Remote Control Systems Laboratory
   at University of Blida 1
FX The authors would like to thank Remote Control Systems Laboratory at
   University of Blida 1, for their support in publishing this manuscript.
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NR 75
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 6
U2 22
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 1556-7036
EI 1556-7230
J9 ENERG SOURCE PART A
JI Energy Sources Part A-Recovery Util. Environ. Eff.
PD DEC 31
PY 2024
VL 46
IS 1
BP 4029
EP 4050
DI 10.1080/15567036.2024.2327606
PG 22
WC Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Chemical; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Energy & Fuels; Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LC6I3
UT WOS:001184615300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Petrova, S
   Velcheva, I
   Nikolov, B
AF Petrova, Slaveya
   Velcheva, Iliana
   Nikolov, Bogdan
TI Nature-Based Solutions to Reduce Air Pollution: A Case Study from
   Plovdiv, Bulgaria, Using Trees, Herbs, Mosses and Lichens
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE biomonitoring; heavy metals; moss-bags; lichen-bags; ecosystem services;
   potentially toxic elements
ID TRACE-ELEMENTS; HEAVY-METALS; ATMOSPHERIC DEPOSITION; DECIDUOUS TREES;
   ACCUMULATION; LEAVES; BAGS; AREA; SOIL; BIOMONITOR
AB Nature-based solutions (NBSs) are becoming more and more recognized as useful instruments to address the challenges that urban areas are currently facing, i.e., climate change adaptation, flood mitigation, etc. In the present study, we aimed to: (1) compare the efficiency of mosses, lichens, herbs and trees in removing pollutants from the urban air using their biomonitoring potential; (2) assess their efficiency as nature-based solutions to mitigate urban air pollution; and (3) propose a framework for implementing such NBSs in urban areas. The first step involved analyses of the concentrations of 20 potentially toxic elements in eight selected biomonitors. After that, an assessment of their removal capacity was made on the basis of elements accumulation. This is the first complex study in an urban area involving the simultaneous application of organisms of eight different species and four different systematic groups (lichenized fungi, mosses, herbaceous plants, woody species) as well as such a large number of potentially hazardous elements. The present study sheds new light on some well-known biomonitors in the context of their application for air pollution mitigation. The great potential of the eight studied plant species for efficient removal of potentially toxic elements is highlighted and their implementation into NBS frameworks is recommended.
C1 [Petrova, Slaveya; Velcheva, Iliana; Nikolov, Bogdan] Plovdiv Univ Paisii Hilendarski, Fac Biol, Dept Ecol & Environm Conservat, Plovdiv 4000, Bulgaria.
   [Petrova, Slaveya] Agr Univ, Fac Plant Protect & Agroecol, Dept Microbiol & Ecol Biotechnol, Plovdiv 4000, Bulgaria.
C3 Plovdiv University; Agricultural University of Plovdiv
RP Petrova, S (corresponding author), Plovdiv Univ Paisii Hilendarski, Fac Biol, Dept Ecol & Environm Conservat, Plovdiv 4000, Bulgaria.; Petrova, S (corresponding author), Agr Univ, Fac Plant Protect & Agroecol, Dept Microbiol & Ecol Biotechnol, Plovdiv 4000, Bulgaria.
EM slaveya_petrova@uni-plovdiv.bg; anivel@uni-plovdiv.bg;
   nikolov81bg@uni-plovdiv.bg
RI Petrova, Slaveya/AAF-9372-2020
OI Petrova, Slaveya/0000-0001-9868-070X
FU European Union-NextGenerationEU [BG-RRP-2.004-0001-C01]
FX This study was financed by the European Union-NextGenerationEU, through
   the NationalRecovery and Resilience Plan of the Republic of Bulgaria,
   project No. BG-RRP-2.004-0001-C01.
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NR 73
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 5
U2 5
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 6
AR 928
DI 10.3390/f15060928
PG 14
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA WQ7C8
UT WOS:001256393800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Avalon-Cullen, C
   Al Suhili, R
   Newlands, NK
   Caudill, C
   Hill, H
   Spence-Hemmings, J
   Enenkel, M
AF Avalon-Cullen, Cheila
   Al Suhili, Rafea
   Newlands, Nathaniel K.
   Caudill, Christy
   Hill, Harvey
   Spence-Hemmings, Jaqueline
   Enenkel, Markus
TI ENSO Impacts on Jamaican Rainfall Patterns: Insights from CHIRPS
   High-Resolution Data for Disaster Risk Management
SO GEOHAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE ENSO; El Nino; La Nina; CHIRPS; rainfall; disaster preparedness; climate
   change adaptation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; PREDICTION; MODELS
AB This study examines the influence of the El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on Jamaica's rainfall patterns, leveraging CHIRPS data from 1981 to 2021 in 370 locations. Our analysis reveals a distinct ENSO imprint on rainfall, with La Nina phases showing a consistently higher probability of exceeding various rainfall thresholds compared to El Nino. Notably, La Nina increases the likelihood of heavier rainfall, particularly in the wet seasons, with probabilities of exceeding 200 mm reaching up to 50% during wet season II. Spatially, the probability of total monthly rainfall (TMR) during La Nina is elevated in the northeastern regions, suggesting regional vulnerability to excess rainfall. Additionally, during El Nino, the correlation between TMR and the maximum air temperature (Tmax) is significantly stronger, indicating a positive and more pronounced relationship between higher temperatures and rainfall, with correlation coefficients ranging from 0.39 to 0.80. Wind speed and evapotranspiration show a negligible influence on TMR during both ENSO phases, maintaining stable correlation patterns with only slight variations. The results of this study underscore the necessity for differentiated regional strategies in water resource management and disaster preparedness, tailored to the unique climatic characteristics imposed by ENSO variability. These insights contribute to a refined understanding of climate impacts, essential for enhancing resilience and adaptive capacity in Jamaica and other small island developing states.
C1 [Avalon-Cullen, Cheila] CUNY, CUNY Remote Sensing Earth Syst Inst, Bronx Community Coll, Grad Ctr, 365 5th Ave, New York, NY 10016 USA.
   [Al Suhili, Rafea] CUNY, City Coll New York, Civil Engn Dept, 160 Convent Ave, New York, NY 10031 USA.
   [Newlands, Nathaniel K.] Agr & Agri Food Canada, Sci & Technol Branch, Summerland Res & Dev Ctr, 4200 Highway 97, Summerland, BC V0N 1Z0, Canada.
   [Caudill, Christy] Carleton Univ, Geomatics & Cartog Res Ctr GCRC, 1125 Colonel Dr, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada.
   [Hill, Harvey] Johnson Shoyama Grad Sch Publ Policy, 101 Diefenbaker Pl, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5B8, Canada.
   [Spence-Hemmings, Jaqueline] Meteorol Serv Jama, 65 3-4 Halfway Tree Rd, Kingston, Jamaica.
   [Enenkel, Markus] World Bank, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
C3 City University of New York (CUNY) System; City University of New York
   (CUNY) System; City College of New York (CUNY); Agriculture & Agri Food
   Canada; Carleton University; University of Saskatchewan; The World Bank
RP Avalon-Cullen, C (corresponding author), CUNY, CUNY Remote Sensing Earth Syst Inst, Bronx Community Coll, Grad Ctr, 365 5th Ave, New York, NY 10016 USA.
EM ccullen@gradcenter.cuny.edu; ralsuhili@ccny.cuny.edu;
   nathaniel.newlands@agr.gc.ca; ccaudill@gcrc.carleton.ca;
   harveyhill@sasktel.net; j.spence@metservice.gov.jm;
   menenkel@worldbank.org
RI Newlands, Nathaniel/E-8433-2012; newlands, nathaniel/C-5939-2009
OI Caudill, Christy/0000-0003-2587-1147; Cullen, Cheila
   Avalon/0000-0001-6116-4912; newlands, nathaniel/0000-0002-3398-2245
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NR 38
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 0
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-795X
J9 GEOHAZARDS-BASEL
JI Geohazards
PD MAR
PY 2024
VL 5
IS 1
BP 91
EP 111
DI 10.3390/geohazards5010005
PG 21
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geology
GA MG7L1
UT WOS:001192536700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Minjauw, F
   Rasheduzzaman, M
   Huang, JX
   Lozano, A
   Baumgartner, P
   Dorward, P
   Clarkson, G
   Cohen, A
AF Minjauw, Fanny
   Rasheduzzaman, Md
   Huang, Jiexuan
   Lozano, Alicia
   Baumgartner, Philipp
   Dorward, Peter
   Clarkson, Graham
   Cohen, Alasdair
TI Climate information access and use in East and Southern Africa:
   identifying linkages between smallholder household characteristics and
   climate change adaptation
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate information; climate change; adaptation; food security;
   resilience; Sub-Saharan Africa
ID MULTIDIMENSIONAL POVERTY; FARMERS; VULNERABILITY; AGRICULTURE;
   CONSTRAINTS; FORECASTS; SERVICES; NEEDS
AB Climate change adversely impacts the livelihoods of smallholder farmers across East and Southern Africa. Climate-related information is assumed to support smallholder farmer decision-making and use of adaptive practices as a means to improve livelihoods, resiliency and levels of food security. However, the value of climate information provision and its role in promoting adaptive practices remains poorly understood. We examined smallholder household access to, and use of, climate information. Survey data was collected from 5322 households across Eswatini, Kenya, Lesotho, Tanzania and Zimbabwe using the Multidimensional Poverty Assessment Tool. Overall, the majority of households regularly accessed at least one source of climate information, primarily via radio (64.9%, n = 3453). Our statistical models showed that households with relatively better access to credit and land tenure were more likely to receive climate information (p < 0.01 and p < 0.001, respectively, n = 1421), and of those, households who reported observing past climate-related changes were more likely to actually use climate information (p < 0.05, n = 1097). Secure land tenure was positively associated with information use, though not statistically significant. Findings from our study offer guidance for improving the targeting and delivery of climate information programmes and policies, and indicate that the assumed benefits of climate information provision should be more rigorously evaluated.
C1 [Minjauw, Fanny; Dorward, Peter; Clarkson, Graham] Univ Reading, Sch Agr Policy & Dev, Reading, England.
   [Rasheduzzaman, Md; Cohen, Alasdair] Virginia Tech, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, 205 Duck Pond Dr, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA.
   [Huang, Jiexuan] Univ Penn, Grad Sch Educ, Philadelphia, PA USA.
   [Lozano, Alicia] Virginia Tech, Ctr Biostat & Hlth Data Sci, Roanoke, VA USA.
   [Baumgartner, Philipp] Int Fund Agr Dev, Rome, Italy.
C3 University of Reading; Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State
   University; University of Pennsylvania; Virginia Polytechnic Institute &
   State University
RP Cohen, A (corresponding author), Virginia Tech, Dept Populat Hlth Sci, 205 Duck Pond Dr, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA.
EM alasdair.cohen@linacre.oxon.org
RI Clarkson, Graham/ABF-4508-2020; Rasheduzzaman, Md/AAD-8701-2022
OI Dorward, Peter/0000-0003-2831-3693; Clarkson, Graham/0000-0002-4342-4773
FU IFAD's
FX Data collection was funded by IFAD's country-level partners as part of
   their programmatic operations. The funders had no role in the design of
   this study/analysis.
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NR 69
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 5
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD SEP 13
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 8
BP 633
EP +
DI 10.1080/17565529.2024.2307403
EA FEB 2024
PG 98
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA G8K3B
UT WOS:001163639000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Comer, PJ
   Seddon, E
AF Comer, Patrick J.
   Seddon, Emily
TI Climate Change Adaptation Zones for Terrestrial Ecosystems-A
   Demonstration with Pinyon-Juniper Woodlands in the USA
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE HCCVI; climate change vulnerability; adaptation strategies;
   transformation; resilience; resistance
ID GREAT-BASIN; BIODIVERSITY; DISTURBANCE; RESILIENCE; VEGETATION; INVASION
AB Decision support tools are needed to ensure that appropriately timed and place-based adaptation is deployed in natural resource policy, planning, and management. Driven by accelerating climate change, analytical frameworks for adaptation are emerging to assist with these decisions. There is a natural relationship between climate change vulnerability assessments and adaptation responses, where low to high relative climate change vulnerability suggests "resistance" to "transformation" strategies for adaptation. The NatureServe Habitat Climate Change Vulnerability Index (HCCVI) embodies a process for ecosystem assessment that integrates both climate and non-climate data and knowledge to document the relative vulnerability of a given habitat or ecosystem type. The framework addresses climate exposure and ecosystem resilience. Since most measures of exposure and resilience are mapped, they can be utilized to create map zones that suggest climate-smart adaptation. We applied the HCCVI to a cross-section of 10 pinyon pine and juniper woodland ecosystem types in western North America. We then demonstrate the application of these outputs to adaptation zonation. Climate exposure defines relative adaptation strategies, while measures of resilience suggest specific priorities for habitat restoration and maintenance. By the mid-21st century, 3% and 23% of the combined area of these types in the United States was categorized as Directed Transformation or Autonomous Transformation, respectively. In just 10% of the combined areas for these types, Passive Resistance strategies are suggested.
C1 [Comer, Patrick J.; Seddon, Emily] NCAR, Boulder, CO 80305 USA.
C3 National Center Atmospheric Research (NCAR) - USA
RP Comer, PJ (corresponding author), NCAR, Boulder, CO 80305 USA.
EM comerecology@gmail.com
OI Comer, Patrick/0000-0002-5869-2105
FU We wish to acknowledge the support of U.S. Department of Interior
   agencies, primarily the Bureau of Land Management, South-Central Climate
   Adaptation Science Center, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and
   Department of Defense (through the Center for Environm; U.S. Department
   of Interior agencies; Bureau of Land Management, South-Central Climate
   Adaptation Science Center, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Department of
   Defense
FX We wish to acknowledge the support of U.S. Department of Interior
   agencies, primarily the Bureau of Land Management, South-Central Climate
   Adaptation Science Center, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and
   Department of Defense (through the Center for Environmental Management
   on Military Lands at Colorado State University) who have provided
   resources for this research. Numerous experts have provided reviews and
   insights throughout the design of this method and its implementation.
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NR 36
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 4
U2 12
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD AUG
PY 2023
VL 14
IS 8
AR 1533
DI 10.3390/f14081533
PG 14
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA Q2EW5
UT WOS:001055710900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Imelda, I
   Mulyo, JH
   Suryantini, A
   Masyhuri, M
AF Imelda, Imelda
   Mulyo, Jangkung Handoyo
   Suryantini, Any
   Masyhuri, Masyhuri
TI Assessing the determinant factors of risk strategy adoption to mitigate
   various risks: An experience from smallholder rubber farmers in West
   Kalimantan Province, Indonesia
SO OPEN AGRICULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE multinomial logit model; risk perception; risk strategy adoption; rubber
   farmers
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; AGRICULTURAL RISKS; PERCEPTIONS; MANAGEMENT;
   DIVERSIFICATION; REGION; SYSTEMS; AGROBIODIVERSITY; XISHUANGBANNA;
   EXPANSION
AB Over the past decade, smallholder rubber farming experienced significant issues related to risks of rainy season, rubber diseases, and price decreases. The risk exposure will reduce agricultural productivity, income, and sustainability. Farmers are expected to mitigate various risks by adopting the appropriate risk strategy. Efforts to support the risk strategy adoption are constrained by the lack of scientific research in rubber farming, especially for simultaneous risk strategy adoption. This study aims to identify the risk strategy adoption in rubber farming and analyse the determinant factors by considering farmers' socioeconomic, rubber farm characteristics, and risk perception. The data were collected from 200 rubber farmers in West Kalimantan, Indonesia, and analysed using a multinomial logit model. The study results show that the most selected strategy was income diversification. The multinomial logit model indicates that farmers' age, family members, rubber age, rubber clones, and rainy season risk perception positively affect the adoption of risk strategy. In contrast, experience, farm area, and farm distance have a negative effect. The results also indicate that family members, farm area, and farm distance variables significantly affect all choices of risk strategy adoption. The results of this study suggest several implications for government and policymakers in providing assistance and counselling, capital assistance, input access, and improving transportation, road access, and communication.
C1 [Mulyo, Jangkung Handoyo; Suryantini, Any; Masyhuri, Masyhuri] Univ Gadjah Mada, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Socioecon, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
   [Imelda, Imelda] Univ Tanjungpura, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Socioecon, West Kalimantan, Indonesia.
   [Imelda, Imelda] Univ Gadjah Mada, Fac Agr, Doctoral Program Agr Socioecon, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
C3 Gadjah Mada University; Universitas Tanjungpura; Gadjah Mada University
RP Mulyo, JH (corresponding author), Univ Gadjah Mada, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Socioecon, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
EM imelda@faperta.untan.ac.id; JHandoyoM@ugm.ac.id;
   any.suryantini@ugm.ac.id; dr_masyhuri@yahoo.com
RI , Imelda/HOC-8779-2023
OI , Imelda/0000-0002-0830-8937
FU Indonesian Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology
FX This study was financed with sources of Indonesian Ministry of
   Education, Culture, Research, and Technology.
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NR 95
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 4
PU DE GRUYTER POLAND SP Z O O
PI WARSAW
PA BOGUMILA ZUGA 32A STR, 01-811 WARSAW, MAZOVIA, POLAND
SN 2391-9531
J9 OPEN AGRIC
JI Open Agric.
PD MAY 16
PY 2023
VL 8
IS 1
AR 20220196
DI 10.1515/opag-2022-0196
PG 14
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Agriculture
GA G4RP0
UT WOS:000989048200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cox, B
   Reichelt-Brushett, A
   Taffs, K
   Smith, R
AF Cox, Brendan
   Reichelt-Brushett, Amanda
   Taffs, Kathryn
   Smith, Ross
TI Plasticity of upper thermal limits of Australian <i>Paratya</i> spp.
   (Decapoda, Atyidae) and considerations of climate-change adaptation
SO MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE acclimatisation; climate change; distribution; macroinvertebrates;
   plasticity; shrimp; stream temperature; thermal tolerance
ID STREAM TEMPERATURES; DISSOLVED-OXYGEN; LIFE-HISTORY; RESPONSES;
   TOLERANCE; ACCLIMATION; INVERTEBRATES; AMPHIPOD; ECOLOGY
AB Context. The ability of ectothermic stream invertebrates to adapt to the predicted increases in mean and extreme stream temperatures is crucial to ensuring they continue to exist. Aims. To examine the plasticity of thermal limits of Australian Paratya spp. (Decapoda, Atyidae) from streams in eastern New South Wales (NSW). We hypothesised that the upper lethal temperature (ULT, as indicated by the median lethal temperature, LT50) would be higher for warm water-acclimated shrimp individuals than for winter-acclimatised shrimp individuals because of the importance of acclimatisation temperature. Methods. Controlled experiments were undertaken to determine the ULT by using ramping assays for winter field-acclimatised and warm water laboratory-acclimated Paratya spp. Key results. Warm water-acclimated shrimp individuals demonstrated a significantly higher LT50 of 36.1 degrees C than did winter-acclimatised shrimp individuals at 34 degrees C. Paratya spp. exhibited a limited plasticity for acclimation to warmer temperatures. Conclusions. Results demonstrated the potential vulnerability of ectothermic stream invertebrates to climate change if stream temperatures increase as predicted and thermal thresholds are exceeded. Implications. Understanding the ULT of stream invertebrates helps predict their ability to respond to temperature variability and response to climate change. Increasing resilience through target management of resorting riparian vegetation for shade and securing environmental flows may reduce the impacts of stream warming.
C1 [Cox, Brendan; Reichelt-Brushett, Amanda; Taffs, Kathryn; Smith, Ross] Southern Cross Univ, Fac Sci & Engn, Lismore, NSW, Australia.
   [Taffs, Kathryn] Water Sci, NSW Dept Planning & Environm, Ballina, NSW, Australia.
   [Smith, Ross] Hydrobiol Pty Ltd, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
C3 Southern Cross University
RP Cox, B (corresponding author), Southern Cross Univ, Fac Sci & Engn, Lismore, NSW, Australia.
EM brendan.cox@scu.edu.au
RI Smith, Ross/ACO-8618-2022; Cox, brendan/HMO-8667-2023;
   Reichelt-Brushett, Amanda/Q-8348-2017; Taffs, Kathryn/Q-4802-2017
OI Reichelt-Brushett, Amanda/0000-0002-5212-7586; Cox,
   Brendan/0000-0002-1413-4726; Smith, Ross/0000-0002-3540-1133; Taffs,
   Kathryn/0000-0001-7675-0420
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NR 58
TC 0
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 7
PU CSIRO PUBLISHING
PI CLAYTON SOUTH
PA Private Bag 10, CLAYTON SOUTH, VIC 3169, AUSTRALIA
SN 1323-1650
EI 1448-6059
J9 MAR FRESHWATER RES
JI Mar. Freshw. Res.
PY 2023
VL 74
IS 6
BP 491
EP 499
DI 10.1071/MF22260
EA MAR 2023
PG 9
WC Fisheries; Limnology; Marine & Freshwater Biology; Oceanography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology; Oceanography
GA D1GC5
UT WOS:000949112800001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Munoz-Jofre, J
   Hinojosa, S
   Mascle-Allemand, AL
   Temprano, J
AF Munoz-Jofre, Jaime
   Hinojosa, Sergio
   Mascle-Allemand, Anne-Laure
   Temprano, Javier
TI A selectivity index for public-private partnership projects in the urban
   water and sanitation sector in Latin America and the caribbean
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Public-private partnership; Water supply; Sanitation; Public utilities;
   Critical success factors
ID CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS; SUPPLY PROJECTS; CONCESSIONAIRE SELECTION;
   INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS; DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; RISK-FACTORS; PPP;
   PERFORMANCE; GHANA; DETERMINANTS
AB The rapid urban development, the Agenda 2030, the climate change adaptation and the COVID 19 crisis high-light the need to increase investment in public infrastructure and improve water supply and sanitation services. For this, an alternative to traditional public procurement is the participation of the private sector under the public-private partnership (PPP) model. The objective of this article is to develop a tool based on critical success factors (CSFs) that allows for evaluation during early stages of the convenience of developing a PPP project for W&S in urban areas of Latin America and the Caribbean. The index was developed based on literature review (779 variables), review of cases (20 variables) and expert opinion to assign them an estimated value of importance. The results were analysed by exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, selecting 17 main var-iables grouped into 6 CSFs, the most relevant of which are Convenience, Certainty, Leadership, Attraction, Performance and Reliability. The application of this index allows an early assessment of the feasibility of a PPP project and/or the selection of the alternatives with the best chances of success. On the other hand, this study contributes to the international discussion on the most relevant elements related to the success of PPP in W&S projects.
C1 [Munoz-Jofre, Jaime; Temprano, Javier] Univ Cantabria, Dept Ciencias & Tecn Agua & Medio Ambiente, Av Castros Sn, Santander 39005, Cantabria, Spain.
   [Hinojosa, Sergio; Mascle-Allemand, Anne-Laure] PIAPPEM Inst, 4201 Cathedral Av,Ap 418E NW, Washington, DC 20016 USA.
C3 Universidad de Cantabria
RP Munoz-Jofre, J (corresponding author), Univ Cantabria, Dept Ciencias & Tecn Agua & Medio Ambiente, Av Castros Sn, Santander 39005, Cantabria, Spain.
EM jmj883@alumnos.unican.es
RI Temprano, Javier/JCO-1858-2023; Muñoz Jofré, Jaime/IXE-7351-2023;
   Temprano, Javier/F-3943-2016
OI Munoz-Jofre, Jaime/0000-0003-3431-6014; Temprano,
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NR 84
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 30
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4797
EI 1095-8630
J9 J ENVIRON MANAGE
JI J. Environ. Manage.
PD JUN 1
PY 2023
VL 335
AR 117564
DI 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.117564
EA MAR 2023
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA A0LE2
UT WOS:000952122800001
PM 36878155
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Porfiriev, BN
   Shirov, AA
AF Porfiriev, B. N.
   Shirov, A. A.
TI Strategies for Socioeconomic Development with Low Greenhouse Gas
   Emissions: Scenarios and Realities for Russia
SO HERALD OF THE RUSSIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE climate policy; climate change adaptation; energy transition; economic
   dynamics; greenhouse gases
AB This article is a supplemented and updated version of the report at the meeting of the Presidium of the Russian Academy of Sciences with the participation of the leadership of the Russian Ministry of Economic Development on September 21, 2021. The authors analyze the main opportunities and risks of implementing the Strategy for the Socioeconomic Development of the Russian Federation with Low Greenhouse Gas Emissions until 2050. The key role of the global climate agenda, determined by the leading countries of the world, primarily the European Union, in shaping the institutional environment that influences decision making in the field of national economic policy, is emphasized. It is argued that there is no automatic positive relationship between the race for so-called carbon neutrality of the economy by 2050, prescribed by the global climate agenda, and the achievement of the sustainable development goals set by the United Nations. Principles and approaches to reduce the risks of decarbonization of the economy are formulated. These provide for the integration of a set of measures to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions with those to adapt communities and economic systems to climate change, and harmonize the measures above with the national goals of long-term sustainable development. Estimates of the economic effects of implementation of various scenarios of the decarbonization of the national economy and the associated risks of the global energy transition for Russia are introduced.
C1 [Porfiriev, B. N.; Shirov, A. A.] Russian Acad Sci, Inst Econ Forecasting, Moscow, Russia.
   [Porfiriev, B. N.] RAS Inst Econ Forecasting RAS IEF, Moscow, Russia.
C3 Russian Academy of Sciences
RP Porfiriev, BN (corresponding author), Russian Acad Sci, Inst Econ Forecasting, Moscow, Russia.; Porfiriev, BN (corresponding author), RAS Inst Econ Forecasting RAS IEF, Moscow, Russia.
EM b_porfiriev@mail.ru; schir@ecfor.ru
RI Shirov, Alexander/I-6052-2018
FU Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation
   [075-15-2020-804, 13.1902.21.0016]
FX This article was prepared within the framework of a grant provided in
   the form of a subsidy for conducting large scientific projects in
   priority areas of scientific and technological development within the
   subprogram "Basic Scientific Research for Long-Term Development and
   Ensuring the Competitiveness of Society and the State" of the state
   program of the Russian Federation "Scientific and Technological
   Development of the Russian Federation," the project "Socioeconomic
   Development of Asian Russia Based on the Synergy of Transport
   Accessibility, Systemic Knowledge of the Natural Resource Potential, and
   the Expanding Space of Interregional Interactions." Agreement with the
   Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation no.
   075-15-2020-804 (internal grant no. 13.1902.21.0016).
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NR 19
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 8
PU MAIK NAUKA/INTERPERIODICA/SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013-1578 USA
SN 1019-3316
EI 1555-6492
J9 HER RUSS ACAD SCI+
JI Her. Russ. Acad. Sci.
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 92
IS 3
BP 230
EP 238
DI 10.1134/S1019331622030030
PG 9
WC History & Philosophy Of Science; Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC History & Philosophy of Science; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 3X6GQ
UT WOS:000843137500002
PM 36035025
OA Bronze, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Koç, G
   Uzmay, A
AF Koc, Gokce
   Uzmay, Ayse
TI Determinants of dairy farmers' likelihood of climate change adaptation
   in the Thrace Region of Turkey
SO ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Perceptions; Determinants of adaptation; Adaptation
   methods; Logistic regression; Dairy farming; Thrace region
ID FARMING SYSTEMS; CHANGE BELIEFS; CHANGE IMPACTS; PERCEPTIONS;
   STRATEGIES; VARIABILITY; AWARENESS; ATTITUDES; RESPONSES; DECISION
AB The adverse effects of climate change on agricultural production systems threaten food security. In terms of dairy farming, it affects milk yield, quality, animal health, growth, reproduction, forage crops and rangelands. These effects are not only technically, but also socio-economically important, and adaptation is necessary to minimise losses. In this context, the purposes of this research are threefold. The first is to demonstrate how dairy farmers in the Thrace region are affected by climate change; the second is to investigate the adaptation methods they use to minimise farm-level negative effects and finally, to analyse the farm and farmer specific factors that determine the likelihood of adaptation. A total of 140 interviews with dairy farmers were carried out and logistic regression was used to investigate factors affecting their adaptation behaviour. One-third of the farmers changed the feed ration and using supplementary nutrients, while one-fourth of them used cooling systems. The logistic regression model showed that whether the farmer has non-agricultural income, education level, farm-scale, knowledge of climate change and whether children work in the farm were statistically significant factors for adaptation. In conclusion, extension services are recommended to inform smallholder farmers and raise awareness for adaptation by the middle-aged and elderly farmers.
C1 [Koc, Gokce; Uzmay, Ayse] Ege Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Econ, TR-35100 Izmir, Bornova, Turkey.
C3 Ege University
RP Koç, G (corresponding author), Ege Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Econ, TR-35100 Izmir, Bornova, Turkey.
EM gkc_add@hotmail.com; ayse.uzmay@ege.edu.tr
RI KOC, Gokce/M-1524-2015
OI KOC, Gokce/0000-0002-3719-3390
FU Ege University Scientific Research Projects Coordination Unit
   [2016-ZRF-054]
FX This study is supported by Ege University Scientific Research Projects
   Coordination Unit (Project Number 2016-ZRF-054).
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NR 103
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 34
U2 85
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1387-585X
EI 1573-2975
J9 ENVIRON DEV SUSTAIN
JI Environ. Dev. Sustain.
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 24
IS 8
BP 9907
EP 9928
DI 10.1007/s10668-021-01850-x
EA SEP 2021
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 2O0ZH
UT WOS:000702170700002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kim, BJ
   Jeong, S
   Chung, JB
AF Kim, Byeong Je
   Jeong, Seunghoo
   Chung, Ji-Bum
TI Research trends in vulnerability studies from 2000 to 2019: Findings
   from a bibliometric analysis
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Vulnerability; Research trend; Bibliometric analysis; Topic network; Web
   of science; Disaster risk management
ID SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; CLIMATE-CHANGE; RESILIENCE; COLLABORATION; RISK;
   PERCEPTIONS; GEOGRAPHY; NETWORKS; SCIENCE; MODEL
AB Vulnerability is a principal concept widely applied in disaster risk management and related studies to understand disaster risks. Vulnerability is understood as having various meanings ranging from direct disaster damage to indirect factors that affect damage, such as exposure, susceptibility, and adaptation. As no universal definition of vulnerability exists, the concept has become diversified, which has led to considerable confusion and contention among scholars. Accordingly, this study conducts a bibliometric analysis to investigate the historical changes in disaster risk management?s vulnerability concept and its related fields between 2000 and 2019. This work collected bibliographic data by searching for disaster-related publications with the keyword vulnerability through an online database. The topic networks were constructed by using collected bibliographic data to identify research trends of vulnerability-related studies. This study found that the number of vulnerability-related publications increased rapidly from 2010. Among the various topics, climate change, adaptation, and resilience have become important research subjects in vulnerability-related studies, while topics related to structural mitigation had received less attention regarding the number of publications by the mid-2010s. These spotlighted topics shifted toward adaptation and resilience following international agreements. The proposed method can help an efficient understanding of the research trends in vulnerability-related studies. The analyzed trend is expected to provide scholars in this domain with a better insight into vulnerability studies.
C1 [Kim, Byeong Je; Chung, Ji-Bum] Ulsan Natl Inst Sci & Technol UNIST, Sch Urban & Environm Engn, Ulsan, South Korea.
   [Jeong, Seunghoo] Korea Railrd Res Inst, Adv Railrd Civil Engn Div, Uiwang, South Korea.
C3 Ulsan National Institute of Science & Technology (UNIST); Korea Railroad
   Research Institute (KRRI)
RP Chung, JB (corresponding author), Ulsan Natl Inst Sci & Technol UNIST, Sch Urban & Environm Engn, Ulsan, South Korea.
EM learning@unist.ac.kr
RI Kim, Byeong-Je/IVU-9214-2023; Chung, Ji-Bum/AAH-7479-2021
OI Kim, Byeong-Je/0000-0002-9149-0708; Jeong, Seunghoo/0000-0003-2594-3710
FU Korea Statistics Research Institute; Fundamental Technology Development
   Program for Extreme Disaster Response - Ministry of Interior and Safety
   (MOST) [2020-MOIS31-013]; National Research Council of Science &
   Technology (NST) grant by the Korea government (MSIT) [CCL-2020-04-KRRI]
FX This work was supported by the Korea Statistics Research Institute, the
   Fundamental Technology Development Program for Extreme Disaster Response
   funded by Ministry of Interior and Safety (MOST) (Grant No.
   2020-MOIS31-013) and the National Research Council of Science &
   Technology (NST) grant by the Korea government (MSIT) (No.
   CCL-2020-04-KRRI).
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NR 74
TC 34
Z9 34
U1 1
U2 27
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD APR 1
PY 2021
VL 56
AR 102141
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2021.102141
EA MAR 2021
PG 13
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA RH8EG
UT WOS:000636444100005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Akugre, FA
   Owusu, K
   Wrigley-Asante, C
   Lawson, ET
AF Akugre, Francis A.
   Owusu, Kwadwo
   Wrigley-Asante, Charlotte
   Lawson, Elaine T.
TI How do land tenure arrangements influence adaptive responses of farmers?
   A study of crop farmers from semi-arid Ghana
SO GEOJOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Land tenure arrangements; Land tenure rights; Adaptive responses;
   Semi-arid Ghana; Climate variability and change
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; HOUSEHOLD FOOD SECURITY; SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA;
   SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; PROPERTY-RIGHTS; CUSTOMARY TENURE; WEST-AFRICA;
   IMPACTS; DETERMINANTS; AGRICULTURE
AB This study investigated land tenure potential to influence farmers' adaptive responses to climate change. A quantitative approach was employed to determine how crop farmers' farmland tenure arrangements influence their adaptive responses to climate change impacts in the Lawra District of semi-arid north western Ghana. Field data were gathered from 248 farming households between January and May, 2017 through a multi-stage sampling procedure. About 55.2%, 45.6%, 44.4%, 80.6% and 64.5% of the farmers adopted early maturing crop varieties, zai farming techniques, agroforestry, crop rotation and adjustment in planting dates respectively as adaptive choices to the impacts of climate change. Binary logistic regression models showed that farmland size, years of land occupancy or usage, method of land acquisition and perceived level of farmland tenure security significantly (p <= 0.05) influenced farmers adaptive responses. We recommend that, government and non-governmental organizations should always consider farmers land tenure arrangements particularly regarding how they access or acquire their farmlands, the size of their farmlands and how they perceive the tenure security of those lands in the design and implementation of adaptation policies and programmes targeted at farmers so as to enhance sustainable adaptation.
C1 [Akugre, Francis A.] Univ Ghana, Coll Humanities, Ctr Climate Change & Sustainabil Studies, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
   [Owusu, Kwadwo; Wrigley-Asante, Charlotte] Univ Ghana, Coll Humanities, Dept Geog & Resource Dev, PO Pox LG 72, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
   [Lawson, Elaine T.] Univ Ghana, Coll Basic & Appl Sci, Inst Environm & Sanitat Studies IESS, Accra, Ghana.
C3 University of Ghana; University of Ghana; University of Ghana
RP Akugre, FA (corresponding author), Univ Ghana, Coll Humanities, Ctr Climate Change & Sustainabil Studies, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
EM awaafofrancis@gmail.com
RI Owusu, Kwadwo/R-5803-2019; Akugre, Francis/GWM-4888-2022
OI Akugre, Francis Awaafo/0000-0002-5064-3202; Owusu,
   Kwadwo/0000-0003-1322-0566; Wrigley-Asante,
   Charlotte/0000-0002-7538-7452
FU Building Capacity to Meet Climate Change Challenge (B4C) project,
   University of Ghana; Open Society Foundation (OSF); ASSAR (Adaptation at
   Scale in Semi-Arid Regions) Project, University of Ghana
FX The researchers are thankful to the Building Capacity to Meet Climate
   Change Challenge (B4C) project, University of Ghana and the Open Society
   Foundation (OSF) for providing funding for this research. Special thanks
   also go to ASSAR (Adaptation at Scale in Semi-Arid Regions) Project,
   University of Ghana for financially supporting this research.
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NR 112
TC 9
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U1 0
U2 12
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0343-2521
EI 1572-9893
J9 GEOJOURNAL
JI GeoJournal
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 87
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BP 2255
EP 2270
DI 10.1007/s10708-021-10372-y
EA JAN 2021
PG 16
WC Geography
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geography
GA 1S5PM
UT WOS:000607358100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Herath, HMM
   Wijesekera, NTS
AF Herath, H. M. M.
   Wijesekera, N. T. S.
GP IOP
TI A Methodological Framework for Operationalization of Flood Risk
   Management
SO 5TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING AND
   SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (CEESD 2020)
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 5th International Conference on Environmental Engineering and
   Sustainable Development (CEESD)
CY DEC 04, 2020
CL Xishuangbanna, PEOPLES R CHINA
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; WATER MANAGEMENT; DECISION-MAKING;
   VULNERABILITY; UNCERTAINTY; PERCEPTION; GOVERNANCE; STRATEGY; SUPPORT;
   RHINE
AB Flood risk management has undergone significant transformations during the recent past. Climate change is very likely to bring a higher probability of extrememe weather events. Climate change is a significant challenge for urban growth in costal delta cities. Transformation of floodplains for urban development is a vital component of flood exposure, and changes in this component can lead to variations in flood risk. Socio ecological system conceptualizations suggests that resilience is the key to managing complex systems and to reduce vulnerability which is a result from the inherent uncertainty of flood risk. Theoretical understanding of flood risk management has advanced over the years but it is still seen that there are shortcomings in the operationalization concepts and methods. One of the main reason is lack of a common framework for clear recognition and understanding of the components of flood risk management for all stakeholders. Therefore, this research has questioned the current status of flood risk management and provide recommendations for operationalization. The Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) is a multi-criteria analysis technique that can be applied for structuring of complex decision-making problems involving multiple stakeholders, and scenarios. Therefore, this paper has developed a solution model for structuring the complexity of flood risk management and increase the certainty of the objectives of stakeholders. Result of the study has highlighted the main criteria and the sub criteria to structure the complexity of the planning process for operationalization of flood risk management.
C1 [Herath, H. M. M.; Wijesekera, N. T. S.] Univ Moratuwa, Dept Civil Engn, Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
C3 University Moratuwa
RP Herath, HMM (corresponding author), Univ Moratuwa, Dept Civil Engn, Moratuwa, Sri Lanka.
EM malani@uom.lk
OI Wijesekera, N.T.Sohan/0000-0003-0964-4331
FU Senate Research Committee (SRC) Grant University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka
   [SRC/ST/2016/19]; SRC Conference & Publishing Support Grant
FX Authors would like to acknowledge the Senate Research Committee (SRC)
   Grant (SRC/ST/2016/19) University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka and SRC
   Conference & Publishing Support Grant for funding.
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PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2021
VL 691
AR 012018
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/691/1/012018
PG 11
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Engineering, Civil; Environmental Sciences
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA BR7NF
UT WOS:000668559100018
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gralepois, M
AF Gralepois, Mathilde
TI What Can We Learn from Planning Instruments in Flood Prevention?
   Comparative Illustration to Highlight the Challenges of Governance in
   Europe
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE flood prevention; policy instruments; spatial planning; governance;
   resilience
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK-MANAGEMENT; POLICY; INITIATIVES;
   NETHERLANDS; STABILITY; FRANCE
AB Studying the selection of planning instruments in flood prevention can be critical to gain a better understanding of governance. This choice is underestimated in the flood management literature. This paper fills a knowledge gap in flood management governance by examining the rationales for the choice of instruments. The study is grounded on a comparative illustration of planning instruments in flood prevention in three European countries: England, France and the Netherlands. Flood prevention through spatial planning is a specific example, as the implementation of the Floods Directive has reactivated the role of spatial planning in urban agglomerations. The choice of instruments is never neutral. In the field of flood management, alignment among strategies is supposed to lead to resilience. Instruments should be aligned and coherent. Is that the case? The article explains the challenges of governance configured by a conflict between the spatial planning policy steered by local authorities and the risk prevention policy led by national authorities. This model is further complicated by the tension between the preference for legal, technical or scientific instruments, and the difference in professional culture between planning and prevention. The selection of instrument shows that if their conflicts are exacerbated to debates on variables or parameters, it is because there is no political agreement on the balance between development and security.
C1 [Gralepois, Mathilde] Univ Tours, Engn Sch, Dept Planning & Environm, 35 Allee Ferdinand de Lesseps, F-37200 Tours, France.
C3 Universite de Tours
RP Gralepois, M (corresponding author), Univ Tours, Engn Sch, Dept Planning & Environm, 35 Allee Ferdinand de Lesseps, F-37200 Tours, France.
EM mathilde.gralepois@univ-tours.fr
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NR 91
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 3
U2 25
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD JUN
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 6
AR 1841
DI 10.3390/w12061841
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA MN5LI
UT WOS:000550882400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mihiretu, A
   Okoyo, EN
   Lemma, T
AF Mihiretu, Ademe
   Okoyo, Eric Ndemo
   Lemma, Tesfaye
TI Small holder farmers' perception and response mechanisms to climate
   change: Lesson from Tekeze lowland goat and sorghum livelihood zone,
   Ethiopia
SO COGENT FOOD & AGRICULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; livelihood; perception; response-options; Tekeze lowland
ID VULNERABILITY
AB Though climate change is a global agenda since the last few decades, local and regional changes are not well documented in third-world nations. Therefore, understanding the local circumstances of climate change is vital to exert context specific responses to allay its adverse effects. This study hence assessed small holder farmers' perception and response mechanisms to climate change and their determinants in Tekeze lowland goat and sorghum livelihood zone, Northeast Ethiopia. Data collected from 260 sample respondents were analyzed in descriptive statistics and econometric model. Results revealed that 86.5% of the respondents observed changes in main climatic patterns, whereas 92.3% of them recognized variability in daily weather. Indeed, 76.8% and 83.5% of respondents perceived a rising temperature and decreasing rainfall, respectively. This finding is in line with the regression results of meteorological data recorded for 20 study years in the area. Among respondents who perceived the climate change, nearly two-third were responded through crop, livestock and nonagriculture-based livelihood initiatives. The probit model also discovered that educational status, farm/nonfarm income, extension contact, access to climate information and training were significant factors behind farmers' response decision. As a result, future development interventions should provide prominent training and extension, local meteorological service and agricultural inputs on top of creating nonagricultural income generating opportunities, would play significant role in climate change adaptation.
C1 [Mihiretu, Ademe; Okoyo, Eric Ndemo; Lemma, Tesfaye] Sekota Dryland Agr Res Ctr, Socioecon & Agr Extens, Sekota, Ethiopia.
RP Mihiretu, A (corresponding author), POB 62, Sekota, Ethiopia.
EM ademe_78@yahoo.com.sg; ndemoerick100@gmail.com; t.lemma41@yahoo.com
RI mihiretu, ademe/AHD-3473-2022; Lemma, Tesfaye/HZK-3433-2023
OI Okoyo, Eric/0009-0002-4484-8153
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NR 34
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 10
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
PI OSLO
PA KARL JOHANS GATE 5, NO-0154 OSLO, NORWAY
SN 2331-1932
J9 COGENT FOOD AGR
JI Cogent Food Agr.
PD MAY 12
PY 2020
VL 6
IS 1
AR 1763647
DI 10.1080/23311932.2020.1763647
PG 23
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA LR8TO
UT WOS:000535969600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ferreira, MT
   Cardoso, P
   Borges, PAV
   Gabriel, R
   de Azevedo, EB
   Elias, RB
AF Ferreira, Maria Teresa
   Cardoso, Pedro
   Borges, Paulo A. V.
   Gabriel, Rosalina
   de Azevedo, Eduardo Brito
   Elias, Rui Bento
TI Implications of climate change to the design of protected areas: The
   case study of small islands (Azores)
SO PLOS ONE
LA English
DT Article
ID CONSERVATION; DIVERSITY; DISTRIBUTIONS; ARTHROPODS; MODELS
AB Climate change is causing shifts in species distributions worldwide. Understanding how species distributions will change with future climate change is thus critical for conservation planning. Impacts on oceanic islands are potentially major given the disproportionate number of endemic species and the consequent risk that local extinctions might become global ones. In this study, we use species climate envelope models to evaluate the current and future potential distributions of Azorean endemic species of bryophytes, vascular plants, and arthropods on the Islands of Terceira and Sao Miguel in the Azores archipelago (Macaronesia). We examined projections of climate change effects on the future distributions of species with particular focus on the current protected areas. We then used spatial planning optimization software (PRION) to evaluate the effectiveness of protected areas at preserving species both in the present and future. We found that contractions of species distributions in protected areas are more likely in the largest and most populated island of Sao Miguel, moving from the coastal areas towards inland where the current protected areas are insufficient and inadequate to tackle species distribution shifts. There will be the need for a revision of the current protected areas in Sao Miguel to allow the sustainable conservation of most species, while in Terceira Island the current protected areas appear to be sufficient. Our study demonstrates the importance of these tools for informing long-term climate change adaptation planning for small islands.
C1 [Ferreira, Maria Teresa; Cardoso, Pedro; Borges, Paulo A. V.; Gabriel, Rosalina; Elias, Rui Bento] CE3C Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes, Azorean Biodivers Grp, Angra Do Heroismo, Acores, Portugal.
   [Ferreira, Maria Teresa; Cardoso, Pedro; Borges, Paulo A. V.; Gabriel, Rosalina; Elias, Rui Bento] Univ Acores, Fac Ciencias Agr & Ambiente, Angra Do Heroismo, Acores, Portugal.
   [Cardoso, Pedro] Univ Helsinki, LIBRe Lab Integrat Biodivers Res, Finnish Museum Nat Hist, Helsinki, Finland.
   [de Azevedo, Eduardo Brito] Univ Azores CMMG IITAA, Grp Climate Meteorol & Global Change, Res Inst Agr & Environm Technol, Angra Do Heroismo, Portugal.
C3 Universidade dos Acores; University of Helsinki
RP Ferreira, MT (corresponding author), CE3C Ctr Ecol Evolut & Environm Changes, Azorean Biodivers Grp, Angra Do Heroismo, Acores, Portugal.; Ferreira, MT (corresponding author), Univ Acores, Fac Ciencias Agr & Ambiente, Angra Do Heroismo, Acores, Portugal.
EM mteresabferreira@gmail.com
RI Borges, Paulo/AEW-0237-2022; Cardoso, Pedro/AAY-9650-2020; Ferreira,
   Maria/F-7731-2015; Elias, Rui/B-9055-2018; Borges, Paulo/B-2780-2008;
   Brito de Azevedo, Eduardo/M-4266-2013; Cardoso, Pedro/A-8820-2008
OI Elias, Rui/0000-0003-2397-2438; Ferreira, Maria
   Teresa/0000-0002-3740-6069; Borges, Paulo/0000-0002-8448-7623; Brito de
   Azevedo, Eduardo/0000-0001-5172-7742; Cardoso, Pedro/0000-0001-8119-9960
FU Azorean Regional Fund for Science and Technology; Pro-Emprego
   [M2.1.2/I/005/2011]; project PROAAcXXIs - Projeccoes das Alteracoes
   Climaticas nos Acores para o seculo XXI. (PO_Acores 2020 - Eixo
   Prioritario 1) [Acores-01-0145 -FEDER-000037]; EU [M2.1.2/I/027/2011,
   M2.1.2/F/04/2011/NET]
FX MTF was funded by the Azorean Regional Fund for Science and Technology
   and the Pro-Emprego for funding her grant within the project
   "Implications of climate change for Azorean Biodiversity - IMPACTBIO"
   [M2.1.2/I/005/2011]
   (http://www.azores.gov.pt/Portal/pt/entidades/srmct-frct/) Data on
   species distributions was gathered based on the EU projects INTERREGIII
   B "ATLANTICO" (2004-2006) and BIONATURA
   (2006-2008)(https://www.welcomeurope.com/european-funds/interreg-iii-506
   +406.html#tab=onglet_details), and more recently also ATLANTISMAR
   -b"Mapping coastal and marine biodiversity of the Azores" (Ref:
   M2.1.2/I/027/2011) and "MOVECLIM - Montane vegetation as listening posts
   for climate change" (Ref: M2.1.2/F/04/2011/NET)
   (http://www.azores.gov.pt/Portal/pt/entidades/srmct-frct/). EBA was
   funded in the framework of the project PROAAcXXIs - Projeccoes das
   Alteracoes Climaticas nos Acores para o seculo XXI. (PO_Acores 2020 -
   Eixo Prioritario 1 - Acores-01-0145 - FEDER - 000037)
   (http://poacores2020.azores.gov.pt/programa-acores-2020/). The funders
   had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to
   publish, or preparation of the manuscript. Maria Teresa Ferreira was
   funded by the Azorean Regional Fund for Science and Technology and the
   Pro-Emprego for funding her grant within the project "Implications of
   climate change for Azorean Biodiversity-IMPACTBIO" [M2.1.2/I/005/2011].
   Data on species distributions was gathered based on the EU projects
   INTERREGIII B "ATLANTICO" (2004-2006) and BIONATURA (2006-2008), and
   more recently also ATLANTISMAR-"Mapping coastal and marine biodiversity
   of the Azores" (Ref: M2.1.2/I/027/2011) and "MOVECLIM-Montane vegetation
   as listening posts for climate change" (Ref: M2.1.2/F/04/2011/NET). The
   climatic modelling work of EBA was developed in the framework of the
   project PROAAcXXIs-Projeccoes das Alteracoes Climaticas nos Acores para
   o seculo XXI. (PO_Acores 2020 - Eixo Prioritario 1 -Acores-01-0145
   -FEDER-000037).
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NR 55
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 0
U2 22
PU PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA 1160 BATTERY STREET, STE 100, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111 USA
SN 1932-6203
J9 PLOS ONE
JI PLoS One
PD JUN 13
PY 2019
VL 14
IS 6
AR e0218168
DI 10.1371/journal.pone.0218168
PG 17
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA IC8NN
UT WOS:000471238300059
PM 31194805
OA Green Published, gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Mekuriaw, S
   Mengistu, A
   Tegegne, F
AF Mekuriaw, Shigdaf
   Mengistu, Alemayehu
   Tegegne, Firew
BE Castro, P
   Azul, AM
   Filho, WL
   Azeiteiro, UM
TI Livestock Technologies and Grazing Land Management Options for Climate
   Change Adaption and Mitigation as a Contribution for Food Security in
   Ethiopia: A Brief Overview
SO CLIMATE CHANGE-RESILIENT AGRICULTURE AND AGROFORESTRY: ECOSYSTEM
   SERVICES AND SUSTAINABILITY
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Livestock technologies; Climate change; Grazing land; Methane; Carbon
   sequestration; Drought and food security
ID ENTERIC METHANE EMISSIONS; SYSTEMS; CARBON; IMPACT; LIVELIHOODS;
   DEGRADATION
AB African countries, like Ethiopia, are particularly vulnerable to climate change because their economies largely depend on climate-sensitive agricultural production. Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP) of Ethiopia recognized climate change as a huge threat and focusing on mitigation issues. The GTP stipulates the country's ambition to build a climate resilient green economy by 2030. This paper looks at the potential of livestock technologies and grazing land management for mitigation and adaption to a changing climate. Research findings in Ethiopia showed that livestock technologies and management of grazing lands such as improving the quality of forage, feeding highly digestible forages, processing and preservation of feeds, use of controlled grazing instead of continuous grazing and inclusion of legumes in forage mixes, have a great response to climate change. The choices for application of the technologies and potential mitigation strategies primarily depend on the adoption and cost associated with it. Grazing land management not only mitigates climate change but also reduces soil erosion, increases carbon sequestration and contributes to the resilience of crop-livestock farming systems in Ethiopia. In conclusion, management of grazing lands and implementation of livestock technologies have good implications in mitigating climate change on top of income generation and thereby improving the livelihood of farmers in Ethiopia.
C1 [Mekuriaw, Shigdaf] Tottori Univ, United Grad Sch Agr Sci UGSAS, 1390 Hamasaka, Tottori, Tottori 6800001, Japan.
   [Mekuriaw, Shigdaf] Andassa Livestock Res Ctr, Amhara Region Agr Res Inst, POB 27, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
   [Mengistu, Alemayehu] Urael Branch, Addis Ababa 62291, Ethiopia.
   [Tegegne, Firew] Bahir Dar Univ, Coll Agr & Environm Sci, POB 79, Bahir Dar, Ethiopia.
C3 Tottori University; Bahir Dar University
RP Mekuriaw, S (corresponding author), Tottori Univ, United Grad Sch Agr Sci UGSAS, 1390 Hamasaka, Tottori, Tottori 6800001, Japan.
EM shigdaf@gmail.com
RI MEKURIAW, SHIGDAF/HPH-5499-2023
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NR 54
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-75004-0; 978-3-319-75003-3
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2019
BP 383
EP 396
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-75004-0_22
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-75004-0
PG 14
WC Agronomy; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Ecology; Forestry
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology; Forestry
GA BQ8FX
UT WOS:000620171600023
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Haer, T
   Botzen, WJW
   van Roomen, V
   Connor, H
   Zavala-Hidalgo, J
   Eilander, DM
   Ward, PJ
AF Haer, Toon
   Botzen, W. J. Wouter
   van Roomen, Vincent
   Connor, Harry
   Zavala-Hidalgo, Jorge
   Eilander, Dirk M.
   Ward, Philip J.
TI Coastal and river flood risk analyses for guiding economically optimal
   flood adaptation policies: a country-scale study for Mexico
SO PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL
   AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; cost-benefit analysis; flood risk; policy
   decisions
ID PROTECTION; PATHWAYS; LOSSES; MODEL; WATER
AB Many countries around the world face increasing impacts from flooding due to socio-economic development in flood-prone areas, which may be enhanced in intensity and frequency as a result of climate change. With increasing flood risk, it is becoming more important to be able to assess the costs and benefits of adaptation strategies. To guide the design of such strategies, policy makers need tools to prioritize where adaptation is needed and how much adaptation funds are required. In this country-scale study, we show how flood risk analyses can be used in cost-benefit analyses to prioritize investments in flood adaptation strategies in Mexico under future climate scenarios. Moreover, given the often limited availability of detailed local data for such analyses, we show how state-of-the-art global data and flood risk assessment models can be applied for a detailed assessment of optimal flood-protection strategies. Our results show that especially states along the Gulf of Mexico have considerable economic benefits from investments in adaptation that limit risks from both river and coastal floods, and that increased flood-protection standards are economically beneficial for many Mexican states. We discuss the sensitivity of our results to modelling uncertainties, the transferability of our modelling approach and policy implications.
   This article is part of the theme issue 'Advances in risk assessment for climate change adaptation policy'.
C1 [Haer, Toon; Botzen, W. J. Wouter; van Roomen, Vincent; Connor, Harry; Eilander, Dirk M.; Ward, Philip J.] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, W. J. Wouter] Univ Utrecht, Sch Econ, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, W. J. Wouter] Univ Penn, Wharton Sch, Risk Management & Decis Proc Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
   [Zavala-Hidalgo, Jorge] Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Ctr Ciencias Atmosfera, Mexico City 04510, DF, Mexico.
   [Eilander, Dirk M.] Deltares, NL-2600 MH Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Utrecht University; University of
   Pennsylvania; Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico; Deltares
RP Botzen, WJW (corresponding author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.; Botzen, WJW (corresponding author), Univ Utrecht, Sch Econ, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.; Botzen, WJW (corresponding author), Univ Penn, Wharton Sch, Risk Management & Decis Proc Ctr, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
EM wouter.botzen@vu.nl
RI Zavala-Hidalgo, Jorge/H-3185-2011; Ward, Philip/E-6208-2010; Botzen,
   Wouter/L-3123-2013
OI Haer, Toon/0000-0001-6172-2793; Ward, Philip/0000-0001-7702-7859;
   Eilander, Dirk/0000-0002-0951-8418; Botzen, Wouter/0000-0002-8563-4963
FU United Nations Development Programme (Mexico); National Institute of
   Ecology and Climate Change, as part of Mexico's Sixth National
   Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
   Change [IC-2017-068]; Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
   (NWO) [016.161.324, 016140067]; Zurich Flood Resilience Program
FX The authors acknowledge the financial support from the United Nations
   Development Programme (Mexico) and the National Institute of Ecology and
   Climate Change (grant IC-2017-068), as part of Mexico's Sixth National
   Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
   Change. P.J.W. received funding from the Netherlands Organisation for
   Scientific Research (NWO) in the form of a VIDI grant (grant no.
   016.161.324). T.H. received funding from the Netherlands Organisation
   for Scientific Research (NWO) in the form of a VICI grant (016140067).
   This research was partly funded by the Zurich Flood Resilience Program.
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NR 49
TC 21
Z9 22
U1 0
U2 39
PU ROYAL SOC
PI LONDON
PA 6-9 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE, LONDON SW1Y 5AG, ENGLAND
SN 1364-503X
EI 1471-2962
J9 PHILOS T R SOC A
JI Philos. Trans. R. Soc. A-Math. Phys. Eng. Sci.
PD JUN 13
PY 2018
VL 376
IS 2121
AR 20170329
DI 10.1098/rsta.2017.0329
PG 17
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA GE3YM
UT WOS:000431148800009
PM 29712799
OA Green Published, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Johnson, RK
   Almlöf, K
AF Johnson, Richard K.
   Almlof, Karin
TI Adapting boreal streams to climate change: effects of riparian
   vegetation on water temperature and biological assemblages
SO FRESHWATER SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; streams; riparian vegetation; water
   temperature; invertebrates; diatoms; macrophytes
ID NUTRIENT ENRICHMENT; ECOLOGICAL GUILDS; BRITISH-COLUMBIA; THERMAL
   REGIME; FOREST; BIODIVERSITY; ECOSYSTEMS; RIVERS; EUTROPHICATION;
   CONSEQUENCES
AB Riparian vegetation directly or indirectly affects many important structural and functional processes in stream ecosystems. We used a contiguous paired-reach approach in 4 km of open and shaded reaches in 8 boreal streams to study the effects of canopy cover on in-stream physicochemical (temperature, nutrients), substratum, and biotic assemblages (benthic diatom, macrophyte, invertebrate). Canopy cover, woody debris, and summer temperatures differed between paired reaches. Variation partitioning (partial redundancy analysis) showed that benthic diatom traits, but not species composition, were related strongly to canopy cover (33% of the variance was explained by canopy cover alone). In contrast, using variation partitioning, we found no support for the hypothesis that canopy cover was a strong predictor of macrophyte or benthic invertebrate assemblages. However, multivariable regression (redundancy analysis) showed that canopy cover was a significant predictor of invertebrate taxonomic and trait composition (explaining similar to 26% of the variability), after accounting for covariance with other environmental variables. In agreement with predictions, univariate analyses revealed that macrophyte traits related to light and growth forms were correlated negatively with canopy cover. Our findings that canopy cover resulted in lower summer temperatures, higher amounts of woody debris, and differences in community structure and traits support the importance of riparian buffer strips as a management tool for maintaining biodiversity and for managing stream ecosystems for the warmer future.
C1 [Johnson, Richard K.; Almlof, Karin] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dept Aquat Sci & Assessment, POB 7050, SE-75007 Uppsala, Sweden.
C3 Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
RP Johnson, RK (corresponding author), Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dept Aquat Sci & Assessment, POB 7050, SE-75007 Uppsala, Sweden.
EM richard.johnson@slu.se; karin.almlof@slu.se
RI Johnson, Richard/P-4991-2014
OI Johnson, Richard/0000-0001-7979-6563
FU REFRESH project (Adaptive Strategies to Mitigate the Impacts of Climate
   Change on European Freshwater Ecosystems) - European Union under 7th
   Framework Programme, Theme 6 [244121]; Swedish Environmental Protection
   Agency [Dnr 10/179]; Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management
   through contract for the research program WATERS
FX This work was supported by the REFRESH project (Adaptive Strategies to
   Mitigate the Impacts of Climate Change on European Freshwater
   Ecosystems, contract 244121; www.refresh.ucl.ac.uk/) funded by the
   European Union under the 7th Framework Programme, Theme 6 (Environment
   including Climate Change). We gratefully acknowledge Leonard Sandin for
   assistance in designing and implementing the field work. This work was
   partly funded by the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency (Dnr
   10/179) and Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management through
   contract for the research program WATERS.
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NR 70
TC 36
Z9 40
U1 0
U2 81
PU UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
PI CHICAGO
PA 1427 E 60TH ST, CHICAGO, IL 60637-2954 USA
SN 2161-9549
EI 2161-9565
J9 FRESHW SCI
JI Freshw. Sci.
PD SEP
PY 2016
VL 35
IS 3
BP 984
EP 997
DI 10.1086/687837
PG 14
WC Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA DT4JR
UT WOS:000381446500019
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Larson, S
   Kirono, DGC
   Tjandraatmadja, G
   Barkey, R
AF Larson, Silva
   Kirono, Dewi G. C.
   Tjandraatmadja, Grace
   Barkey, Roland
TI Monitoring and evaluation approaches in water resources project design:
   experiences from an urban water system climate change adaptation project
   in Indonesia
SO WATER POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Capacity building and learning; Integrated climate change assessment;
   Joint knowledge production; Makassar; Mamminasata; Project M&E;
   Self-evaluation and external evaluation; Stakeholder evaluation
ID JOINT KNOWLEDGE PRODUCTION; MANAGEMENT; FRAMEWORK; SUCCESS; SCIENCE
AB Water research projects are often interdisciplinary and participatory in nature. Scientists and managers involved strive to create learning that advances science in various fields while providing benefits for society. They also face challenges of monitoring and evaluation (M&E) for accountability and measurement of impacts, required by funding agencies. In this paper we tested selected M&E processes and methods for their potential to increase capacity in a cross-cultural inter-disciplinary research setting of an urban water research project. A total of eight different qualitative and quantitative evaluation methods were assessed using two processes: self-evaluation by researchers, testing five methods; and the external evaluations by stakeholders, testing three methods. Both processes were found useful. Of the five self-evaluation methods tested, the Logical Frameworks method was deemed a good planning tool but not one contributing to learning. The qualitative (Factors of Success and Obstacles/Enablers) and the Best Case/Worst Case Scenarios quantitative method were effective learning methods. Tracking Change was found suitable for measuring learning. We recommended that a combination of methods be used in order to capture the full dynamic of projects in various stages. Explicit timelines for indicators and measures of project success are recommended for managing expectations of both researchers and funding agencies.
C1 [Larson, Silva] CSIRO, Ecosyst Sci, Townsville, Qld, Australia.
   [Larson, Silva] James Cook Univ, Coll Business Law & Governance, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Larson, Silva] James Cook Univ, Cairns Inst, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Kirono, Dewi G. C.] CSIRO, Oceans & Atmosphere, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Tjandraatmadja, Grace] CSIRO, Land & Water, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Tjandraatmadja, Grace] Vietnam Engineers Borders, Habitat Humanity, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Barkey, Roland] Hasanuddin Univ, Makassar, Indonesia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   James Cook University; James Cook University; Commonwealth Scientific &
   Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO); Commonwealth Scientific &
   Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO); Universitas Hasanuddin
RP Larson, S (corresponding author), CSIRO, Ecosyst Sci, Townsville, Qld, Australia.; Larson, S (corresponding author), James Cook Univ, Coll Business Law & Governance, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.; Larson, S (corresponding author), James Cook Univ, Cairns Inst, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
EM silva.larson@gmail.com
OI Kirono, Dewi/0000-0002-9142-3572
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NR 46
TC 1
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 19
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA ALLIANCE HOUSE, 12 CAXTON ST, LONDON SW1H0QS, ENGLAND
SN 1366-7017
J9 WATER POLICY
JI Water Policy
PD JUN
PY 2016
VL 18
IS 3
BP 708
EP 726
DI 10.2166/wp.2015.144
PG 19
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Water Resources
GA DO8ZG
UT WOS:000378073500011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rittenhouse, CD
   Rissman, AR
AF Rittenhouse, Chadwick D.
   Rissman, Adena R.
TI Changes in winter conditions impact forest management in north temperate
   forests
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change impacts; Forestry; Adaptation; Multiple stressors
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; TREE; SNOW; VULNERABILITY;
   ECOSYSTEMS; RESPONSES; AMERICA; SOILS; GOODS
AB Climate change may impact forest management activities with important implications for forest ecosystems. However, most climate change research on forests has focused on climate-driven shifts in species ranges, forest carbon, and hydrology. To examine how climate change may alter timber harvesting and forest operations in north temperate forests, we asked: 1) How have winter conditions changed over the past 60 years? 2) Have changes in winter weather altered timber harvest patterns on public forestlands? 3) What are the implications of changes in winter weather conditions for timber harvest operations in the context of the economic, ecological, and social goals of forest management? Using meteorological information from Climate Data Online and Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) models we document substantial changes in winter conditions in Wisconsin, including a two- to three-week shortening of frozen ground conditions from 1948 to 2012. Increases in minimum and mean soil temperatures were spatially heterogeneous. Analysis of timber harvest records identified a shift toward greater harvest of jack pine and red pine and less harvest of aspen, black spruce, hemlock, red maple, and white spruce in years with less frozen ground or snow duration. Interviews suggested that frozen ground is a mediating condition that enables low-impact timber harvesting. Climate change may alter frozen ground conditions with complex implications for forest management. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Rittenhouse, Chadwick D.; Rissman, Adena R.] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Forest & Wildlife Ecol, Madison, WI 53706 USA.
   [Rittenhouse, Chadwick D.] Univ Connecticut, Dept Nat Resources & Environm, Wildlife & Fisheries Conservat Ctr, Storrs, CT 06269 USA.
C3 University of Wisconsin System; University of Wisconsin Madison;
   University of Connecticut
RP Rittenhouse, CD (corresponding author), Univ Connecticut, Dept Nat Resources & Environm, Wildlife & Fisheries Conservat Ctr, 1376 Storrs Rd Unit 4087, Storrs, CT 06269 USA.
EM chadwick.rittenhouse@uconn.edu
OI Rissman, Adena/0000-0001-8566-3708
FU Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, USDA McIntire-Stennis Act
   [WIS01661]; University of Wisconsin-Madison
FX This research could not have been conducted without the participation of
   many people in the forest sector. We appreciate the contributions of
   Greg Edge, Ellen Geisler, Carmen Hardin, Catherine Harris, Brad Hutnik,
   Maria Janowiak, Tricia Knoot, Andrew L'Roe, Karl Martin, Colleen Matula,
   Eunice Padley, Andrew Stoltman, and the WICCI Forestry Working Group.
   Discussions with Tracy Rittenhouse and Thomas Meyer led to improvements
   in study design and analysis. We also thank 3 anonymous reviewers for
   comments that improved the manuscript. This research was supported by
   funding from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, USDA
   McIntire-Stennis Act WIS01661, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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NR 43
TC 37
Z9 41
U1 1
U2 72
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4797
EI 1095-8630
J9 J ENVIRON MANAGE
JI J. Environ. Manage.
PD FEB 1
PY 2015
VL 149
BP 157
EP 167
DI 10.1016/j.jenvman.2014.10.010
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AZ2TA
UT WOS:000348084000017
PM 25463581
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Holzworth, DP
   Huth, NI
   Devoil, PG
   Zurcher, EJ
   Herrmann, NI
   McLean, G
   Chenu, K
   van Oosterom, EJ
   Snow, V
   Murphy, C
   Moore, AD
   Brown, H
   Whish, JPM
   Verrall, S
   Fainges, J
   Bell, LW
   Peake, AS
   Poulton, PL
   Hochman, Z
   Thorburn, PJ
   Gaydon, DS
   Dalgliesh, NP
   Rodriguez, D
   Cox, H
   Chapman, S
   Doherty, A
   Teixeira, E
   Sharp, J
   Cichota, R
   Vogeler, I
   Li, FY
   Wang, EL
   Hammer, GL
   Robertson, MJ
   Dimes, JP
   Whitbread, AM
   Hunt, J
   van Rees, H
   McClelland, T
   Carberry, PS
   Hargreaves, JNG
   MacLeod, N
   McDonald, C
   Harsdorf, J
   Wedgwood, S
   Keating, BA
AF Holzworth, Dean P.
   Huth, Neil I.
   deVoil, Peter G.
   Zurcher, Eric J.
   Herrmann, Neville I.
   McLean, Greg
   Chenu, Karine
   van Oosterom, Erik J.
   Snow, Val
   Murphy, Chris
   Moore, Andrew D.
   Brown, Hamish
   Whish, Jeremy P. M.
   Verrall, Shaun
   Fainges, Justin
   Bell, Lindsay W.
   Peake, Allan S.
   Poulton, Perry L.
   Hochman, Zvi
   Thorburn, Peter J.
   Gaydon, Donald S.
   Dalgliesh, Neal P.
   Rodriguez, Daniel
   Cox, Howard
   Chapman, Scott
   Doherty, Alastair
   Teixeira, Edmar
   Sharp, Joanna
   Cichota, Rogerio
   Vogeler, Iris
   Li, Frank Y.
   Wang, Enli
   Hammer, Graeme L.
   Robertson, Michael J.
   Dimes, John P.
   Whitbread, Anthony M.
   Hunt, James
   van Rees, Harm
   McClelland, Tim
   Carberry, Peter S.
   Hargreaves, John N. G.
   MacLeod, Neil
   McDonald, Cam
   Harsdorf, Justin
   Wedgwood, Sara
   Keating, Brian A.
TI APSIM - Evolution towards a new generation of agricultural systems
   simulation
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MODELLING & SOFTWARE
LA English
DT Article
DE APSIM; Simulation; Model; Agricultural systems; Crop; Farming system;
   Gene-to-phenotype model
ID DECISION-SUPPORT-SYSTEMS; GENOTYPE-ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS; AUSTRALIAN
   GRAZING ENTERPRISES; CROP-LIVESTOCK SYSTEMS; MIXED-FARMING SYSTEMS;
   NORTH CHINA PLAIN; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SUGARCANE PRODUCTION; MODELING
   FRAMEWORK; WHEAT PRODUCTION
AB Agricultural systems models worldwide are increasingly being used to explore options and solutions for the food security, climate change adaptation and mitigation and carbon trading problem domains. APSIM (Agricultural Production Systems sIMulator) is one such model that continues to be applied and adapted to this challenging research agenda. From its inception twenty years ago, APSIM has evolved into a framework containing many of the key models required to explore changes in agricultural landscapes with capability ranging from simulation of gene expression through to multi-field farms and beyond.
   Keating et al. (2003) described many of the fundamental attributes of APSIM in detail. Much has changed in the last decade, and the APSIM community has been exploring novel scientific domains and utilising software developments in social media, web and mobile applications to provide simulation tools adapted to new demands.
   This paper updates the earlier work by Keating et al. (2003) and chronicles the changing external challenges and opportunities being placed on APSIM during the last decade. It also explores and discusses how APSIM has been evolving to a "next generation" framework with improved features and capabilities that allow its use in many diverse topics. Crown Copyright (C) 2014 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Holzworth, Dean P.; Huth, Neil I.; Zurcher, Eric J.; Herrmann, Neville I.; Moore, Andrew D.; Whish, Jeremy P. M.; Verrall, Shaun; Fainges, Justin; Bell, Lindsay W.; Peake, Allan S.; Poulton, Perry L.; Hochman, Zvi; Thorburn, Peter J.; Gaydon, Donald S.; Dalgliesh, Neal P.; Chapman, Scott; Wang, Enli; Robertson, Michael J.; Hunt, James; Carberry, Peter S.; Hargreaves, John N. G.; MacLeod, Neil; McDonald, Cam; Keating, Brian A.] CSIRO Agr Flagship, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Chenu, Karine; van Oosterom, Erik J.; Rodriguez, Daniel; Hammer, Graeme L.] Univ Queensland, QAAFI, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.
   [Snow, Val; Cichota, Rogerio; Li, Frank Y.; Wang, Enli] AgResearch, Hamilton, New Zealand.
   [Brown, Hamish; Teixeira, Edmar; Sharp, Joanna] New Zealand Inst Plant & Food Res, Auckland, New Zealand.
   [Whitbread, Anthony M.] Univ Gottingen, D-37073 Gottingen, Germany.
   [van Rees, Harm] Cropfacts Pty Ltd, Horsham, Vic, Australia.
   [van Rees, Harm; McClelland, Tim] Birchip Cropping Grp, Birchip, Vic, Australia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   University of Queensland; AgResearch - New Zealand; New Zealand
   Institute for Plant & Food Research Ltd; University of Gottingen
RP Holzworth, DP (corresponding author), CSIRO Agr Flagship, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
EM Dean.Holzworth@csiro.au
RI Carberry, Peter/B-9768-2008; McDonald, Cam/AAE-5085-2019; Snow,
   Val/S-2106-2019; Bell, Lindsay/B-9769-2008; Hargreaves,
   John/G-5458-2010; Hunt, James/A-1408-2010; Holzworth, Dean/F-8332-2010;
   Keating, Brian/ABD-1652-2021; McLean, Greg/AAE-9842-2021; Fainges,
   Justin/E-7110-2015; Dalgliesh, Neal/B-9772-2008; Hochman,
   Zvi/E-8993-2010; Rodriguez, Daniel/A-7920-2011; Peake,
   Allan/C-4906-2011; Gaydon, Donald/F-4608-2012; Wang, Enli/K-7478-2012;
   Brown, Hamish/IAN-1847-2023; Moore, Andrew/D-3418-2009; Li, Frank
   Yonghong/AAN-3093-2020; Thorburn, Peter/A-6884-2011; Huth,
   Neil/U-3271-2019; Robertson, Michael/G-1418-2010; Vogeler,
   Iris/P-2761-2019; Snow, Val/O-8693-2016; Chapman, Scott/B-9673-2008;
   Whitbread, Anthony/F-3068-2010; Chenu, Karine/A-8967-2009; McLean,
   Gregory/Q-9103-2017; Hammer, Graeme/A-3785-2008; Whish,
   Jeremy/D-3343-2011; Poulton, Perry/D-7027-2011; Teixeira,
   Edmar/K-1238-2016; Sharp, Joanna/C-1167-2011
OI Snow, Val/0000-0002-6911-8184; Hunt, James/0000-0003-2884-5622; Vogeler,
   Iris/0000-0003-2512-7668; Chapman, Scott/0000-0003-4732-8452; Whitbread,
   Anthony/0000-0003-4840-7670; Chenu, Karine/0000-0001-7273-2057; Van
   Oosterom, Erik/0000-0003-4886-4038; McLean, Gregory/0000-0002-8491-2984;
   Hochman, Zvi/0000-0002-6217-5231; Robertson,
   Michael/0000-0003-2905-4347; Rodriguez, Daniel/0000-0002-4699-0957;
   Hammer, Graeme/0000-0002-1180-7374; Herrmann,
   Neville/0000-0002-7832-9362; Whish, Jeremy/0000-0001-5939-9659; Moore,
   Andrew/0000-0002-5675-4720; Poulton, Perry/0000-0003-1341-5056;
   Teixeira, Edmar/0000-0002-4835-0590; McDonald, Cam/0000-0003-2265-2299;
   Zurcher, Eric/0000-0002-7274-9921; Sharp, Joanna/0000-0001-5849-868X;
   Gaydon, Donald/0000-0002-0078-4154; Li, Frank
   Yonghong/0000-0002-5137-8017
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NR 239
TC 1142
Z9 1234
U1 33
U2 544
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1364-8152
EI 1873-6726
J9 ENVIRON MODELL SOFTW
JI Environ. Modell. Softw.
PD DEC
PY 2014
VL 62
BP 327
EP 350
DI 10.1016/j.envsoft.2014.07.009
PG 24
WC Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Engineering,
   Environmental; Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Computer Science; Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water
   Resources
GA AX2CZ
UT WOS:000346751800027
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tian, XR
   Zhao, FJ
   Shu, LF
   Wang, MY
AF Tian, Xiao-rui
   Zhao, Feng-jun
   Shu, Li-fu
   Wang, Ming-yu
TI Changes in forest fire danger for south-western China in the 21st
   century
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change, fire season, forest fire danger, south-western China.
ID CANADIAN BOREAL FOREST; CLIMATE-CHANGE; IMPACT; ALASKA; USA
AB This paper predicts future changes in fire danger and the fire season in the current century for south-western China under two different climate change scenarios. The fire weather index (FWI) system calculated from daily outputs of a regional climate model with a horizontal resolution of 50x50km was used to assess fire danger. Temperature and precipitation demonstrated a gradually increasing trend for the future. Forest fire statistics for 1987-2011 revealed that the FWI, initial spread index and seasonal severity rating were significantly related to the number of forest fires between 100 and 1000ha in size. Over three future periods, the FWI component indices will increase greatly. The mean FWI value will increase by 0.83-1.85, 1.83-2.91 and 3.33-3.97 in the periods 2011-2040, 2041-2070 and 2071-2100. The regions with predicted FWI increases are mainly in central and south-eastern China. The fire season (including days with high, very high and extreme fire danger ratings) will be prolonged by 9-13, 18-21 and 28-31 days over these periods. This fire season extension will mainly be due to days with an extreme fire danger rating. Considering predicted future changes in the forest fire danger rating and the fire season, it is suggested that climate change adaptation measures be implemented.
C1 [Tian, Xiao-rui; Zhao, Feng-jun; Shu, Li-fu; Wang, Ming-yu] Chinese Acad Forestry, Res Inst Forest Ecol Environm & Protect, State Forestry Adm, Key Open Lab Forest Protect, Beijing 100091, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Forestry; Research Institute of Forest Ecology,
   Environment and Protection, CAF
RP Shu, LF (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Forestry, Res Inst Forest Ecol Environm & Protect, State Forestry Adm, Key Open Lab Forest Protect, Beijing 100091, Peoples R China.
EM shulf@caf.ac.cn
RI Tian, Xiaorui/AAX-4197-2021
FU National Science and Technology Support Plan [2012BAC19B02]; National
   Natural Science Foundation of China [31270695]
FX This research was financially supported by the National Science and
   Technology Support Plan (2012BAC19B02) and Project of the National
   Natural Science Foundation of China (31270695).
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NR 49
TC 32
Z9 37
U1 1
U2 77
PU CSIRO PUBLISHING
PI COLLINGWOOD
PA 150 OXFORD ST, PO BOX 1139, COLLINGWOOD, VICTORIA 3066, AUSTRALIA
SN 1049-8001
EI 1448-5516
J9 INT J WILDLAND FIRE
JI Int. J. Wildland Fire
PY 2014
VL 23
IS 2
BP 185
EP 195
DI 10.1071/WF13014
PG 11
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA AE6KJ
UT WOS:000334100800003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lyytimäki, J
AF Lyytimaki, Jari
TI Mainstreaming climate policy: the role of media coverage in Finland
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Mass media coverage; Newspapers; Policy integration
ID ADAPTATION; RESPONSIBILITY; OPPORTUNITIES; MITIGATION; KNOWLEDGE
AB Integration of climate change adaptation and mitigation measures into other policies is considered to be a precondition for effective climate policies. This paper explores the role of mass media coverage as a potential obstacle or enhancing factor in relation to this mainstreaming of climate policies. The paper presents a quantitative content analysis of the national-level press coverage of climate change from 1990 to 2010, focusing on Finland. The empirical results indicate four major phases of Finnish media coverage of climate change: a definition phase before the Kyoto meeting in 1997, a maturation phase after the Kyoto meeting, climate hype in 2006-2008, and a phase of levelling off that started in late 2008. The results suggest that climate issues have widely permeated various fields of newspaper coverage. This broad-based debate may create and sustain a public agenda potentially favourable to attempts to bring climate policies into the mainstream of other policy domains. However, it also may open doors for unexpected initiatives by various activists and lobbyists that employ climate concern as a tool to advance other interests. The role of mass media has received little attention in studies focusing on the mainstreaming of climate policies. This paper highlights the importance of taking media coverage into account as a key factor in the formulation and implementation of environmental policies aimed at broad-based actions.
C1 Finnish Environm Inst, Helsinki, Finland.
C3 Finnish Environment Institute
RP Lyytimäki, J (corresponding author), Finnish Environm Inst, Helsinki, Finland.
EM jari.lyytimaki@ymparisto.fi
RI Lyytimaki, Jari/C-8688-2013
OI Lyytimaki, Jari/0000-0003-3308-5234
FU Academy of Finland [128307]; Academy of Finland (AKA) [128307] Funding
   Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)
FX The author warmly thanks Per Mickwitz, Petri Tapio and two anonymous
   referees for the comments on the manuscript. The study was supported by
   the Academy of Finland (The climate discussion on transport - an
   interdisciplinary environmental analysis (CAST), project no. 128307).
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NR 65
TC 44
Z9 46
U1 2
U2 48
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD AUG
PY 2011
VL 16
IS 6
BP 649
EP 661
DI 10.1007/s11027-011-9286-x
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 852OP
UT WOS:000297367600003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dinis, LT
   Mota, N
   Martins, S
   Ribeiro, AC
   Moutinho-Pereira, J
   Pereira, S
AF Dinis, Lia-Tania
   Mota, Natalia
   Martins, Sandra
   Ribeiro, Antonio Castro
   Moutinho-Pereira, Jose
   Pereira, Sandra
TI Foliar Silicon Application in the Era of Climate Change as a Part of
   Strategy to Reduce Water Requirements in Mediterranean Viticulture
SO HORTICULTURAE
LA English
DT Article
DE silicon (Si); water stress; viticulture; climate change adaptation;
   <italic>Vitis vinifera</italic> L.
ID LEAF GAS-EXCHANGE; CHLOROPHYLL FLUORESCENCE; VASCULAR PLANTS; WINE
   QUALITY; DROUGHT; STRESS; GROWTH; GRAPE; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; YIELD
AB Rising temperatures and water scarcity due to climate change are significant challenges for Mediterranean viticulture, particularly in the Douro Valley, a prominent winemaking region. Silicon (Si) has gained attention as a potential solution for mitigating these environmental stresses, especially in areas with limited water resources. This study explores the foliar application of Si as a promising strategy to reduce water requirements in vineyards, specifically for the Touriga Franca variety, thereby supporting more sustainable water use. Four treatments were tested: non-irrigated control (C-), an irrigated control under a deficit irrigation regime (25% ETc; C+), and two Si concentrations (7% Si-Si1 and 20% Si-Si2) applied to non-irrigated plants. Results demonstrate that Si-treated plants improved physiological resilience, as evidenced by enhanced photosynthetic efficiency, greater water-use efficiency, and higher biochemical quality in both leaves and berries. Additionally, Si application increased leaf flavonoids and simultaneously improved must composition due to its overall influence on vine physiology, indicating its potential as a sustainable alternative to irrigation for reducing summer stress. This research suggests that foliar Si application could be a valuable, eco-friendly strategy to support sustainable viticulture under increasingly arid conditions, reducing the irrigation needs.
C1 [Dinis, Lia-Tania; Martins, Sandra; Moutinho-Pereira, Jose; Pereira, Sandra] Univ Tras Os Montes & Alto Douro UTAD, Ctr Res & Technol Agroenvironm & Biol Sci CITAB, P-5000801 Vila Real, Portugal.
   [Dinis, Lia-Tania; Martins, Sandra; Moutinho-Pereira, Jose; Pereira, Sandra] Univ Tras Os Montes & Alto Douro UTAD, Inst Innovat Capac Bldg & Sustainabil Agrifood Pro, P-5000801 Vila Real, Portugal.
   [Mota, Natalia] Univ Tras Os Montes & Alto Douro UTAD, Agron Dept, P-5000801 Vila Real, Portugal.
   [Ribeiro, Antonio Castro] Inst Politecn Braganca, Ctr Invest Montanha CIMO, Campus Santa Apolonia, P-5300253 Braganca, Portugal.
   [Ribeiro, Antonio Castro] Inst Politecn Braganca, Lab Associado Sustentabilidade & Tecnol Regioes Mo, Campus Santa Apolonia, P-5300253 Braganca, Portugal.
C3 University of Tras-os-Montes & Alto Douro; University of Tras-os-Montes
   & Alto Douro; University of Tras-os-Montes & Alto Douro; Instituto
   Politecnico de Braganca; Instituto Politecnico de Braganca
RP Dinis, LT; Pereira, S (corresponding author), Univ Tras Os Montes & Alto Douro UTAD, Ctr Res & Technol Agroenvironm & Biol Sci CITAB, P-5000801 Vila Real, Portugal.; Dinis, LT; Pereira, S (corresponding author), Univ Tras Os Montes & Alto Douro UTAD, Inst Innovat Capac Bldg & Sustainabil Agrifood Pro, P-5000801 Vila Real, Portugal.
EM liatdinis@utad.pt; nataliacmota@hotmail.com; scpmartins@utad.pt;
   antrib@ipb.pt; moutinho@utad.pt; sirp@utad.pt
RI Moutinho-Pereira, Jose/J-6950-2013; Dinis, Lia/J-7560-2013
OI Moutinho-Pereira, Jose/0000-0001-5825-559X; Pereira,
   Sandra/0000-0003-2998-814X; Dinis, Lia/0000-0002-9612-0909
FU Project Vine&Wine Portugal-Driving Sustainable Growth Through Smart
   Innovation [C644866286-00000011, (EU) 2021/241]; Foundation for Science
   and Technology (FCT, Portugal) [PT2020, UIDB/04033/2020]
FX This work was funded by the Project Vine&Wine Portugal-Driving
   Sustainable Growth Through Smart Innovation, Ref. No.
   C644866286-00000011, co-financed by the NextGenerationEU, under Reg.
   (EU) 2021/241-Recovery and Resilience Facility in Portugal (PRR-C5:
   Capitalization and Business Innovation). The research was also funded by
   the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT, Portugal) and FEDER
   under Programme PT2020 for financial support to CITAB (UIDB/04033/2020).
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NR 111
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2311-7524
J9 HORTICULTURAE
JI Horticulturae
PD NOV
PY 2024
VL 10
IS 11
AR 1224
DI 10.3390/horticulturae10111224
PG 22
WC Horticulture
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA N6N0D
UT WOS:001365470300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rocchi, L
   Rizzo, AG
   Paolotti, L
   Boggia, A
   Attard, M
AF Rocchi, Lucia
   Rizzo, Anthony G.
   Paolotti, Luisa
   Boggia, Antonio
   Attard, Maria
TI Assessing climate change vulnerability of coastal roads
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Road vulnerability; Malta; MCDA; VIKOR; COPRA; PROMETHEE
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; MULTICRITERIA DECISION-MAKING; TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE;
   PHYSICAL VULNERABILITY; NETWORK; PROMETHEE; IMPACTS; SUSTAINABILITY;
   WEIGHTS; SYSTEM
AB Climate change is a global phenomenon, which affects in several ways different regions all around the world, beyond the rise in global temperature. Among the different climate change issues, the management of transport infrastructures is crucial. Particularly, their vulnerability against changes in climatic conditions should be assessed. Vulnerability indicators are based on the IPCC concept of vulnerability and can be defined as a function of Climate Exposure, Sensitivity, and Adaptive Capacity. These dimensions need to be addressed during the assessment making and can be modelled as a Multiple Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) problem. This study proposes an integrated approach of several MCDA methods as a possible tool for ranking the climate change vulnerability of coastal roads in Malta. The application covers six coastal roads in the islands of Malta, classified by three different MCDA methods. The results indicate that the proposed approach can produce a consistent ranking of the climate change vulnerability of coastal roads. The study provides policy and decision-makers with a definition of a coastal road, an inventory of such roads, a list of climate change impacts, and a mathematical model incorporating climate change vulnerability indicators. The model can be used to prioritize investment and plan climate change adaptation strategies for infrastructural works on coastal roads.
C1 [Rocchi, Lucia; Paolotti, Luisa; Boggia, Antonio] Univ Perugia, Dept Agr Food & Environm Sci, Borgo 20 Giugno,74, I-06121 Perugia, Italy.
   [Rizzo, Anthony G.; Attard, Maria] Univ Malta, Inst Climate Change & Sustainable Dev, OH132, MSD-2080 Msida, Malta.
C3 University of Perugia; University of Malta
RP Rocchi, L (corresponding author), Univ Perugia, Dept Agr Food & Environm Sci, Borgo 20 Giugno,74, I-06121 Perugia, Italy.
EM lucia.rocchi@unipg.it
RI Attard, Maria/AAL-4294-2020; Rocchi, Lucia/H-6327-2019; Boggia,
   Antonio/AEK-8443-2022
OI Boggia, Antonio/0000-0002-7049-4144; Rocchi, Lucia/0000-0002-3386-2390;
   Attard, Maria/0000-0002-3876-7376
FU Universit degli Studi di Perugia
FX No Statement Available
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EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 29
IS 5
AR 43
DI 10.1007/s11027-024-10140-6
PG 29
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA OU3K2
UT WOS:001209753400001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rice, H
   Cohen, SA
   Scott, D
AF Rice, Harald
   Cohen, Scott Allen
   Scott, Daniel
TI Sweden as a last resort for European skiing? An outbound market
   perspective
SO CURRENT ISSUES IN TOURISM
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Climate change; Sweden; sustainability; skiing; adaptation; substitution
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; BEHAVIORAL ADAPTATION; TOURISM; SKIERS; VARIABILITY;
   PERCEPTIONS; INVOLVEMENT; RESPONSES; ANALOG
AB Previous work identified Northern Swedish skiing as a beneficiary from worsening climate change, with its relative improvement in snow reliability increasing its attractiveness over areas of the European Alps. This study advances the supply-side discussion of Northern Sweden as a 'last resort' with demand-side insights. It examines whether Europe's major outbound ski market would adapt its destination choice due to climate change impacts on European skiing. A survey of 296 skiers was administered through the Ski Club of Great Britain. British ski tourists held negative perceptions of the price, accessibility, and quality/variety of ski terrain in Sweden. These concerns improved amongst those who had visited Sweden to ski, demonstrating familiarity with Swedish skiing may overcome barriers to substituting away from the European Alps. British ski tourists ranked snow conditions as the most important factor in their destination choice, thus snow reliability should form the basis of Swedish destination image moving forward. The majority of respondents (76%) opted for spatial substitution under poor snow conditions, ranking Sweden as the fifth most popular substitution destination, after four major Alpine ski nations, indicating that until climate reliable locations in the European Alps are exhausted, Sweden may not benefit substantially from climate change adaptation.
C1 [Rice, Harald; Cohen, Scott Allen] Univ Surrey, Sch Hospitality & Tourism Management, Guildford, Surrey, England.
   [Scott, Daniel] Univ Surrey, Dept Geog & Environm Management, Guildford, Surrey, England.
   [Scott, Daniel] Univ Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada.
C3 University of Surrey; University of Surrey; University of Waterloo
RP Rice, H (corresponding author), Univ Surrey, Sch Hospitality & Tourism Management, Guildford, Surrey, England.
EM h.rice@surrey.ac.uk
RI Rice, Harald/HGB-7859-2022
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NR 51
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 4
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1368-3500
EI 1747-7603
J9 CURR ISSUES TOUR
JI Curr. Issues Tour.
PD 2024 FEB 28
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/13683500.2024.2320854
EA FEB 2024
PG 17
WC Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA JI4V5
UT WOS:001172532500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

EF