نتایج جستجو برای: arctic oscillationao

تعداد نتایج: 23724  

2015
Kaj M. Hansen Jesper H. Christensen Jørgen Brandt Michael E. Goodsite Hans Sanderson

Mercury (Hg) is a global pollutant with adverse health effects on humans and wildlife. It is of special concern in the Arctic due to accumulation in the food web and exposure of the Arctic population through a rich marine diet. Climate change may alter the exposure of the Arctic population to Hg. We have investigated the effect of climate change on the atmospheric Hg transport to and deposition...

2017
Philipp Assmy Mar Fernández-Méndez Pedro Duarte Amelie Meyer Achim Randelhoff Christopher J. Mundy Lasse M. Olsen Hanna M. Kauko Allison Bailey Melissa Chierici Lana Cohen Anthony P. Doulgeris Jens K. Ehn Agneta Fransson Sebastian Gerland Haakon Hop Stephen R. Hudson Nick Hughes Polona Itkin Geir Johnsen Jennifer A. King Boris P. Koch Zoe Koenig Slawomir Kwasniewski Samuel R. Laney Marcel Nicolaus Alexey K. Pavlov Christopher M. Polashenski Christine Provost Anja Rösel Marthe Sandbu Gunnar Spreen Lars H. Smedsrud Arild Sundfjord Torbjørn Taskjelle Agnieszka Tatarek Jozef Wiktor Penelope M. Wagner Anette Wold Harald Steen Mats A. Granskog

The Arctic icescape is rapidly transforming from a thicker multiyear ice cover to a thinner and largely seasonal first-year ice cover with significant consequences for Arctic primary production. One critical challenge is to understand how productivity will change within the next decades. Recent studies have reported extensive phytoplankton blooms beneath ponded sea ice during summer, indicating...

2017
Christopher Horvat David Rees Jones Sarah Iams David Schroeder Daniela Flocco Daniel Feltham

In July 2011, the observation of a massive phytoplankton bloom underneath a sea ice-covered region of the Chukchi Sea shifted the scientific consensus that regions of the Arctic Ocean covered by sea ice were inhospitable to photosynthetic life. Although the impact of widespread phytoplankton blooms under sea ice on Arctic Ocean ecology and carbon fixation is potentially marked, the prevalence o...

2015
ELIZABETH A. BARNES LORENZO M. POLVANI

Recent studies have hypothesized that Arctic amplification, the enhanced warming of the Arctic region compared to the rest of the globe, will cause changes inmidlatitude weather over the twenty-first century. This study exploits the recently completed phase 5 of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) and examines 27 state-of-the-art climate models to determine if their projected chan...

Journal: :Molecular ecology 2007
L E Carmichael J Krizan J A Nagy E Fuglei M Dumond D Johnson A Veitch D Berteaux C Strobeck

Wolves (Canis lupus) and arctic foxes (Alopex lagopus) are the only canid species found throughout the mainland tundra and arctic islands of North America. Contrasting evolutionary histories, and the contemporary ecology of each species, have combined to produce their divergent population genetic characteristics. Arctic foxes are more variable than wolves, and both island and mainland fox popul...

2010
Peter J. Hotez

The neglected tropical diseases are not always exclusively tropical as defined by their endemicity between the Tropic of Cancer in the northern hemisphere and in the Tropic of Capricorn in the southern hemisphere. Indeed, in previous articles, it has been pointed out that neglected infections occur wherever extreme poverty occurs [1], even in pockets of poverty in North America and Europe [2–4]...

2014
John E. Walsh

1 R ecent Arctic changes are expected to, and may already be, impacting middle latitudes and the rest of the globe. For the first time, the US National Climate Assessment (Melillo et al. 2014) has called attention to a possible role of the Arctic in variations of the jet stream (now referred to as the “polar vortex”) over the contiguous United States (http://nca2014. globalchange.gov/report/our...

2016
R. Bintanja F. Krikken

Observed and projected climate warming is strongest in the Arctic regions, peaking in autumn/winter. Attempts to explain this feature have focused primarily on identifying the associated climate feedbacks, particularly the ice-albedo and lapse-rate feedbacks. Here we use a state-of-the-art global climate model in idealized seasonal forcing simulations to show that Arctic warming (especially in ...

1999
F. STUART CHAPIN WERNER EUGSTER JOSEPH P. MCFADDEN AMANDA H. LYNCH DONALD A. WALKER

Biome differences in surface energy balance strongly affect climate. However, arctic vegetation is considered sufficiently uniform that only a single arctic land surface type is generally used in climate models. Field measurements in northern Alaska show large differences among arctic ecosystem types in summer energy absorption and partitioning. Simulations with the Arctic Regional Climate Syst...

Journal: :FEMS microbiology ecology 2005
Silva Sonjak Jens Christian Frisvad Nina Gunde-Cimerman

Penicillium crustosum is common in food and feed both in subtropical and temperate regions. Recently, it has also been found occurring frequently in glacier ice, sea ice and sea water of Arctic regions of Svalbard. The aim of the study was to compare isolates of the same fungal species from widely different habitats and geographic regions to see if the nutritional physiology and the profile of ...

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