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1 nd associated impacts on ozone depletion and climate change.
2 enhouse gas emission that exacerbates global climate change.
3 burst - false springs - which may shift with climate change.
4 construct operators able to flexibly predict climate change.
5 source of CO(2) emissions and contribute to climate change.
6 vulnerability of species in these regions to climate change.
7 ecies can occur and how they will respond to climate change.
8 tral tools for understanding past and future climate change.
9 enon predicted to increase in magnitude with climate change.
10 s in floral pigmentation linked to ozone and climate change.
11 e advantage of the existing attention toward climate change.
12 a low-cost, nature-based tool for mitigating climate change.
13 emissions and uptake will respond to ongoing climate change.
14 mer and less saline waters, both outcomes of climate change.
15 entrations, generating negative feedbacks to climate change.
16 dity, land degradation, and vulnerability to climate change.
17 institutions that will most need to adapt to climate change.
18 ng and are in turn substantially affected by climate change.
19 potentially substantial positive feedback to climate change.
20 ong five scenarios of future development and climate change.
21 the management of fish stocks in the face of climate change.
22 ct land-atmosphere interactions under future climate change.
23 on gymnosperm-dominated forests under future climate change.
24 rbon (SOC) stabilization and SOC response to climate change.
25 ina may have significant negative impacts on climate change.
26 habitat degradation and long-term forces of climate change.
27 for understanding species' vulnerability to climate change.
28 rease in both frequency and intensity due to climate change.
29 oil organic carbon (SOC) and mitigate global climate change.
30 rization of ecosystem responses to sustained climate change.
31 promote species range shifts in response to climate change.
32 ove our knowledge about forest resilience to climate change.
33 in the face of mounting stresses from global climate change.
34 hemistry and metal concentrations because of climate change.
35 seful to delay harvest to counter effects of climate change.
36 xisting and future MPA networks to continued climate change.
37 e are threatened by thermal stress caused by climate change.
38 nges, ranging from local fisheries to global climate change.
39 studying the response of organisms to rapid climate change.
40 mmunities on novel reef ecosystems shaped by climate change.
41 e mobility is crucial in dealing with global climate change.
42 hallenges the global community faces through climate change.
43 selected animals for enhanced resilience to climate change.
44 , impacted by fishing, and will decline with climate change.
45 er as they shift their ranges in response to climate change.
46 ressures, poor land management practices and climate change.
47 ances than animals but are more sensitive to climate change.
48 tial to obscure and distort the influence of climate change.
49 importance, especially in the face of global climate change.
50 spread of crop pests, agrochemical use, and climate change.
51 on shifts (i.e. biome shifts) in response to climate change.
52 des water and air quality and contributes to climate change.
53 rategy for geoengineering to mitigate global climate change.
54 ate and manage future range shifts driven by climate change.
55 e the responsiveness of arctic ecosystems to climate change.
56 r coastal wetlands under future scenarios of climate change.
57 s sites in community dynamics in response to climate change.
58 rucial interactions between nanoplastics and climate change.
59 rld are shifting their ranges in response to climate change.
60 rately predict tree mortality under on-going climate change.
61 stems are highly vulnerable to pollution and climate change.
62 ses generate a valuable negative feedback on climate change.
63 the vulnerability of groundwater aquifers to climate change.
66 n Greenland were associated with synchronous climate changes across the Asian Monsoon, South American
67 revealed that 82% of real-world examples of climate change adaptation in MPA planning derive from tr
68 and challenges of climate change mitigation, climate change adaptation, combatting land degradation a
70 cur worldwide driven by altered land-use and climate change, affecting landscape function, biodiversi
71 tal hazards as declining sediment supply and climate change alter their sediment budget, affecting de
73 ility is fundamental to predicting near-term climate change and changing extremes, and to attributing
77 ogical and paleoecological evidence for past climate change and human response and argue that these c
78 es due to latitudinal range shifts driven by climate change and increased artificial light at night (
81 re we test whether biodiversity responses to climate change and land-use change differ among biomes (
82 d study assessing the interactive effects of climate change and land-use intensification on body size
83 rsity to secure adequate financing, plan for climate change and make biodiversity conservation a far
84 is available to help separate the effects of climate change and other anthropogenic activities on car
85 rts to predict how consumers will respond to climate change and other environmental perturbations.
89 eabirds on St Kilda, UK, have been linked to climate change and predation from great skuas Stercorari
90 f sudden and severe biodiversity losses from climate change and provide a framework for predicting bo
91 able potential to help mitigate human-caused climate change and provide society with many cobenefits.
92 e promise of mitigating the worst effects of climate change and providing a means to engineer crops f
93 wable energy production is necessary to halt climate change and reverse associated biodiversity losse
95 maladaptive in the context of anthropogenic climate change and that selection now promotes thermal c
97 unlikely.(1-3) Eutrophication, overfishing, climate change, and disease have fueled the supremacy of
98 is expected to increase under anthropogenic climate change, and drought-induced mortality and commun
99 future states and functioning of trees under climate change, and has the potential to be incorporable
101 ions (NO) lead to increased smog, acid rain, climate change, and respiratory inflammation within the
102 body size reduction is a general response to climate change, and reveal a similarly consistent and un
103 esponse of caribou reproductive phenology to climate change, and species-specific changes in terrestr
104 communities exhibit a range of responses to climate change, and that improving passage and fluvial c
106 he most dramatic damage due to anthropogenic climate change, and the situation is predicted to worsen
107 at press releases opposing action to address climate change are about twice as likely to be cited in
108 large-scale crop growth and its responses to climate change are critical for yield estimation and pre
110 Increasing temperatures associated with climate change are predicted to cause reductions in body
112 ng the widely held assumption that long-term climate changes are the primary drivers of biodiversity
113 ng the United States today, but they do view climate change as an important issue for the world today
115 rate species vulnerability assessments under climate change, as priorities for protecting, connecting
116 mpounding the ecophysiological risk posed by climate change, as the combined effects are more severe
118 ose that these communities were resilient to climate change because molluscs are better adapted to hi
121 Rising atmospheric CO(2) is intensifying climate change but it is also driving global and particu
122 ed as a response to human influence, such as climate change, but could also be a non-negligible drive
123 resented in studies demonstrating effects of climate change, but depending on their thermal tolerance
124 nge are governed by ecosystem sensitivity to climate change, but ecosystem model projections are unde
125 and biomes to shift poleward and upward with climate change, but non-climatic factors complicate thes
126 environments may provide some refuge through climate change, but these reefs will need high conservat
127 l protection to Andean frog communities from climate change by enabling tracking of suitable climates
128 gle field of research that could help combat climate change by generating better heat pumps for both
129 y polarization in beliefs about human-caused climate change can threaten global cooperation agreement
136 ver the long-term, evolutionary responses to climate change could potentially increase inter-annual v
137 lying that a change in forcing (e.g., due to climate change) could cause a delta to switch from predi
140 rbate the impacts of biological invasions if climate change differentially affects invasive and nativ
141 titudes, with several displaying substantial climate change-driven intensification over the last cent
143 lly be constrained, rather than promoted, by climate change due to decreases in their primary trophic
144 ees that is hypothesized to be vulnerable to climate change due to its correlation with variability i
147 s considered were freshwater eutrophication, climate change, energy demand, land use, and dependency
149 f each ecotype may be shifted due to ongoing climate change, especially in traits associated with wat
150 l conditions could increase vulnerability to climate change, even for geographically widespread speci
152 echanistic insights into the consequences of climate change for Arctic herbivores, highlighting the p
153 udies have not addressed the consequences of climate change for the metabolism of these organisms in
156 If these processes continue during modern climate change, future loss of summer Arctic sea ice wil
157 e controls plant growth and development, and climate change has already altered the phenology of wild
159 y in understanding biodiversity responses to climate change has been hampered by substantial variatio
165 sh abundance and distribution in response to climate change have been simulated using both statistica
167 wth and the uncertain hazards that accompany climate change have put increasing pressure on the manag
169 tinction due to human land use, hunting, and climate change; (ii) loss of megabiota has a negative im
178 es are cited in all articles published about climate change in The New York Times, The Wall Street Jo
179 on data also suggest an accelerating role of climate change in the range expansion of M. soledadinus,
180 hifting of cultivars to adapt agriculture to climate change-including in major winegrowing regions-as
182 to multiple factors including habitat loss, climate change, increased vulnerability to disease and p
189 current understanding of, and evidence for, climate (change) influences on migration still remains r
190 for 21st-century Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) projections that suggest SA will e
191 dicting how organisms will respond to future climate change is a challenging task for biologists.
205 n artefacts may become further endangered if climate change leads to more favorable growth conditions
206 ncertain how the global processes of WPE and climate change may combine to impact water availability
207 antic, OMZ expansion in the course of global climate change may detrimentally impact taxa that avoid
208 uced species are one mechanism through which climate change may exacerbate negative impacts of biolog
209 rstanding how species have responded to past climate change may help refine projections of how specie
210 providing a regional baseline to monitor how climate change may impact the largest habitat on the pla
213 rimary productivity are key to determine how climate change might impact marine ecosystems and fisher
215 of the potential contributions of forests in climate change mitigation associated with tree planting.
220 ered to determine whether planting trees for climate change mitigation results in increased C storage
222 n (the Master Plan) on population health and climate change mitigation, assuming primary, sustained u
223 organic matter and sequester soil carbon for climate change mitigation, but a renewal of high methane
224 ors to address the global land challenges of climate change mitigation, climate change adaptation, co
225 been proposed as a means to sequester C for climate change mitigation, yet little is known about how
231 e United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, most often assess POC (particulate organ
232 advocacy organizations' press releases about climate change (n = 1,768), examining which messages are
233 tudies have estimated the adverse effects of climate change on crop yields, however, this literature
235 mate variation when predicting the impact of climate change on keystone species, such as the Baltic b
237 potential drastic and rapid consequences of climate change on multitrophic-level community structure
238 Understanding and predicting the impact of climate change on soil microbiomes and the ecosystem ser
240 ive, whereas the likely outcome of continued climate change on summer survival was generally positive
242 ict the spatially explicit effects of future climate change on the wintering energetics of a freeze-t
245 remaining knowledge gaps on the influence of climate (change) on bat migration and abundance can be a
246 s expanding into new habitats as a result of climate change or human introductions will frequently en
247 n examining how these factors are altered by climate change (or vice versa), this framework will allo
248 with an increase in drought frequency due to climate change, pose a threat to plant growth and produc
257 on was realized via two dissimilar pathways: climate change reduced mean body size and intensive land
258 , we assess the likely effects of four major climate change-related abiotic factors on the spatiotemp
259 dy permits spatially explicit predictions of climate change-related population extinction-colonizatio
263 in (Aptenodytes forsteri) colonies under new climate change scenarios meeting the Paris Agreement obj
265 ted CO(2) and warmer temperatures reflecting climate change scenarios somewhat attenuated nanoplastic
266 tes of change to body condition under future climate change scenarios within the next 50 years sugges
272 tical role of coastal wetlands in mitigating climate change, sea-level rise, and salinity increase, s
273 Fast ecological responses closely track climate change, slow responses substantively lag climate
274 tperformed local populations under simulated climate change (snow removal) across all five experiment
275 e eco-chemosphere of seaweeds in response to climate change stressors and other environmental stresso
276 become aware that responses of holobionts to climate change stressors may be driven by shifts in the
277 Based upon these concerns associated with climate change, the International Society for Children's
279 mportant roles on coral reefs in the face of climate change, the species and functional groups they b
282 indirect effects, we used the simulations of climate change to assess the distribution of P. smintheu
285 While MREDs undoubtedly can help mitigate climate change, variability in the sensitivity of differ
287 capacity all contribute to heterogeneity in climate change vulnerability, predicting these features
288 preceding summer and the effect of continued climate change was likely to be mainly negative, whereas
289 erent driving processes, land use change and climate change were found to be the major drivers of tur
290 ability to adapt to the challenges posed by climate change, which hampers the implementation of miti
291 to fundamentally change in structure due to climate change, which leads to questioning of whether de
292 vity have distorted the public debate around climate change, while providing evidence that the struct
294 l effort has gone into predicting how global climate change will impact biodiversity patterns, the sc
295 To gain insight into how these projected 'climate change winners' evolve, we grew populations of m
296 se ecosystems are increasingly threatened by climate change with seasonal implications for photosynth
297 diversity necessary to evolve in response to climate change within populations of black cottonwood (P
299 n Arabia is one of resilience in the face of climate change, yet future challenges include rising tem
300 ten discussed as "co-benefits" of mitigating climate change, yet they are rarely considered when desi