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1 or reduced (~40% of rainfall removed) summer rainfall.
2 locally determined unexpected variations in rainfall.
3 fter a 4-year period with smaller wet season rainfall.
4 tively decoupled from the booms and busts in rainfall.
5 diversity does not continually increase with rainfall.
6 riability in dictating past and future Sahel rainfall.
7 esiccation in semiarid regions with seasonal rainfall.
8 s of arthropods would be lower under reduced rainfall.
9 information about the timing and location of rainfall.
10 1%, 10%) compared with weeks with no extreme rainfall.
11 the responsiveness of primary production to rainfall.
12 regions receiving 1%-36% of their historical rainfall.
13 iversity were not affected by temperature or rainfall.
14 varied across gradients in soil texture and rainfall.
15 ed as a function of observed temperature and rainfall.
16 nary diversity above 1,490 mm of mean annual rainfall.
17 ype and count of aquatic habitats, and daily rainfall.
18 ge was correlated with either temperature or rainfall.
19 is positively associated with the amount of rainfall.
20 he forest was minor in years with an average rainfall.
21 luential in determining future trends in ISM rainfall.
22 e to variations in [CO(2) ], temperature and rainfall.
23 significant relationships between HF183 and rainfall 8-14 days prior to sampling and between total c
25 predation risk and/or food availability) and rainfall (a proxy for food availability), did not affect
28 ndian Ocean Dipole (IOD) affects climate and rainfall across the world, and most severely in nations
29 nd measure how manipulation of the amount of rainfall affected the fitness of 517 natural Arabidopsis
30 ship between ecosystem productivity and mean rainfall amounts across sites (in space) and have a low
33 after a 4-year period with larger wet season rainfall and 30 nests after a 4-year period with smaller
34 ting model of YF transmission to account for rainfall and a temperature suitability index and project
35 il carbon stocks was triggered by increasing rainfall and associated enhanced soil respiration rates.
39 lor, to determine the impact of temperature, rainfall and group size on body mass change and interann
40 ion of the WNPSH implies more future monsoon rainfall and heatwaves but less typhoon landfalls over E
41 owed albatrosses, the combination of extreme rainfall and high rabbit density explained 33% of total
42 y evolves only under harsh conditions of low rainfall and high temperature variability and never unde
47 amental part in ecosystems and where intense rainfall and seasonal flooding can result in considerabl
48 eals a negative relationship between monsoon rainfall and soil organic carbon stocks on a millennial
52 carbon sink is out of phase with wintertime rainfall and the sink seasonality of Southern California
54 ture of global warming, could increase local rainfall and through teleconnections strengthen surface
56 13 assessments) to evaluate the link between rainfall and undernutrition in children under age 5 year
57 mite attests to the constant availability of rainfall and vegetated soils, while its delta(13)C-delta
58 d losses in past decades due to both extreme rainfall and water limited conditions, though the degree
61 ing altitude, temperature, and precipitation/rainfall) and in presence/absence of virus infections; w
62 tors such as ambient temperature, season and rainfall, and biotic factors such as body mass, age, soc
63 e relationship between Vairimorpha loads and rainfall, and differences in pathogens by geographic reg
64 Flash flood is mainly initiated by intense rainfall, and due to its rapid onset (within six hours o
65 ionship between rainfall, especially extreme rainfall, and increases in waterborne infectious disease
66 stems, are strongly affected by variation in rainfall, and respond negatively to habitat disturbance.
67 al climatic parameters, such as temperature, rainfall, and snow amount have already been observed.
68 affected by higher temperature or decreasing rainfall; and (c) was more affected by increased rainfal
69 ip in regions where yields are buffered from rainfall anomalies by irrigation infrastructure and find
70 he sampling method used to derive Cumulative Rainfall Anomalies does not appear to actually reflect a
75 of low rainfall but that the effects of low rainfall are mitigated by increases in group size and bo
77 We also calculated daily mean stratiform rainfall area fractions around each station over an area
78 ed from high (Gatton) and medium (St George) rainfall areas of the northern grain region of Australia
80 likely experience lower and more unreliable rainfall as climatic conditions change over the next cen
81 us studies, this implicates temperature, not rainfall, as the principal driver of Mg variability.
82 The most direct impact was the increase in rainfall associated with hurricanes and El Nino, resulti
83 itivity of vegetation productivity to annual rainfall at a given site, even though observation uncert
84 y to September there is a declining trend in rainfall at the coastline, whereas the interior only sho
85 = 13) for the Mariana Trench compared to the rainfall average of 0.13 (+/-0.05, n = 8) in the central
86 r LOW (fortnightly) or HIGH (weekly) average rainfall based upon climate models and the previous 100
88 e fecundity is reduced during periods of low rainfall but that the effects of low rainfall are mitiga
91 thropogenic emissions in the model increases rainfall by 10-70% over densely populated regions in Ind
93 s closely-related species adapted to varying rainfall can provide insights into plant habitat distrib
94 ved sensitivity of ecosystem productivity to rainfall changes at 10 sites across the globe, in nine o
99 al control of fluxes in this highly variable rainfall climate and demonstrates the ability of these d
100 nfall events) and longer-term precipitation (rainfall conditions antecedent to these extreme events)
101 impact of varying [CO(2) ], temperature and rainfall conditions on maize yield, for different nitrog
102 term extreme rainfall events and longer-term rainfall conditions on salmonellosis incidence, our find
103 e interaction between extreme and antecedent rainfall conditions, wet periods were associated with a
105 e limited fidelity typical of spatiotemporal rainfall data sets biases effect estimates towards the n
108 thropogenic global warming to this prolonged rainfall deficit has previously been evaluated through o
112 tensities of herbivory, decreased amounts of rainfall during growing seasons, and natural processes t
115 egional and global scale, tropical cyclones' Rainfall erosivity is poorly assessed and have not been
118 filtering framework that generates improved rainfall estimates by updating radar rainfall fields wit
119 ts occur throughout a wide range of seasonal rainfall, even simultaneously under normal weather.
120 low precipitation years, RUE is lowest when rainfall event sizes are relatively large, and when a la
123 n increase in the average annual duration of rainfall events and debris flow occurrence can be observ
124 , suggesting increased likelihood of extreme rainfall events and intensification of the hydrologic cy
125 Given the associations of short-term extreme rainfall events and longer-term rainfall conditions on s
126 experience more frequent/severe droughts and rainfall events as a consequence of increasing greenhous
127 eveal the global coupling pattern of extreme-rainfall events by applying complex-network methodology
129 heir inability to simulate intense and short rainfall events mask effects of soil structure on surfac
130 ns between short-term precipitation (extreme rainfall events) and longer-term precipitation (rainfall
131 tation regimes dominated by fewer but larger rainfall events, already documented over much of the glo
132 high-altitude atmospheric humidity and heavy rainfall events, but those events did not alleviate seve
133 tal reservoirs of Salmonella following heavy rainfall events, especially during the rainy season, may
136 10 sites across the globe, in nine of which, rainfall exclusion and/or irrigation experiments had bee
140 tions are rising, the climate is warming and rainfall experiences booms and busts, remains an unanswe
142 timated associations between temperature and rainfall exposures and diarrhea and [Formula: see text]
143 mproved rainfall estimates by updating radar rainfall fields with windshield wiper observations.
145 ng (ambient vs. +4 degrees C increase), high rainfall (flushing) events (no events vs. seasonal event
146 e explained by the background level of rain: Rainfall following dry periods can flush pathogens into
147 ater, increasing diarrhea incidence, whereas rainfall following wet periods can dilute pathogen conce
150 lation (NAO) were found for fulmars and with rainfall for murres, after a time lag of 4-9 yr between
151 precessional pacing, suggesting that direct rainfall forcing effects were predominantly driven by se
154 urrent study, we collected wet-only and bulk rainfall from four precipitation chemistry monitoring st
155 ong with average temperature in July and the rainfall from June to September, influence seed oil cont
157 ween radiation forcing, air temperature, and rainfall generate a rate-dependent hysteresis, explainin
158 experiment with species originating across a rainfall gradient (188-1,125 mm/year) across South-East
161 tible availability was high: temperature and rainfall had net positive and negative effects respectiv
162 th increasing wet season length, mean annual rainfall had no systematic effect on rooting depth.
163 s were earlier in warmer years, while summer rainfall had opposing associations with collection date
165 r-suggest that: increasing autumn and winter rainfall has resulted in increasing floods in northweste
167 e show that changes in Indian Summer Monsoon rainfall have controlled the residence time of soil carb
168 t the increased probabilities of high (less) rainfall, high (low) minimum temperature and low (modera
170 cords indicating a major decrease of monsoon rainfall in MSEA during the mid- to late Holocene, coinc
172 ainfall projected in East China and 36% less rainfall in Southeast Asia than suggested by the multi-m
173 in salinity (from > 30ppt to < 5ppt) due to rainfall in the catchments, with hypo-salinity persistin
174 shows that current drivers of the amount of rainfall in the Mediterranean share some similarities to
176 ted increases of 20% in hurricane-associated rainfall in the North Atlantic highlight the need to con
178 nd indirect mechanisms underlie responses to rainfall, including physiological, top-down, and food-re
179 lan speleothem showing that Central American rainfall increased within a 2000 yr period from a persis
180 st interglacial (e.g., 125, 105 ka)-regional rainfall increases due to both wetter winters and the in
181 ermodynamic arguments imply that global mean rainfall increases in a warmer atmosphere; however, dyna
182 in rainfall modification and highlight that rainfall increases not only downwind of the city but als
184 g decreased in samples under extended spring rainfall, indicating that long-term climate alteration c
187 ore and during the eruption, infiltration of rainfall into Kilauea Volcano's subsurface increased por
188 ontrast to the modern regional climate where rainfall is delivered predominantly in winter months alo
191 e for variable contributions of mercury from rainfall is provided by even-mass independent isotope va
192 Modelling vegetation responses to changes in rainfall is thus crucial to project water and carbon cyc
193 er, including heat waves, droughts, and high rainfall, is becoming more common and affecting a divers
194 esults shed light on key processes governing rainfall isotope ratios in the MAC region during contine
196 observed patterns in productivity changes in rainfall manipulation experiments but had a low capacity
198 marine ecosystems, and episodic but extreme rainfall may drive high fluxes to marine communities.
199 lts suggest that, in rural Tamil Nadu, heavy rainfall may wash pathogens that accumulate during dry w
201 te picture of the role of urban processes in rainfall modification and highlight that rainfall increa
202 ow variation in the quantity and evenness of rainfall modulates trophic structure in 210 natural fres
205 ased estimated health effects due to extreme rainfall (occurrence) and wet conditions (accumulated to
209 f population susceptibility, temperature and rainfall on dengue transmission empirically, our model i
210 tionship between group size and variation in rainfall on dominant female fecundity, body mass, and of
212 buffer the negative effects of variation in rainfall on the fecundity and body mass of breeding fema
216 ow of immediate availability in which I from rainfall or irrigation remains in soil solution and avai
218 ating temporal variability in growing season rainfall over a wide range of precipitation amounts, fro
219 eases fire size and intensity but cumulative rainfall over several years leads to increased standing
220 rm pool and the MJO are related to increased rainfall over southeast Asia, northern Australia, Southw
221 on and with species that experience variable rainfall over summer months when seeds usually mature.
222 e significantly associated with above normal rainfall (p < 0.05); while dengue in Brazil and southeas
223 Semi-arid Australia has a highly variable rainfall pattern, making it an ideal system to study how
225 lation (ENSO) have major impacts on regional rainfall patterns around the globe, with substantial env
226 f historic eruption occurrence suggests that rainfall patterns contribute substantially to the timing
227 Cave speleothems suggest that summer monsoon rainfall periodically reaches as far north as Israel-wel
229 r of leaves and biomass, however, the medium rainfall population of R. rugosum produced more seeds th
231 nd-sea thermal contrast, leading to 28% more rainfall projected in East China and 36% less rainfall i
232 are adapted to drought and take advantage of rainfall pulses, and more negative AIs were found in wet
235 he UK Met Office's long-term temperature and rainfall records, we present the first evidence demonstr
236 ned the effects of increased temperature and rainfall reduction on the biochemical limitations of pho
237 8), whereas interactions between warming and rainfall reduction on the J(max25 degrees C) to V(cmax25
238 cation of the hydrological cycle is altering rainfall regimes by increasing the frequency of extreme
239 ed to be lower and more variable in most low-rainfall regions, with nitrogen availability limiting gr
242 face topography through interactions between rainfall, runoff and erosion in drainage basins(1-4).
243 lained by hydrological controls that reflect rainfall-runoff regimes in different climate zones.
246 However, the lengthening of the monsoon rainfall season and reduced evapotranspiration will shor
249 esis, and measures of topographic diversity, rainfall seasonality, and productivity were used to test
250 al regression models showed biome stability, rainfall seasonality, and topographic heterogeneity were
251 and temporal reconstruction of premortality rainfall shows that mass mortality and synchronous ecosy
253 ts enhanced decomposition most at cool, high rainfall sites, indicating that in a warmer and drier fu
255 addition to climatic drought severity (i.e., rainfall), subsurface processes explained variation in d
256 Results highlight that urbanization modifies rainfall, such that mean precipitation is enhanced by 18
257 due to its rapid onset (within six hours of rainfall), taking action for effective response is chall
258 er-law-distributed connections form a global rainfall teleconnection pattern that is probably control
259 arameters (soil type as "calcareous" or not, rainfall, temperature and wine color) were used to expla
261 , western US, and Brazil) followed shifts in rainfall, temperature, and vegetation in which both drou
262 c changes such as eutrophication and altered rainfall, these findings illustrate the potential for si
263 graphical shifts are observed than with most rainfall threshold models and the pattern of that shift
269 olcanic activity can be modulated by extreme rainfall triggering edifice rock failure-a factor that s
270 experimental plots, showing that effects of rainfall uncovered in the experiment are applicable to n
271 of this diaspore polymorphic species in its rainfall-unpredictable environment likely is enhanced by
275 experimentally reduced versus naturally high rainfall variability using a 32-year precipitation-ANPP
277 In this context, large-scale forcing of ISM rainfall variability with multi-decadal resolution over
282 latively infiltrate 51-54% additional annual rainfall volume as compared to pre-demolition state, in
283 ological variables, i.e., relative humidity, rainfall volume, wind speed, and wind direction, were si
286 t the Holocene evolution of Central American rainfall was driven by exceeding a temperature threshold
288 y, the biomass of predators was highest when rainfall was uneven, resulting in top-heavy biomass pyra
289 tly related to mf abundance, suggesting that rainfall washout and air mass movement are important pre
290 astal Plain counties, extreme and antecedent rainfall were associated with significant differences in
291 drier tropical forests (receiving ~ 1000 mm rainfall) were at least twice that of the wettest (recei
292 total of larvae and pupae adjusted for daily rainfall when compared to tires, followed by bromeliads
293 importance of considering non-monsoon season rainfall when interpreting speleothem paleoclimate recor
294 200 years BP) are suggestive of reduced ISM rainfall, whereas lower delta(18)Ow values during the Me
296 e climate change predictions suggest extreme rainfall will become more common in this system, necessi
297 of reduced thermocline feedback and weakened rainfall-wind-sea surface temperature coupling over the
299 egrees C) in response to warming and reduced rainfall, with such responses expected to be greatest in