Author Correction |
Browse Articles
Filters
-
Article Type
- All (3567)
- Article (312)
- Author Correction (31)
- Books & Arts (75)
- Comment (80)
- Commentary (248)
- Correction (42)
- Correspondence (173)
- Editorial (175)
- Feature (54)
- Letter (782)
- Market Watch (29)
- News & Views (381)
- News Feature (68)
- Perspective (170)
- Policy Watch (40)
- Publisher Correction (26)
- Research Highlight (142)
- Research Highlights (642)
- Review Article (66)
- Snapshot (31)
-
Year
-
-
Article |
Stringent mitigation substantially reduces risk of unprecedented near-term warming rates
GHG mitigation is not likely to be detectable in global mean temperature before mid-century. However, a simple climate emulator and an Earth system model ensemble suggest that strong mitigation greatly decreases the likelihood of high rates of 20-year warming over the next two decades.
- Christine M. McKenna
- , Amanda C. Maycock
- , Piers M. Forster
- , Christopher J. Smith
- & Katarzyna B. Tokarska
-
Analysis |
Expert assessment of future vulnerability of the global peatland carbon sink
Peatlands are impacted by climate and land-use changes, with feedback to warming by acting as either sources or sinks of carbon. Expert elicitation combined with literature review reveals key drivers of change that alter peatland carbon dynamics, with implications for improving models.
- J. Loisel
- , A. V. Gallego-Sala
- , M. J. Amesbury
- , G. Magnan
- , G. Anshari
- , D. W. Beilman
- , J. C. Benavides
- , J. Blewett
- , P. Camill
- , D. J. Charman
- , S. Chawchai
- , A. Hedgpeth
- , T. Kleinen
- , A. Korhola
- , D. Large
- , C. A. Mansilla
- , J. Müller
- , S. van Bellen
- , J. B. West
- , Z. Yu
- , J. L. Bubier
- , M. Garneau
- , T. Moore
- , A. B. K. Sannel
- , S. Page
- , M. Väliranta
- , M. Bechtold
- , V. Brovkin
- , L. E. S. Cole
- , J. P. Chanton
- , T. R. Christensen
- , M. A. Davies
- , F. De Vleeschouwer
- , S. A. Finkelstein
- , S. Frolking
- , M. Gałka
- , L. Gandois
- , N. Girkin
- , L. I. Harris
- , A. Heinemeyer
- , A. M. Hoyt
- , M. C. Jones
- , F. Joos
- , S. Juutinen
- , K. Kaiser
- , T. Lacourse
- , M. Lamentowicz
- , T. Larmola
- , J. Leifeld
- , A. Lohila
- , A. M. Milner
- , K. Minkkinen
- , P. Moss
- , B. D. A. Naafs
- , J. Nichols
- , J. O’Donnell
- , R. Payne
- , M. Philben
- , S. Piilo
- , A. Quillet
- , A. S. Ratnayake
- , T. P. Roland
- , S. Sjögersten
- , O. Sonnentag
- , G. T. Swindles
- , W. Swinnen
- , J. Talbot
- , C. Treat
- , A. C. Valach
- & J. Wu
-
Article |
Opposite response of strong and moderate positive Indian Ocean Dipole to global warming
The strength of a positive Indian Ocean Dipole (pIOD) is set by sea surface temperature gradient across the equatorial Indian Ocean. Modelling shows warming will increase strong pIODs but decrease moderate pIODs, as faster surface warming in the west sets up conducive conditions for the strong events.
- Wenju Cai
- , Kai Yang
- , Lixin Wu
- , Gang Huang
- , Agus Santoso
- , Benjamin Ng
- , Guojian Wang
- & Toshio Yamagata
-
Perspective |
Achievements and needs for the climate change scenario framework
The SSP–RCP scenario framework has been an important component of physical, social and integrated climate change research for the past decade. This Perspective reviews the successes of the framework and the challenges it faces, and provides suggestions for improvement moving forward.
- Brian C. O’Neill
- , Timothy R. Carter
- , Kristie Ebi
- , Paula A. Harrison
- , Eric Kemp-Benedict
- , Kasper Kok
- , Elmar Kriegler
- , Benjamin L. Preston
- , Keywan Riahi
- , Jana Sillmann
- , Bas J. van Ruijven
- , Detlef van Vuuren
- , David Carlisle
- , Cecilia Conde
- , Jan Fuglestvedt
- , Carole Green
- , Tomoko Hasegawa
- , Julia Leininger
- , Seth Monteith
- & Ramon Pichs-Madruga
-
-
Editorial |
Two roads diverge
The past year has seen climate change manifest in wildfires, storms and flooding, in some cases simultaneous with outbreaks of the COVID-19 pandemic that restricted human activity and impacted global emissions. Despite these trials, other developments hint at the potential for positive steps in climate mitigation.
-
Article |
Increased ocean heat transport into the Nordic Seas and Arctic Ocean over the period 1993–2016
An increase in ocean transport from the North Atlantic into the Nordic Seas and Arctic Ocean is warming the region. Observations from 1993 to 2016 show a significant increase in heat transport after 2001, with the heat being transported over the Greenland–Scotland Ridge.
- Takamasa Tsubouchi
- , Kjetil Våge
- , Bogi Hansen
- , Karin Margretha H. Larsen
- , Svein Østerhus
- , Clare Johnson
- , Steingrímur Jónsson
- & Héðinn Valdimarsson
-
Correspondence |
Weakened evidence for mid-latitude impacts of Arctic warming
- Russell Blackport
- & James A. Screen
-
News & Views |
Body size shapes thermal stress
Body sizes have been declining in response to climate change, but an expected relationship between size and the hot temperatures organisms can tolerate has eluded detection. Now, research shows how body size and the duration of exposure to hot temperatures interact to determine the onset and consequences of thermal stress.
- Lauren B. Buckley
-
Article |
Heat tolerance in ectotherms scales predictably with body size
Analysis of ectotherm thermal death curves in the context of both challenge intensity and duration shows that smaller animals exhibit higher tolerance to acute stress, but lower tolerance to chronic stress. The size-dependent impact provides one explanation for warming-related reductions in animal size.
- Ignacio Peralta-Maraver
- & Enrico L. Rezende
-
Review Article |
Accountability and data-driven urban climate governance
The shift to data-driven urban climate governance alters accountability. This Review examines critically the drivers of the shift—standardization, transparency and capacity building—and how best to achieve equitable climate mitigation outcomes within this context.
- Sara Hughes
- , Sarah Giest
- & Laura Tozer
-
Article |
Climate change risk to global port operations
Global trade and transport depend on the resilience of the ports sector. Multi-hazard operational risks are estimated for 2,013 ports under historical climate and future warming; of the marine and atmospheric hazards considered, coastal flooding, wave overtopping and heat stress increase risk most.
- C. Izaguirre
- , I. J. Losada
- , P. Camus
- , J. L. Vigh
- & V. Stenek
-
Comment |
Why the divestment movement is missing the mark
Despite a strong media presence and pledges from high-profile investors, the divestment movement has largely failed to mobilize financial markets in the war on carbon. Divestment 2.0 will require major tweaking to more effectively redirect the flow of capital and catalyse greater corporate climate action.
- Felix Mormann
-
Article |
Future impacts of climate change on inland Ramsar wetlands
Hydrological modelling is combined with soil moisture estimates to quantify climate change impacts on inland Ramsar wetlands. Net global changes are estimated to be modest, but individual sites with area reductions over 10% are projected to increase 19–243% by 2100, depending on emissions scenario.
- Yi Xi
- , Shushi Peng
- , Philippe Ciais
- & Youhua Chen
-
Matters Arising |
Sandy beaches can survive sea-level rise
- J. A. G. Cooper
- , G. Masselink
- , G. Coco
- , A. D. Short
- , B. Castelle
- , K. Rogers
- , E. Anthony
- , A. N. Green
- , J. T. Kelley
- , O. H. Pilkey
- & D. W. T. Jackson
-
-
Matters Arising |
Reply to: Sandy beaches can survive sea-level rise
- Michalis I. Vousdoukas
- , Roshanka Ranasinghe
- , Lorenzo Mentaschi
- , Theocharis A. Plomaritis
- , Panagiotis Athanasiou
- , Arjen Luijendijk
- & Luc Feyen
-
Editorial |
Climate connections
The climate crisis highlights just how connected the world is. But understanding the changes cascading throughout the natural world calls for even greater connectivity: between countries, scientists and scientific disciplines.
-
Perspective |
The future of Arctic sea-ice biogeochemistry and ice-associated ecosystems
The Arctic is warming and undergoing rapid ice loss. This Perspective considers how changes in sea ice will impact the biogeochemistry and associated ecosystems of the region while calling for more observations to improve our understanding of this complex system.
- Delphine Lannuzel
- , Letizia Tedesco
- , Maria van Leeuwe
- , Karley Campbell
- , Hauke Flores
- , Bruno Delille
- , Lisa Miller
- , Jacqueline Stefels
- , Philipp Assmy
- , Jeff Bowman
- , Kristina Brown
- , Giulia Castellani
- , Melissa Chierici
- , Odile Crabeck
- , Ellen Damm
- , Brent Else
- , Agneta Fransson
- , François Fripiat
- , Nicolas-Xavier Geilfus
- , Caroline Jacques
- , Elizabeth Jones
- , Hermanni Kaartokallio
- , Marie Kotovitch
- , Klaus Meiners
- , Sébastien Moreau
- , Daiki Nomura
- , Ilka Peeken
- , Janne-Markus Rintala
- , Nadja Steiner
- , Jean-Louis Tison
- , Martin Vancoppenolle
- , Fanny Van der Linden
- , Marcello Vichi
- & Pat Wongpan
-
Comment |
Renewable energy targets may undermine their sustainability
As the world’s economies seek to use new renewable energy developments to address climate change and reinvigorate economies post-COVID-19, avoiding a fixation on targets in decision-making will ensure positive social and environmental outcomes.
- Scott Spillias
- , Peter Kareiva
- , Mary Ruckelshaus
- & Eve McDonald-Madden
-
Article |
Enhanced warming constrained by past trends in equatorial Pacific sea surface temperature gradient
The east–west gradient in equatorial Pacific sea surface temperature has strengthened, but models suggest the opposite in past and future climates. Model ensembles show that the observed trend can arise from internal variability but their gradient weakens in the long term, causing more climate warming.
- Masahiro Watanabe
- , Jean-Louis Dufresne
- , Yu Kosaka
- , Thorsten Mauritsen
- & Hiroaki Tatebe
-
Publisher Correction |
Publisher Correction: Weakening Atlantic overturning circulation causes South Atlantic salinity pile-up
- Chenyu Zhu
- & Zhengyu Liu
-
Correspondence |
Research can (and should) support corporate decarbonization
- Belinda Wade
- & Saphira Rekker
-
Article |
Winter temperatures predominate in spring phenological responses to warming
Spring phenology is influenced by chilling, forcing and photoperiod cues; the phenological response to warming from anthropogenic climate change may be slowed by chilling or photoperiod. Plant species respond to all cues in experiments but under environmental conditions, forcing predominates.
- A. K. Ettinger
- , C. J. Chamberlain
- , I. Morales-Castilla
- , D. M. Buonaiuto
- , D. F. B. Flynn
- , T. Savas
- , J. A. Samaha
- & E. M. Wolkovich
-
Article |
Changing carbon-to-nitrogen ratios of organic-matter export under ocean acidification
The biological pump sequesters carbon to the deep ocean. Ocean acidification, through impacts on plankton and food-web structure, is shown to alter the carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of organic material export, with heterotrophic processes playing a key role.
- Jan Taucher
- , Tim Boxhammer
- , Lennart T. Bach
- , Allanah J. Paul
- , Markus Schartau
- , Paul Stange
- & Ulf Riebesell
-
News & Views |
Drivers of wildfire carbon emissions
Increasing fire frequency and severity may shift boreal forests from carbon sinks to carbon sources and amplify climate warming. Analysis indicates that fuel characteristics are important drivers of wildfire carbon emissions across a broad range of North America’s boreal forest.
- Rachel A. Loehman
-
Article |
Fuel availability not fire weather controls boreal wildfire severity and carbon emissions
Carbon emissions from fires are generally modelled and predicted from fire weather and climate. Fuel availability drives carbon emissions more strongly than fire weather in boreal forests, highlighting the importance of ecological dynamics for fire–climate feedbacks.
- X. J. Walker
- , B. M. Rogers
- , S. Veraverbeke
- , J. F. Johnstone
- , J. L. Baltzer
- , K. Barrett
- , L. Bourgeau-Chavez
- , N. J. Day
- , W. J. de Groot
- , C. M. Dieleman
- , S. Goetz
- , E. Hoy
- , L. K. Jenkins
- , E. S. Kane
- , M.-A. Parisien
- , S. Potter
- , E. A. G. Schuur
- , M. Turetsky
- , E. Whitman
- & M. C. Mack
-
News & Views |
Plant agrodiversity to the rescue
Agricultural systems are vulnerable to climate change, and global reservoirs of plant genetic diversity are proving to be a valuable means of crop adaptation. A study now shows that production of sweet potato is at risk from extreme heat events, but a few tolerant cultivars can still thrive and potentially provide climate resilience.
- Samuel Pironon
- & Marybel Soto Gomez
-
News & Views |
A darker cryosphere in a warming world
Dust and black carbon deposition in high-mountain Asia darkens snow and ice, increases sunlight absorption and causes melt — a reinforcing feedback. Now research shows the increasing importance of dust over black carbon at higher altitude, and the sensitivity of aerosol transport and delivery to Arctic sea-ice melt.
- Biagio Di Mauro
-
Article |
Intraspecific diversity as a reservoir for heat-stress tolerance in sweet potato
Mass field testing of heat tolerance in 1,973 cultivars of sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas) from 50 countries identifies tolerant cultivars and reveals tolerance-predictive traits for breeding consideration. The work highlights the role of intraspecific diversity for future crop resilience.
- Bettina Heider
- , Quentin Struelens
- , Émile Faye
- , Carlos Flores
- , José E. Palacios
- , Raul Eyzaguirre
- , Stef de Haan
- & Olivier Dangles
-
Article |
Dust dominates high-altitude snow darkening and melt over high-mountain Asia
Dust deposition in high-mountain Asia lowers snow albedo and hastens melt. Satellite data and models show that dust arrives via transport in elevated aerosol layers and outweighs black carbon impacts at high altitudes, suggesting a growing importance of dust on snowmelt as snowlines rise with warming.
- Chandan Sarangi
- , Yun Qian
- , Karl Rittger
- , L. Ruby Leung
- , Duli Chand
- , Kat J. Bormann
- & Thomas H. Painter
-
Article |
Right-wing ideology reduces the effects of education on climate change beliefs in more developed countries
Education increases political polarization on climate change beliefs in the US. Here the authors find that this effect does not generalize to other contexts. Across 64 countries, education has positive effects on climate change beliefs, and interactions with ideology are more nuanced and contextual.
- Gabriela Czarnek
- , Małgorzata Kossowska
- & Paulina Szwed
-
News & Views |
Winter in a warming Arctic
Winter conditions have typically been downplayed or oversimplified in past estimations of terrestrial Arctic vegetation shifts in relation to climate change. A study now demonstrates the importance of fine-scale variation in winter temperature in explaining the composition and diversity of Arctic plant communities.
- Anne D. Bjorkman
- & Elise C. Gallois
-
News & Views |
Climate change disturbs wildlife microbiomes
While large-scale climate-associated changes are becoming increasingly visible, our understanding of changes in the microbial world remains limited. Now a study takes advantage of a tropical microecosystem to disentangle the direct and indirect impacts of increased temperatures on the microbiomes of animals.
- Obed Hernández-Gómez
-
Article |
Electrification of light-duty vehicle fleet alone will not meet mitigation targets
Electric vehicles (EV) are often considered as the best chance for reducing light-duty transport emissions. Analysis of US policies shows that required emission reductions exceed feasible EV deployment, and technology alongside behaviour change is needed.
- Alexandre Milovanoff
- , I. Daniel Posen
- & Heather L. MacLean
-
Article |
Increasing ocean stratification over the past half-century
Seawater properties—temperature, salinity and density—cause stratification of the water column, limiting vertical exchange. Considering down to 2,000 m, ocean stratification is shown to have increased ~5.3% since 1960, with ~71% of the change occurring in the upper 200 m primarily from warming.
- Guancheng Li
- , Lijing Cheng
- , Jiang Zhu
- , Kevin E. Trenberth
- , Michael E. Mann
- & John P. Abraham
-
Article |
Fine-scale tundra vegetation patterns are strongly related to winter thermal conditions
Winter conditions are the strongest environmental variable relating to fine-scale patterns in tundra vegetation. Vascular plants, lichens and bryophytes nonetheless show complex responses across environmental gradients, highlighting the importance of local heterogeneity.
- Pekka Niittynen
- , Risto K. Heikkinen
- , Juha Aalto
- , Antoine Guisan
- , Julia Kemppinen
- & Miska Luoto
-
Article |
Warming drives ecological community changes linked to host-associated microbiome dysbiosis
Replicated bromeliad microecosystems were used to examine warming-induced community shifts and changes to tadpole gut microbiome. Tadpole growth was more strongly associated with cascading effects of warming on gut dysbiosis than with direct warming effects or indirect effects on food resources.
- Sasha E. Greenspan
- , Gustavo H. Migliorini
- , Mariana L. Lyra
- , Mariana R. Pontes
- , Tamilie Carvalho
- , Luisa P. Ribeiro
- , Diego Moura-Campos
- , Célio F. B. Haddad
- , Luís Felipe Toledo
- , Gustavo Q. Romero
- & C. Guilherme Becker
-
Letter |
Divergent forest sensitivity to repeated extreme droughts
Drought frequency will probably increase under climate change, posing a potential risk to forests. Forest response is variable, but subsequent droughts generally have a negative impact at the tree and ecosystem scales, with systems dominated by conifers particularly vulnerable.
- William R. L. Anderegg
- , Anna T. Trugman
- , Grayson Badgley
- , Alexandra G. Konings
- & John Shaw
-
-
-
-
-
Feature |
Documenting climate change
The impacts of climate change on people and societies are varied and nuanced, making it difficult to encapsulate in an image. Photographs of people can, however, create an emotional connection to what may otherwise be viewed as a natural problem.
- Alyssa Findlay
-
Review Article |
Phytoplankton dynamics in a changing Arctic Ocean
Ongoing Arctic changes are impacting phytoplankton. This Review considers recent primary productivity trends and the environmental drivers, as well as how these are changing, that drive phytoplankton diversity in the region.
- Mathieu Ardyna
- & Kevin Robert Arrigo
-
Publisher Correction |
Publisher Correction: A recent decline in North Atlantic subtropical mode water formation
- Samuel W. Stevens
- , Rodney J. Johnson
- , Guillaume Maze
- & Nicholas R. Bates
-
News & Views |
A preference for constant costs
Raising the cost of carbon is critical for effective climate policy, but is politically challenging because the public are averse to costs. Conventional wisdom suggests this could be addressed by giving the public time to adjust by gradually increasing costs. However, new research shows that the public actually prefers a constant cost curve.
- Christopher Warshaw
-
Article |
Climate velocity in inland standing waters
High warming rates may exceed an organism’s ability to track their thermal habitats. The velocity of climate change in inland standing waters will increase markedly under future warming, making freshwater species particularly vulnerable because their habitat is fragmented in the landscape.
- R. Iestyn Woolway
- & Stephen C. Maberly
-
Article |
Constant carbon pricing increases support for climate action compared to ramping up costs over time
Introducing carbon prices is considered central to climate change mitigation. This study shows that publics prefer constant carbon cost schedules rather than those that gradually increase, even when average costs are the same, because of a desire to smooth consumption over time.
- Michael M. Bechtel
- , Kenneth F. Scheve
- & Elisabeth van Lieshout