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研究表明南极洲东西部对外部条件的反应截然不同 快报文章
资源环境快报,2024年第13期
作者:  魏艳红
Microsoft Word(23Kb)  |  收藏  |  浏览/下载:623/0  |  提交时间:2024/07/15
Antarctic Ice Sheets.  Permanently Glaciated Areas  Global Climate Dynamics  
The online competition between pro- and anti-vaccination views 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 582 (7811) : 230-+
作者:  Wu, Fan;  Zhao, Su;  Yu, Bin;  Chen, Yan-Mei;  Wang, Wen;  Song, Zhi-Gang;  Hu, Yi;  Tao, Zhao-Wu;  Tian, Jun-Hua;  Pei, Yuan-Yuan;  Yuan, Ming-Li;  Zhang, Yu-Ling;  Dai, Fa-Hui;  Liu, Yi;  Wang, Qi-Min;  Zheng, Jiao-Jiao;  Xu, Lin;  Holmes, Edward C.;  Zhang, Yong-Zhen
收藏  |  浏览/下载:42/0  |  提交时间:2020/07/03

Insights into the interactions between pro- and anti-vaccination clusters on Facebook can enable policies and approaches that attempt to interrupt the shift to anti-vaccination views and persuade undecided individuals to adopt a pro-vaccination stance.


Distrust in scientific expertise(1-14) is dangerous. Opposition to vaccination with a future vaccine against SARS-CoV-2, the causal agent of COVID-19, for example, could amplify outbreaks(2-4), as happened for measles in 2019(5,6). Homemade remedies(7,8) and falsehoods are being shared widely on the Internet, as well as dismissals of expert advice(9-11). There is a lack of understanding about how this distrust evolves at the system level(13,14). Here we provide a map of the contention surrounding vaccines that has emerged from the global pool of around three billion Facebook users. Its core reveals a multi-sided landscape of unprecedented intricacy that involves nearly 100 million individuals partitioned into highly dynamic, interconnected clusters across cities, countries, continents and languages. Although smaller in overall size, anti-vaccination clusters manage to become highly entangled with undecided clusters in the main online network, whereas pro-vaccination clusters are more peripheral. Our theoretical framework reproduces the recent explosive growth in anti-vaccination views, and predicts that these views will dominate in a decade. Insights provided by this framework can inform new policies and approaches to interrupt this shift to negative views. Our results challenge the conventional thinking about undecided individuals in issues of contention surrounding health, shed light on other issues of contention such as climate change(11), and highlight the key role of network cluster dynamics in multi-species ecologies(15).


  
Asynchronous carbon sink saturation in African and Amazonian tropical forests 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 579 (7797) : 80-+
作者:  Wannes Hubau;  Simon L. Lewis;  Oliver L. Phillips;  Kofi Affum-Baffoe;  Hans Beeckman;  Aida Cuní;  -Sanchez;  Armandu K. Daniels;  Corneille E. N. Ewango;  Sophie Fauset;  Jacques M. Mukinzi;  Douglas Sheil;  Bonaventure Sonké;  Martin J. P. Sullivan;  Terry C. H. Sunderland;  Hermann Taedoumg;  Sean C. Thomas;  Lee J. T. White;  Katharine A. Abernethy;  Stephen Adu-Bredu;  Christian A. Amani;  Timothy R. Baker;  Lindsay F. Banin;  Fidè;  le Baya;  Serge K. Begne;  Amy C. Bennett;  Fabrice Benedet;  Robert Bitariho;  Yannick E. Bocko;  Pascal Boeckx;  Patrick Boundja;  Roel J. W. Brienen;  Terry Brncic;  Eric Chezeaux;  George B. Chuyong;  Connie J. Clark;  Murray Collins;  James A. Comiskey;  David A. Coomes;  Greta C. Dargie;  Thales de Haulleville;  Marie Noel Djuikouo Kamdem;  Jean-Louis Doucet;  Adriane Esquivel-Muelbert;  Ted R. Feldpausch;  Alusine Fofanah;  Ernest G. Foli;  Martin Gilpin;  Emanuel Gloor;  Christelle Gonmadje;  Sylvie Gourlet-Fleury;  Jefferson S. Hall;  Alan C. Hamilton;  David J. Harris;  Terese B. Hart;  Mireille B. N. Hockemba;  Annette Hladik;  Suspense A. Ifo;  Kathryn J. Jeffery;  Tommaso Jucker;  Emmanuel Kasongo Yakusu;  Elizabeth Kearsley;  David Kenfack;  Alexander Koch;  Miguel E. Leal;  Aurora Levesley;  Jeremy A. Lindsell;  Janvier Lisingo;  Gabriela Lopez-Gonzalez;  Jon C. Lovett;  Jean-Remy Makana;  Yadvinder Malhi;  Andrew R. Marshall;  Jim Martin;  Emanuel H. Martin;  Faustin M. Mbayu;  Vincent P. Medjibe;  Vianet Mihindou;  Edward T. A. Mitchard;  Sam Moore;  Pantaleo K. T. Munishi;  Natacha Nssi Bengone;  Lucas Ojo;  Fidè;  le Evouna Ondo;  Kelvin S.-H. Peh;  Georgia C. Pickavance;  Axel Dalberg Poulsen;  John R. Poulsen;  Lan Qie;  Jan Reitsma;  Francesco Rovero;  Michael D. Swaine;  Joey Talbot;  James Taplin;  David M. Taylor;  Duncan W. Thomas;  Benjamin Toirambe;  John Tshibamba Mukendi;  Darlington Tuagben;  Peter M. Umunay;  Geertje M. F. van der Heijden;  Hans Verbeeck;  Jason Vleminckx;  Simon Willcock;  Hannsjö;  rg Wö;  ll;  John T. Woods;  Lise Zemagho
收藏  |  浏览/下载:73/0  |  提交时间:2020/05/13

Structurally intact tropical forests sequestered about half of the global terrestrial carbon uptake over the 1990s and early 2000s, removing about 15 per cent of anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions(1-3). Climate-driven vegetation models typically predict that this tropical forest '  carbon sink'  will continue for decades(4,5). Here we assess trends in the carbon sink using 244 structurally intact African tropical forests spanning 11 countries, compare them with 321 published plots from Amazonia and investigate the underlying drivers of the trends. The carbon sink in live aboveground biomass in intact African tropical forests has been stable for the three decades to 2015, at 0.66 tonnes of carbon per hectare per year (95 per cent confidence interval 0.53-0.79), in contrast to the long-term decline in Amazonian forests(6). Therefore the carbon sink responses of Earth'  s two largest expanses of tropical forest have diverged. The difference is largely driven by carbon losses from tree mortality, with no detectable multi-decadal trend in Africa and a long-term increase in Amazonia. Both continents show increasing tree growth, consistent with the expected net effect of rising atmospheric carbon dioxide and air temperature(7-9). Despite the past stability of the African carbon sink, our most intensively monitored plots suggest a post-2010 increase in carbon losses, delayed compared to Amazonia, indicating asynchronous carbon sink saturation on the two continents. A statistical model including carbon dioxide, temperature, drought and forest dynamics accounts for the observed trends and indicates a long-term future decline in the African sink, whereas the Amazonian sink continues to weaken rapidly. Overall, the uptake of carbon into Earth'  s intact tropical forests peaked in the 1990s. Given that the global terrestrial carbon sink is increasing in size, independent observations indicating greater recent carbon uptake into the Northern Hemisphere landmass(10) reinforce our conclusion that the intact tropical forest carbon sink has already peaked. This saturation and ongoing decline of the tropical forest carbon sink has consequences for policies intended to stabilize Earth'  s climate.


  
Long-term population dynamics of small mammals in tropical dry forests, effects of unusual climate events, and implications for management and conservation 期刊论文
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2018, 426: 123-133
作者:  Mason-Romo, Edgard D.;  Ceballos, Gerardo;  Lima, Mauricio;  Martinez-Yrizar, Angelina;  Jaramillo, Victor J.;  Maass, Manuel
收藏  |  浏览/下载:19/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
Population dynamics  Global climate disruption  Tropical dry forests  Small mammals  Feedback structure  Extreme climate events  
Assessing the sensitivity of bivalve populations to global warming using an individual-based modelling approach 期刊论文
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2018, 24 (10) : 4581-4597
作者:  Thomas, Yoann;  Bacher, Cedric
收藏  |  浏览/下载:13/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
benthic species  biogeography  climate scenario  dynamic energy budget  global warming  phenology  population dynamics  temperature tolerance  
Assessing the Dynamic Versus Thermodynamic Origin of Climate Model Biases 期刊论文
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2018, 45 (16) : 8471-8479
作者:  Wehrli, Kathrin;  Guillod, Benoit P.;  Hauser, Mathias;  Leclair, Matthieu;  Seneviratne, Sonia I.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:26/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
climate model biases  Earth system models  atmospheric nudging  dynamics versus thermodynamics  global climate models  systematic biases  
Stability in a changing world - palm community dynamics in the hyperdiverse western Amazon over 17 years 期刊论文
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2017, 23 (3)
作者:  Olivares, Ingrid;  Svenning, Jens-Christian;  van Bodegom, Peter M.;  Valencia, Renato;  Balslev, Henrik
收藏  |  浏览/下载:27/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
Arecaceae  biodiversity  climate change  climatic records  community ecology  directional changes  forest dynamics  forest monitoring  global change  Yasuni National Park  
Do dynamic global vegetation models capture the seasonality of carbon fluxes in the Amazon basin? A data-model intercomparison 期刊论文
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2017, 23 (1)
作者:  Restrepo-Coupe, Natalia;  Levine, Naomi M.;  Christoffersen, Bradley O.;  Albert, Loren P.;  Wu, Jin;  Costa, Marcos H.;  Galbraith, David;  Imbuzeiro, Hewlley;  Martins, Giordane;  da Araujo, Alessandro C.;  Malhi, Yadvinder S.;  Zeng, Xubin;  Moorcroft, Paul;  Saleska, Scott R.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:26/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
Amazonia  carbon dynamics  dynamic global vegetation models  ecosystem-climate interactions  eddy covariance  seasonality  tropical forests phenology