<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Demuzere, M., Decubber, S., Miralles, D., Papagiannopoulou, C., Waegeman, W., Verhoest, N., & Dorigo, W. (2017). Sensitivity of Global Ecosystems to Climate Anomalies in Observations and Earth System Models. In V. Lyubchich, N. C. Oza, A. Rhines, & E. Szekely (Eds.), <i>Proceedings of the 7th International Workshop on Climate Informatics: CI 2017.</i> (pp. 21–24). https://doi.org/10.5065/D6222SH7</div>
</div>
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dc.identifier.isbn
978-0-9973548-2-9
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/43761
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dc.description.abstract
Vegetation is a key player in the climate system, constraining atmospheric conditions through a series of feedbacks. This fundamental role highlights the importance of understanding regional drivers of ecological sensitivity and the response of vegetation to climatic changes. While nutrient availability and shortterm disturbances can be crucial for vegetation at various spatiotemporal scales, natural vegetation dynamics are overall driven by climate. At monthly scales, the interactions between vegetation and climate become complex: some vegetation types react preferentially to specific climatic changes, with different levels of intensity, resilience and lagged response. For our current Earth System Models (ESMs) being able to capture this complexity is crucial but extremely challenging. This adds uncertainty to our projections of future climate and the fate of global ecosystems. Here, following a Granger causality framework based on a random forest (RF) predictive model, we exploit the current wealth of satellite data records to uncover the main climatic drivers of monthly vegetation variability globally. Results based on three decades of satellite data indicate that water availability is the most dominant factor driving vegetation in over 60% of the vegetated land. These observation-based results will then used to benchmark ESMs on their representation of vegetation sensitivity to climate and climatic extremes.
en
dc.language.iso
en
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dc.title
Sensitivity of Global Ecosystems to Climate Anomalies in Observations and Earth System Models
en
dc.type
Konferenzbeitrag
de
dc.type
Inproceedings
en
dc.relation.publication
Proceedings of the 7th International Workshop on Climate Informatics: CI 2017.
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dc.relation.isbn
978-0-9973548-2-9
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dc.relation.doi
10.5065/D6222SH7
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dc.description.startpage
21
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dc.description.endpage
24
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dc.type.category
Full-Paper Contribution
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tuw.booktitle
Proceedings of the 7th International Workshop on Climate Informatics: CI 2017.
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tuw.peerreviewed
true
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tuw.researchTopic.id
E4
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tuw.researchTopic.name
Environmental Monitoring and Climate Adaptation
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tuw.researchTopic.value
100
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tuw.publication.orgunit
E120-01-2 - Forschungsgruppe Klima- und Umweltfernerkundung
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tuw.publisher.doi
10.5065/D6222SH7
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dc.description.numberOfPages
4
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tuw.event.name
7th International Workshop on Climate Informatics
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tuw.event.startdate
20-09-2017
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tuw.event.enddate
22-09-2017
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tuw.event.online
On Site
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tuw.event.type
Event for scientific audience
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tuw.event.place
Boulder, CO, USA
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tuw.event.country
US
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tuw.event.presenter
Demuzere, Matthias
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wb.sciencebranch
Geodäsie, Vermessungswesen
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wb.sciencebranch.oefos
2074
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wb.facultyfocus
Geoinformationstechnik
de
wb.facultyfocus
Geoinformation Technology
en
wb.facultyfocus.faculty
E100
-
wb.presentation.type
science to science/art to art
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item.languageiso639-1
en
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item.openairetype
conference paper
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item.grantfulltext
none
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item.fulltext
no Fulltext
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item.cerifentitytype
Publications
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item.openairecristype
http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794
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crisitem.author.dept
E120-08 - Forschungsbereich Klima- und Umweltfernerkundung