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国际视野 | Nature Climate Change期刊目录

Volume 9 Issue 1, January 2019


Image:

 Harrison Eastwood/DigitalVision/Getty. 

Cover Design: 

Tulsi Voralia.


Consumer under-estimation of food emissions

Adopting plant-based diets has the potential to reduce global GHG emissions. A study in this issue shows that consumers underestimate the GHG emissions associated with foods, but carbon labels that provide information on GHG emissions can promote the purchase of lower-emitting options.


See Camilleri et al. and News & Views by Vandenberg and Nielsen


Editorial

Editorial | 18 December 2018

Rescuing Paris

To achieve the Paris climate goals, the private sector and sub-national governments need to fill the void left by unambitious national government efforts.


Correspondence

Correspondence | 18 December 2018

Waves do not contribute to global sea-level rise

Jerome Aucan, Ron K. Hoeke […] & Ryan Lowe


Correspondence | 18 December 2018

Reply to ‘Waves do not contribute to global sea-level rise’

Angélique Melet, Benoît Meyssignac […] & Gonéri Le Cozannet


Q&A

Q&A | 18 December 2018

International perspectives

Nature Climate Change has asked Polina Ermolaeva and Irina Kuznetsova, Midori Aoyagi, Shah Md Atiqul Haq and Shih-Yun Kuo to share their insights about public perceptions of climate change in Russia, Japan, Bangladesh and Taiwan, respectively.

Jenn Richler


Research Highlights

Research Highlight | 18 December 2018

Photovoltaic win–win

Alastair Brown


Research Highlight | 18 December 2018

Action needed on NDCs

Adam Yeeles


Research Highlight | 18 December 2018

Shifts in storage

Bronwyn Wake


Research Highlight | 18 December 2018

Greenland Sea convection

Graham Simpkins


News & Views

News & Views | 17 December 2018

From myths to action

Correcting misperceptions provides an opportunity to reduce household GHG emissions across multiple domains. Now research shows that consumers greatly underestimate emissions from foods, but these misperceptions can be successfully corrected with carbon labelling.

Michael P. Vandenbergh & Kristian Steensen Nielsen


News & Views | 17 December 2018

A unified wetting and drying theory

For years, theory and model simulations have strongly disagreed on whether global warming will lead to scarcer or more plentiful water supplies. An elegant study now supplies the missing theoretical piece, strengthening the case that global water resources will increase in a warmer world.

Jacob Scheff


Perspectives

Perspective | 18 December 2018

A research roadmap for quantifying non-state and subnational climate mitigation action

Global climate change governance has seen an increase in action beyond national governments. This Perspective sets forth a research agenda and recommendations for evaluating non-state and subnational climate mitigation action.

Angel Hsu, Niklas Höhne […] & Oscar Widerberg


Perspective | 10 December 2018

The private sector’s climate change risk and adaptation blind spots

Investors are increasingly asking businesses to disclose their climate risk and corresponding management strategies. A review of corporate adaptation strategies reveals limited consideration of broader risks to supply chains, customers and employees.

Allie Goldstein, Will R. Turner […] & David G. Hole


Perspective | 18 December 2018

Madden–Julian oscillation changes under anthropogenic warming

The Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO) is the leading mode of intraseasonal variability in the tropical atmosphere. This Perspective examines how the MJO may change with anthropogenic warming, revealing a projected increase in MJO-related precipitation.

Eric D. Maloney, Ángel F. Adames & Hien X. Bui


Letters

Letter | 10 December 2018

Increased snowfall over the Antarctic Ice Sheet mitigated twentieth-century sea-level rise

Ice loss from Antarctica contributes to global sea-level rise. Analysis of ice core records and reanalysis datasets reveals that increased snowfall over the Antarctic Ice Sheet has offset contemporary sea-level rise by ~10 mm since 1901.

B. Medley & E. R. Thomas


Letter | 10 December 2018

Ecological memory modifies the cumulative impact of recurrent climate extremes

The increasing frequency of marine heatwaves suggests that the impacts of successive events may be influenced by previous events. The extent of the 2016 and 2017 bleaching events on the Great Barrier Reef shows that ecological memory played a role in the impacts of the second heatwave.

Terry P. Hughes, James T. Kerry […] & Gergely Torda


Letter | 17 December 2018

Hydrologic implications of vegetation response to elevated CO2 in climate projections

This paper introduces a modification to the Penman–Monteith equation—for net evapotranspiration—to account for vegetation under elevated atmospheric CO2. In so doing it reconciles contradictions between drought indices and modelled runoff projections.

Yuting Yang, Michael L. Roderick […] & Randall J. Donohue


Letter | 17 December 2018

Boreal forest biomass accumulation is not increased by two decades of soil warming

Nearly two decades of data from a boreal forest soil warming experiment (+5 °C) show no significant increase in aboveground biomass accumulation beyond an initial transitory response.

Hyungwoo Lim, Ram Oren […] & Sune Linder


Articles

Article | 17 December 2018

Consumers underestimate the emissions associated with food but are aided by labels

Consumer adoption of more plant-based diets has high technical potential to reduce global GHG emissions. This study shows that consumers underestimate the GHG emissions associated with foods, but carbon labels that provide this information promote the purchase of lower-emitting options.

Adrian R. Camilleri, Richard P. Larrick […] & Dalia Patino-Echeverri


Article | 03 December 2018

Natural variability of Southern Ocean convection as a driver of observed climate trends

Sea-ice expansion around Antarctica, and related surface cooling, is shown to be linked to natural long-term variability of Southern Ocean convection. Model simulations reproduce the observed trends, if they start from an active phase of convection.

Liping Zhang, Thomas L. Delworth […] & Xiaosong Yang


Article | 17 December 2018

Agricultural non-CO2 emission reduction potential in the context of the 1.5 °C target

Agricultural CH4 and N2O emissions represent around 11% of total anthropogenic GHGs. Here agriculture mitigation potentials are quantified, in the context of the 1.5 °C target, and decomposed by emission source, region and mitigation mechanism.

Stefan Frank, Petr Havlík […] & Hugo Valin


Article | 17 December 2018

Global trends in carbon sinks and their relationships with CO2 and temperature

Global net ecosystem production (NEP) from a number of atmospheric inversions and dynamic global vegetation models is analysed to attribute trends to potential drivers. CO2 is found to have a positive effect on NEP that is constrained by climate warming.

M. Fernández-Martínez, J. Sardans[…] & J. Peñuelas


Amendments & Corrections

Publisher Correction | 14 November 2018

Publisher Correction: Bitcoin emissions alone could push global warming above 2 °C

Camilo Mora, Randi L. Rollins […] & Erik C. Franklin


来源:Nature Climate Change

https://www.nature.com/nclimate/

整理、排版:童苗

责任编辑:梁龙武

审核:任宇飞  王冠  王波涛

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