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Showing 1–16 of 16 results
Advanced filters: Author: Didier Swingedouw Clear advanced filters
  • While present in palaeoclimate records, the drivers behind 20-year climate variability are poorly understood. Here, using climate simulations and in situand palaeo data, the authors present a possible link between volcanic eruptions, Great Salinity Anomalies and the Atlantic overturning circulation.

    • Didier Swingedouw
    • Pablo Ortega
    • Roland Séférian
    Research
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 6, P: 1-12
  • The Atlantic overturning circulation plays a key role in large-scale climate but how it varies is not well known. Now a study proposes that the weakening it may have experienced in the late 1970s is unprecedented over the last millennium.

    • Didier Swingedouw
    News & Views
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 5, P: 411-412
  • Concerns on climate change include the risk of abrupt cooling in the North Atlantic. Here, the authors analyse CMIP5 projections and show that a convection collapse in the subpolar gyre can cool this region by up to 3°C in 10 years, which is as likely to occur by 2100 as a continuous warming.

    • Giovanni Sgubin
    • Didier Swingedouw
    • Amine Bennabi
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 8, P: 1-12
  • New climate models show a stronger warming with greenhouse gas emissions than is suggested by observations. Here, the authors argue that internal variability of the Atlantic Ocean may have dampened some of the recent warming, which could explain part of the disagreement between the newer models and observations.

    • Rémy Bonnet
    • Didier Swingedouw
    • Adriana Sima
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-9
  • Ocean warming contributes to the thinning of the Antarctic ice shelves, however, lack of observations has prevented a quantification of this contribution. Here the authors use geological records to show that 0.3–1.5 °C ocean warming has played a central role on regional ice shelf instability over the last 9000 years.

    • Johan Etourneau
    • Giovanni Sgubin
    • Jung-Hyun Kim
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 10, P: 1-8
  • Grapes produced for winemaking are highly susceptible to changes in climate, particularly extreme heat and drought. This Review examines the changing geography of existing and emerging winegrowing regions, and recommends adaptation measures to increasing heat and modified drought, pest and disease pressure.

    • Cornelis van Leeuwen
    • Giovanni Sgubin
    • Gregory A. Gambetta
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Earth & Environment
    Volume: 5, P: 258-275
  • Climate change could drive critical parts of the Earth system past tipping points, causing large-scale, abrupt and/or irreversible changes that harm societies. Here, the authors suggest that satellite remote sensing can play a unique role in helping manage these profound risks, by providing improved early warning of tipping points across scales.

    • Timothy M. Lenton
    • Jesse F. Abrams
    • Niklas Boers
    ReviewsOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 15, P: 1-15
  • The North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) is an important source of climate variability in the Northern Hemisphere; here, a model-tested reconstruction of the NAO for the past millennium reveals that positive NAO phases were predominant during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, but not during the whole medieval period.

    • Pablo Ortega
    • Flavio Lehner
    • Pascal Yiou
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 523, P: 71-74
  • Antarctic climate trends observed in the satellite record are compared with a two hundred year paleoclimate record. The satellite record is found to be too short to attribute changes to anthropogenic forcing, with natural variability overwhelming the forced signal.

    • Julie M. Jones
    • Sarah T. Gille
    • Tessa R. Vance
    Reviews
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 6, P: 917-926
  • Julián Velasco et al. use climate model simulations to show how the collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation and unabated global warming under the RCP 8.5 scenario affect the global distribution of 2509 amphibian species. These results show severe and synergistic impacts of global warming, with particularly strong effects shown in the Neotropical, Nearctic and Palearctic regions.

    • Julián A. Velasco
    • Francisco Estrada
    • Dimitri Defrance
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Biology
    Volume: 4, P: 1-7