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Showing 1–9 of 9 results
Advanced filters: Author: Elvira Poloczanska Clear advanced filters
  • Research that combines all available studies of biological responses to regional and global climate change shows that 81–83% of all observations were consistent with the expected impacts of climate change. These findings were replicated across taxa and oceanic basins.

    • Elvira S. Poloczanska
    • Christopher J. Brown
    • Anthony J. Richardson
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 3, P: 919-925
  • The biological world is responding rapidly to a changing climate, but attempts to attribute individual impacts to rising greenhouse gases are ill-advised.

    • Camille Parmesan
    • Carlos Duarte
    • Michael C. Singer
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 1, P: 2-4
  • The ways in which ocean communities respond to warming are related to their composition. The variety of thermal affinities and thermal ranges of individual species, along with vertical temperature gradients, shape community response and allow the prediction of regional responses to warming.

    • Michael T. Burrows
    • Amanda E. Bates
    • Elvira S. Poloczanska
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 9, P: 959-963
  • Global maps constructed using climate-change velocities to derive spatial trajectories for climatic niches between 1960 and 2100 show past and future shifts in ecological climate niches; properties of these trajectories are used to infer changes in species distributions, and thus identify areas that will act as climate sources and sinks, and geographical barriers to species migrations.

    • Michael T. Burrows
    • David S. Schoeman
    • Elvira S. Poloczanska
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 507, P: 492-495
  • Ocean warming will cause widespread changes in species richness and assemblage composition over coming decades, with important implications for both conservation management and international ocean governance.

    • Jorge García Molinos
    • Benjamin S. Halpern
    • Michael T. Burrows
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 6, P: 83-88
  • Analyses of the recovery of marine populations, habitats and ecosystems following past conservation interventions indicate that substantial recovery of the abundance, structure and function of marine life could be achieved by 2050 if major pressures, including climate change, are mitigated.

    • Carlos M. Duarte
    • Susana Agusti
    • Boris Worm
    Reviews
    Nature
    Volume: 580, P: 39-51