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Showing 1–16 of 16 results
Advanced filters: Author: F. Stuart Chapin Clear advanced filters
  • Analyses of the relationships between temperature, moisture and seven key plant functional traits across the tundra and over time show that community height increased with warming across all sites, whereas other traits lagged behind predicted rates of change.

    • Anne D. Bjorkman
    • Isla H. Myers-Smith
    • Evan Weiher
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 562, P: 57-62
  • This study develops a wide-ranging index to assess the many factors that contribute to the health and benefits of the oceans, and the scores for all costal nations are assessed.

    • Benjamin S. Halpern
    • Catherine Longo
    • Dirk Zeller
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 488, P: 615-620
  • Perhaps the most scientifically challenging phase of the terrestrial carbon cycle occurs below ground. Innovative experiments, carried out in northern Sweden, illustrate the huge influence of roots and associated fungi.

    • F. Stuart Chapin III
    • Roger W. Ruess
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 411, P: 749-751
  • Identifying and quantifying planetary boundaries that must not be transgressed could help prevent human activities from causing unacceptable environmental change, argue Johan Rockström and colleagues.

    • Johan Rockström
    • Will Steffen
    • Jonathan A. Foley
    Special Features
    Nature
    Volume: 461, P: 472-475
  • Stratospheric injection of sulphate aerosols has been advocated as an emergency geoengineering measure to tackle dangerous climate change, or as a stop-gap until atmospheric carbon dioxide levels are reduced. But it may not prove to be the game-changer that some imagine.

    • Scott Barrett
    • Timothy M. Lenton
    • Aart de Zeeuw
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 4, P: 527-529
  • A varied repertoire of responses helps manage fluctuations, as in markets. This Perspective argues that society needs to strengthen the diversity of options for responding to disruptions, exploring how this response diversity is expressed, how it can be built and lost, and what we can do to promote it.

    • Brian Walker
    • Anne-Sophie Crépin
    • Jeffrey R. Vincent
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 6, P: 621-629
  • Transnational corporations control large proportions of the industries and commodities that directly and indirectly impact the environment. Here, the authors discuss the problems, but also potential benefits, of such consolidation for sustainability.

    • Carl Folke
    • Henrik Österblom
    • Aart de Zeeuw
    Reviews
    Nature Ecology & Evolution
    Volume: 3, P: 1396-1403
  • Well-being and resilience are considered related or even synergistic dimensions of sustainable development. This Perspective highlights how trade-offs emerging from narrow interpretations of resilience and well-being could threaten sustainable development outcomes.

    • Tomas Chaigneau
    • Sarah Coulthard
    • Katrina Brown
    Reviews
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 5, P: 287-293