Journal Information

Online ISSN: 1520-0477
Print ISSN:    0003-0007
Frequency:    Monthly

Volume 90, Issue 5 (May 2009)

The Northern Eurasia Earth Science Partnership: An Example of Science Applied to Societal Needs

Pavel Ya Groisman

UCAR, NOAA/National Climatic Data Center, Asheville, North Carolina

Elizabeth A. Clark and Dennis P. Lettenmaier

University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

Vladimir M. Kattsov

Voeikov Main Geophysical Observatory, St. Petersburg, Russia

Irina N. Sokolik

Georgia Institute for Technology, Atlanta, Georgia

Vladimir B. Aizen

University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho

Oliver Cartus

Friedrich Schiller University, Jena, Germany

Jiquan Chen and Christiane C. Schmullius

University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio

Susan Conard

USDA Forest Service, Arlington, Virginia

John Katzenberger

Aspen Global Change Institute, Aspen, Colorado

Olga Krankina

Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon

Jaakko Kukkonen and Mikhail A. Sofiev

Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland

Toshinobu Machida and Shamil Maksyutov

National Institute for Environmental Sciences, Tsukuba, Japan

Dennis Ojima

The H. John Heinz III Center for Science, Economics, and the Environment, Washington, D.C

Jiaguo Qi

Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan

Vladimir E. Romanovsky and Donald Walker

University of Alaska, Fairbanks, Alaska

Maurizio Santoro

Gamma Remote Sensing, Gumligen, Switzerland

Alexander I. Shiklomanov and Charles Vörösmarty

University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire

Kou Shimoyama

Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan

Herman H. Shugart and Jacquelyn K. Shuman

University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia

Anatoly I. Sukhinin

Forest Institute, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Krasnoyarsk, Russia

Eric F. Wood

Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey





Abstract

Northern Eurasia, the largest land-mass in the northern extratropics, accounts for 20% of the global land area. However, little is known about how the biogeochemical cycles, energy and water cycles, and human activities specific to this carbon-rich, cold region interact with global climate. A major concern is that changes in the distribution of land-based life, as well as its interactions with the environment, may lead to a self-reinforcing cycle of accelerated regional and global warming. With this as its motivation, the Northern Eurasian Earth Science Partnership Initiative (NEESPI) was formed in 2004 to better understand and quantify feedbacks between northern Eurasian and global climates. The first group of NEESPI projects has mostly focused on assembling regional databases, organizing improved environmental monitoring of the region, and studying individual environmental processes. That was a starting point to addressing emerging challenges in the region related to rapidly and simultaneously changing climate, environmental, and societal systems. More recently, the NEESPI research focus has been moving toward integrative studies, including the development of modeling capabilities to project the future state of climate, environment, and societies in the NEESPI domain. This effort will require a high level of integration of observation programs, process studies, and modeling across disciplines.

Cited by

E P Gordov, E A Vaganov. (2010) Siberia Integrated Regional Study: multidisciplinary investigations of the dynamic relationship between the Siberian environment and global climate change. Environmental Research Letters 5:1, 015007
Online publication date: 1-Mar-2010.
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Haibin Li, Justin Sheffield, Eric F. Wood. (2010) Bias correction of monthly precipitation and temperature fields from Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change AR4 models using equidistant quantile matching. Journal of Geophysical Research 115:D10,
Online publication date: 1-Jan-2010.
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Pavel Groisman, Amber J Soja. (2009) Ongoing climatic change in Northern Eurasia: justification for expedient research. Environmental Research Letters 4:4, 045002
Online publication date: 1-Dec-2009.
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N Lu, B Wilske, J Ni, R John, J Chen. (2009) Climate change in Inner Mongolia from 1955 to 2005—trends at regional, biome and local scales. Environmental Research Letters 4:4, 045006
Online publication date: 1-Oct-2009.
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Ranjeet John, Jiquan Chen, Nan Lu, Burkhard Wilske. (2009) Land cover/land use change in semi-arid Inner Mongolia: 1992–2004. Environmental Research Letters 4:4, 045010
Online publication date: 1-Oct-2009.
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J K Shuman, H H Shugart. (2009) Evaluating the sensitivity of Eurasian forest biomass to climate change using a dynamic vegetation model. Environmental Research Letters 4:4, 045024
Online publication date: 1-Oct-2009.
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