首页> 外文期刊>Ambio: A Journal of the Human Environment >Environmental changes in the North Atlantic Region: SCANNET as a collaborative approach for documenting, understanding and predicting changes
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Environmental changes in the North Atlantic Region: SCANNET as a collaborative approach for documenting, understanding and predicting changes

机译:北大西洋地区的环境变化:SCANNET是记录,理解和预测变化的一种协作方法

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摘要

The lands surrounding the North Atlantic Region (the SCANNET Region) cover a wide range of climate regimes, physical environments and availability of natural resources. Except in the extreme North, they have supported human populations and various cultures since at least the end of the last ice age. However, the region is also important at a wider geographical scale in that it influences the global climate and supports animals that migrate between the Arctic and all the other continents of the world. Climate, environment and land use in the region are changing rapidly and projections suggest that global warming will be amplified there while increasing land use might dramatically reduce the remaining wilderness areas. Because much of the region is sparsely populated-if populated at all-observational records of past environmental changes and their impacts are both few and of short duration. However, it is becoming very important to record the changes that are now in progress, to understand the drivers of these changes, and to predict future consequences of the changes. To facilitate research into understanding impacts of global change on the lands of the North Atlantic Regions, and also to monitor changes in real time, an EU-funded network of research sites and infrastructures was formed in 2000: this was called SCANNET-SCANdinavian/North European NETwork of Terrestrial Field Bases. SCANNET currently consists of 9 core sites and 5 sites within local networks that together cover the broad range of current climate and predicted change in the region. Climate observations are well replicated across the network, whereas each site has tended to select particular environmental and ecological subjects for intensive observation. This provides diversity of both subject coverage and expertise. In this paper, we summarize the findings of SCANNET to-date and outline its information bases in order to increase awareness of data on environmental change in the North Atlantic Region. We also identify important gaps in our understanding and identify where the roles of existing infrastructures and activities represented by SCANNET can facilitate future research, monitoring and ground-truthing activities.
机译:北大西洋地区(SCANNET地区)周围的土地覆盖了广泛的气候体制,自然环境和自然资源。除极北地区外,至少自上个冰河时代结束以来,他们就一直在为人类和各种文化提供支持。但是,该地区在更广泛的地理范围内也很重要,因为它会影响全球气候并支持在北极地区与世界其他所有大陆之间迁移的动物。该地区的气候,环境和土地利用正在迅速变化,预测表明全球变暖将在那儿加剧,而土地利用的增加可能会大大减少其余的荒野地区。因为该地区的大部分人口稀少-如果按照过去环境变化的所有观测记录进行人口稠密,其影响既少又持续时间短。但是,记录当前正在进行的更改,了解这些更改的驱动力并预测更改的未来后果变得非常重要。为了促进对了解全球变化对北大西洋地区土地的影响的研究并实时监视变化,2000年,由欧盟资助的研究站点和基础设施网络成立:这被称为SCANNET-SCANdinavian / North欧洲地面基地网络。 SCANNET当前由9个核心站点和5个本地站点组成,这些站点共同覆盖了该地区当前的广泛气候和预期变化。气候观测在整个网络中得到很好的复制,而每个站点都倾向于选择特定的环境和生态主题进行深入观测。这提供了主题覆盖范围和专业知识的多样性。在本文中,我们总结了SCANNET的最新发现,并概述了其信息库,以提高对北大西洋地区环境变化数据的认识。我们还确定了我们理解中的重要差距,并确定了由SCANNET代表的现有基础架构和活动在哪些方面可以促进未来的研究,监控和实地活动。

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