29 research outputs found
The effects of water soluble fraction of crude oil on larvae of the decapod crustacean Neopanope texana (Sayi)
The past and future in understanding the health risks of and responses to climate variability and change
Tropospheric temperature trends: history of an ongoing controversy
Changes in atmospheric temperature have a particular importance in climate research because climate models consistently predict a distinctive vertical profile
of trends. With increasing greenhouse gas concentrations, the surface and troposphere are consistently projected to warm, with an enhancement of that warming in the tropical upper troposphere. Hence, attempts to detect this distinct
‘fingerprint’ have been a focus for observational studies. The topic acquired heightened importance following the 1990 publication of an analysis of satellite data which challenged the reality of the projected tropospheric warming. This review documents the evolution over the last four decades of understanding of tropospheric temperature trends and their likely causes. Particular focus
is given to the difficulty of producing homogenized datasets, with which to derive trends, from both radiosonde and satellite observing systems, because of the many systematic changes over time. The value of multiple independent analyses is demonstrated. Paralleling developments in observational datasets, increased computer power and improved understanding of climate forcing
mechanisms have led to refined estimates of temperature trends from a wide range of climate models and a better understanding of internal variability. It is concluded that there is no reasonable evidence of a fundamental disagreement between tropospheric temperature trends from models and observations when uncertainties in both are treated comprehensivel
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Stratospheric temperature trends: our evolving understanding
We review the scientific literature since the 1960s to examine the evolution of
modeling tools and observations that have advanced understanding of global
stratospheric temperature changes. Observations show overall cooling of the
stratosphere during the period for which they are available (since the late 1950s and
late 1970s from radiosondes and satellites, respectively), interrupted by episodes
of warming associated with volcanic eruptions, and superimposed on variations
associated with the solar cycle. There has been little global mean temperature
change since about 1995. The temporal and vertical structure of these variations
are reasonably well explained bymodels that include changes in greenhouse gases,
ozone, volcanic aerosols, and solar output, although there are significant uncertainties
in the temperature observations and regarding the nature and influence of past
changes in stratospheric water vapor. As a companion to a recent WIREs review of
tropospheric temperature trends, this article identifies areas of commonality and
contrast between the tropospheric and stratospheric trend literature. For example,
the increased attention over time to radiosonde and satellite data quality has
contributed to better characterization of uncertainty in observed trends both in the
troposphere and in the lower stratosphere, and has highlighted the relative deficiency
of attention to observations in the middle and upper stratosphere. In contrast
to the relatively unchanging expectations of surface and tropospheric warming primarily
induced by greenhouse gas increases, stratospheric temperature change
expectations have arisen from experiments with a wider variety of model types,
showingmore complex trend patterns associated with a greater diversity of forcing
agents
