Authors
Franz‐W Badeck, Alberte Bondeau, Kristin Böttcher, Daniel Doktor, Wolfgang Lucht, Jörg Schaber, Stephen Sitch
Publication date
2004/5
Source
New phytologist
Volume
162
Issue
2
Pages
295-309
Publisher
Blackwell Science Ltd
Description
Climate change effects on seasonal activity in terrestrial ecosystems are significant and well documented, especially in the middle and higher latitudes. Temperature is a main driver of many plant developmental processes, and in many cases higher temperatures have been shown to speed up plant development and lead to earlier switching to the next ontogenetic stage. Qualitatively consistent advancement of vegetation activity in spring has been documented using three independent methods, based on ground observations, remote sensing, and analysis of the atmospheric CO2 signal. However, estimates of the trends for advancement obtained using the same method differ substantially. We propose that a high fraction of this uncertainty is related to the time frame analysed and changes in trends at decadal time scales. Furthermore, the correlation between estimates of the initiation of spring activity derived from …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
FW Badeck, A Bondeau, K Böttcher, D Doktor, W Lucht… - New phytologist, 2004