30 research outputs found

    Spatial coverage of tree ring chronologies and remotely sensed vegetation greenness.

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    Remotely sensed enhanced vegetation index (EVI) coverage is restricted to pixels with a dominant growing season, allowing for an annual area under the curve estimate from EVI data as a proxy for vegetation productivity, equivalent to tree ring widths. The figure uses public domain spatial data from Natural Earth (http://www.naturalearthdata.com/) and an original spatial layer developed from open-access EVI2 data (https://lpdaac.usgs.gov/products/mcd12q2v006/).</p

    Global interpolated precipitation products evaluated in this study.

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    Datasets were generated by the University of East Anglia Climatic Research Unit (CRU), the University of Delaware Terrestrial Precipitation (UDEL), the Global Precipitation Climatology Centre (GPCC), the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Reanalysis v5 (ERA5), the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (CHELSA), the Center for Hydrometeorology and Remote Sensing at the University of California (PERSIANN), and the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Princeton University (MSWEP).</p

    Best regional interpolated precipitation products for a recent 2000–2017 period against remotely sensed vegetation greenness.

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    The comparisons are based on the strongest correlation with Enhanced Vegetation Index (EVI) annual area under the curve values. The map by ecoregions represents the best performing precipitation product, using the Condorcet winner method, where R2 values of individual EVI pixels are used equivalently to ranked ballots. The figure uses public domain data from Natural Earth (http://www.naturalearthdata.com/) and original results generated in this study.</p

    Spatial coverage of weather stations with precipitation records.

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    Remotely sensed precipitation estimates are not available above 60Β° latitude, indicated by the dashed line. The figure uses public domain spatial data from Natural Earth (http://www.naturalearthdata.com/) and public domain location data from the International Tree Ring Databank (https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/products/paleoclimatology/tree-ring).</p

    Best regional interpolated precipitation products in a long term (1901–2017) evaluation against tree ring records.

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    Trends over time in validation statistics for the three global interpolated precipitation products that extend back to the 1900. The lines represent variance explained in tree ring with by precipitation using 20-year moving windows.</p

    Temporal data coverage of climate products, remotely sensed EVI data, and tree ring chronologies.

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    Tree ring chronologies are ordered by end year and truncated at 1900s to match climate data (total of 4422 sites). Shades of grey in lower panel represent the percentiles of the dataset. Only temporally pairwise-complete data was used for climate product comparisons.</p

    Appendix A. A table and seven figures illustrating model fit and model limitations.

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    A table and seven figures illustrating model fit and model limitations

    Appendix A. Local uses of native tree species in the North Negros Natural Park.

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    Local uses of native tree species in the North Negros Natural Park

    Appendix C. A table and 14 figures showing the effect of climate change on tree species.

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    A table and 14 figures showing the effect of climate change on tree species

    Seasonal climate data

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    This file contains seasonal climate data for the northeastern British Columbia (BC), northern Alberta (nAB), central Alberta (cAB) and Alberta foothills (ABf) test site. The data was generated using the ClimateWNA software (http://www.climatewna.com/)
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