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Ferdouz V. Cochran

Researcher at Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education

Publications -  12
Citations -  153

Ferdouz V. Cochran is an academic researcher from Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sustainability & Climate change. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 12 publications receiving 103 citations. Previous affiliations of Ferdouz V. Cochran include University of Kansas & University of Hawaii Maui College.

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Earth Observation-Based Ecosystem Services Indicators for National and Subnational Reporting of the Sustainable Development Goals.

TL;DR: Geospatial resources like EnviroAtlas that provide open access to indicators based on EO data and allow for assessment at multiple extents and resolutions are critical to broadly addressing national to subnational SDG goals and targets.
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Indigenous ecological calendars define scales for climate change and sustainability assessments

TL;DR: In this article, the Tiquie River and the Brazilian Socio-environmental Institute (ISA) share knowledge from the Tukano ecological calendar with methodology for examining changes in precipitation and river levels and their interactions at multiple timescales.
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Climate-change and mass mortality events in overwintering monarch butterflies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors test the hypothesis of climate-change causation of mortality events in Mexican overwintering populations, at least in part, finding significant local weather trends toward conditions lethal for monarch survival.
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Temporal scales of tropospheric CO2, precipitation, and ecosystem responses in the central Great Plains

TL;DR: In this paper, at-mospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) measurements of CO2 concentrations in the mid-troposphere from 2002 to 2010 were examined in relation to precipitation and vegetation phenology across the US Great Plains.
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How Do Natural Features in the Residential Environment Influence Women's Self-Reported General Health? Results From Cross-Sectional Analyses of a U.S. National Cohort

TL;DR: A small but important beneficial association between residential nature and general health is identified, which could inform community planning and investments in neighborhood nature for targeted health improvements and potential societal and environmental co-benefits.