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Contribution of Working Group II to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

TLDR
Drafting Authors: Neil Adger, Pramod Aggarwal, Shardul Agrawala, Joseph Alcamo, Abdelkader Allali, Oleg Anisimov, Nigel Arnell, Michel Boko, Osvaldo Canziani, Timothy Carter, Gino Casassa, Ulisses Confalonieri, Rex Victor Cruz, Edmundo de Alba Alcaraz, William Easterling, Christopher Field, Andreas Fischlin, Blair Fitzharris.
Abstract
Drafting Authors: Neil Adger, Pramod Aggarwal, Shardul Agrawala, Joseph Alcamo, Abdelkader Allali, Oleg Anisimov, Nigel Arnell, Michel Boko, Osvaldo Canziani, Timothy Carter, Gino Casassa, Ulisses Confalonieri, Rex Victor Cruz, Edmundo de Alba Alcaraz, William Easterling, Christopher Field, Andreas Fischlin, Blair Fitzharris, Carlos Gay García, Clair Hanson, Hideo Harasawa, Kevin Hennessy, Saleemul Huq, Roger Jones, Lucka Kajfež Bogataj, David Karoly, Richard Klein, Zbigniew Kundzewicz, Murari Lal, Rodel Lasco, Geoff Love, Xianfu Lu, Graciela Magrín, Luis José Mata, Roger McLean, Bettina Menne, Guy Midgley, Nobuo Mimura, Monirul Qader Mirza, José Moreno, Linda Mortsch, Isabelle Niang-Diop, Robert Nicholls, Béla Nováky, Leonard Nurse, Anthony Nyong, Michael Oppenheimer, Jean Palutikof, Martin Parry, Anand Patwardhan, Patricia Romero Lankao, Cynthia Rosenzweig, Stephen Schneider, Serguei Semenov, Joel Smith, John Stone, Jean-Pascal van Ypersele, David Vaughan, Coleen Vogel, Thomas Wilbanks, Poh Poh Wong, Shaohong Wu, Gary Yohe

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A statistical explanation of MaxEnt for ecologists

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Social Capital, Collective Action, and Adaptation to Climate Change

TL;DR: The authors argue that societies have inherent capacities to adapt to climate change, but these capacities are bound up in their ability to act collectively, and they argue that this capacity is limited by the nature of the agents of change, states, markets and civil society.
References
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Multi-pattern fingerprint method for detection and attribution of climate change

TL;DR: In this article, the multi-variate optimal fingerprint method for the detection of an externally forced climate change signal in the presence of natural internal variability is extended to the attribution problem, and the detection and attribution problem is treated as a sequence of individual consistency tests applied to all candidate forcing mechanisms, as well as to the null hypothesis that no climate change has taken place, within the phase space spanned by the predicted climate change patterns.
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Avian Movements and Wetland Connectivity in Landscape Conservation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors outline theoretical, empirical, modeling, and planning problems associated with this issue and suggest solutions to some current obstacles, which represent a tradeoff between typical in-depth single species studies and more generic multi-species studies.
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Biogeophysical impacts of land use on present-day climate: near-surface temperature change and radiative forcing

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of land cover on climate has been assessed by comparing climate simulations performed with current and potential natural vegetation, and the importance of these effects was assessed by comparison with current-day land use with respect to global mean radiative forcing by anthropogenic surface albedo change relative to the natural state.
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Simulating the winter North Atlantic Oscillation: the roles of internal variability and greenhouse gas forcing

TL;DR: In this paper, simulations with seven coupled climate models demonstrate that the observed variations in the winter North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), particularly the increase from the 1960s to the 1990s, are not compatible with either the internally generated variability nor the response to increasing greenhouse gas forcing simulated by these models.
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Drought in the Sahel

TL;DR: Zeng et al. as mentioned in this paper analyzed the possible causes of the Sahel drought and found that natural vegetation processes and land use change probably reinforced the oceanic changes to produce the unusual drought.
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