Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Article (1011)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (209)
- Doctoral Thesis (202)
- Postprint (68)
- Review (25)
- Master's Thesis (17)
- Other (15)
- Conference Proceeding (6)
- Habilitation Thesis (6)
- Report (6)
Language
- English (801)
- German (765)
- Spanish (3)
- Multiple languages (2)
- French (1)
Keywords
- climate change (38)
- Curriculum Framework (37)
- European values education (37)
- Europäische Werteerziehung (37)
- Lehrevaluation (37)
- Studierendenaustausch (37)
- Unterrichtseinheiten (37)
- curriculum framework (37)
- lesson evaluation (37)
- student exchange (37)
Institute
- Institut für Umweltwissenschaften und Geographie (1572) (remove)
The efficiency of sediment routing from land to the ocean depends on the position of submarine canyon heads with regard to terrestrial sediment sources. We aim to identify the main controls on whether a submarine canyon head remains connected to terrestrial sediment input during Holocene sea-level rise. Globally, we identified 798 canyon heads that are currently located at the 120m-depth contour (the Last Glacial Maximum shoreline) and 183 canyon heads that are connected to the shore (within a distance of 6 km) during the present-day highstand. Regional hotspots of shore-connected canyons are the Mediterranean active margin and the Pacific coast of Central and South America. We used 34 terrestrial and marine predictor variables to predict shore-connected canyon occurrence using Bayesian regression. Our analysis shows that steep and narrow shelves facilitate canyon-head connectivity to the shore. Moreover, shore-connected canyons occur preferentially along active margins characterized by resistant bedrock and high river-water discharge.
Wildfires, as a key disturbance in forest ecosystems, are shaping the world's boreal landscapes. Changes in fire regimes are closely linked to a wide array of environmental factors, such as vegetation composition, climate change, and human activity. Arctic and boreal regions and, in particular, Siberian boreal forests are experiencing rising air and ground temperatures with the subsequent degradation of permafrost soils leading to shifts in tree cover and species composition. Compared to the boreal zones of North America or Europe, little is known about how such environmental changes might influence long-term fire regimes in Russia. The larch-dominated eastern Siberian deciduous boreal forests differ markedly from the composition of other boreal forests, yet data about past fire regimes remain sparse. Here, we present a high-resolution macroscopic charcoal record from lacustrine sediments of Lake Khamra (southwest Yakutia, Siberia) spanning the last ca. 2200 years, including information about charcoal particle sizes and morphotypes. Our results reveal a phase of increased charcoal accumulation between 600 and 900 CE, indicative of relatively high amounts of burnt biomass and high fire frequencies. This is followed by an almost 900-year-long period of low charcoal accumulation without significant peaks likely corresponding to cooler climate conditions. After 1750 CE fire frequencies and the relative amount of biomass burnt start to increase again, coinciding with a warming climate and increased anthropogenic land development after Russian colonization. In the 20th century, total charcoal accumulation decreases again to very low levels despite higher fire frequency, potentially reflecting a change in fire management strategies and/or a shift of the fire regime towards more frequent but smaller fires. A similar pattern for different charcoal morphotypes and comparison to a pollen and non-pollen palynomorph (NPP) record from the same sediment core indicate that broad-scale changes in vegetation composition were probably not a major driver of recorded fire regime changes. Instead, the fire regime of the last two millennia at Lake Khamra seems to be controlled mainly by a combination of short-term climate variability and anthropogenic fire ignition and suppression.
Der Beitrag zeigt auf, dass sich mit "Wildnis" und Planung Paradoxien in mehrfacher Hinsicht verbinden: So ist in Mitteleuropa die Grenzziehung zwischen anthropogener Nutzung und ungelenkter Entwicklung immer eine bewusst zu treffende Entscheidung - alle unsere Nationalparke und Kernzonen anderer Schutzgebiete beruhen auf diesem Prinzip. Vor dem Hintergrund des umfassenden Gestaltungsanspruchs einer "Landschafts-"Planung gilt es zudem zu beachten, dass umfassende Eingriffe in komplexe Systeme gerade keine Rückkoppelung mehr zulassen, welche Folgen genau auf welche Einzelmaßnahmen zurückzuführen sind und damit in eine "geplante PLanlosigkeit" münden. In Mitteleuropa wird Wildnis großflächig in der Regel nur als Folge einer bewussten Entscheidung möglich sein, jedoch wird daneben immer auch das Prinzip Zufall als wesentlicher Gestalter stehen. Anlass, sich mit dem Thema Wildnis und Planung zu befassen, geben auch Flächenansprüche nach Räumen ungelenkter Entwicklung, die den vorläufigen Stand einer Entwicklung des Naturschutzgedankens markieren, dabei aber in der flächendeckend von menschlicher Einflussnahme geprägten mitteleuropäischen Kulturlandschaft oft im Konflikt zu Nutzungsinteressen stehen. Daneben zeichnet sich unter den Bedingungen des Weltmarktes und der EU-Osterweiterung ein Rückzug der Landwirtschft aus der Fläche ab, der neue Spielräume eröffnet, zugleich aber die Frage nach Lenkungsmöglichkeiten aufwirft. Der bewusste Umgang mit Wildnis im Siedlungsraum beinhaltet dabei mehrere Dimensionen: Eine räumliche (z.B. Zonierungen oder die Lage von Schutzgebieten betreffend), eine zeitliche (z.B. das Zulassen temporären Verwilderns), die Rolle des Menschen (z.B. die Art eines reglementierten/unregelmentierten Zugangs zu den betreffenden Gebieten) und die Art der Vermittlung des Wildnisgedankens (kommen unterstützend pädagogische Hilfsmittel zum Einsatz oder wird ganz bewusst davon abgesehen?). "Planung und Wildnis" bedeutet dabei, sich gerade auch über letzteres, nämlich die Kommunikation und Vermittlung von Naturschutzzielen im klaren zu sein.
Phytoplankton biomass and production regulates key aspects of freshwater ecosystems yet its variability and subsequent predictability is poorly understood. We estimated within-lake variation in biomass using high-frequency chlorophyll fluorescence data from 18 globally distributed lakes. We tested how variation in fluorescence at monthly, daily, and hourly scales was related to high-frequency variability of wind, water temperature, and radiation within lakes as well as productivity and physical attributes among lakes. Within lakes, monthly variation dominated, but combined daily and hourly variation were equivalent to that expressed monthly. Among lakes, biomass variability increased with trophic status while, within-lake biomass variation increased with increasing variability in wind speed. Our results highlight the benefits of high-frequency chlorophyll monitoring and suggest that predicted changes associated with climate, as well as ongoing cultural eutrophication, are likely to substantially increase the temporal variability of algal biomass and thus the predictability of the services it provides.