Rising synchrony controls western North American ecosystems

Author:

Black Bryan A.1ORCID,van der Sleen Peter1,Di Lorenzo Emanuele2,Griffin Daniel3,Sydeman William J.4,Dunham Jason B.5,Rykaczewski Ryan R.6,García-Reyes Marisol4,Safeeq Mohammad78,Arismendi Ivan9,Bograd Steven J.10

Affiliation:

1. University of Texas Marine Science Institute; Port Aransas TX USA

2. School of Earth & Atmospheric Sciences; Georgia Institute of Technology; Atlanta GA USA

3. Department of Geography, Environment & Society; University of Minnesota; Minneapolis MN USA

4. Farallon Institute for Advanced Ecosystem Research; Petaluma CA USA

5. U.S. Geological Survey; Forest and Rangeland Ecosystem Science Center; Corvallis OR USA

6. Department of Biological Sciences and Marine Science Program; University of South Carolina; Columbia SC USA

7. Sierra Nevada Research Institute; University of California; Merced CA USA

8. Pacific Southwest Research Station; USDA Forest Service; Fresno CA USA

9. Department of Fisheries and Wildlife; Oregon State University; Corvallis OR USA

10. Environmental Research Division; Southwest Fisheries Science Center; NOAA; Monterey CA USA

Funder

US National Science Foundation Division of Ocean Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

Reference69 articles.

1. Temporal variation in the synchrony of weather and its consequences for spatiotemporal population dynamics;Allstadt;Ecology,2015

2. Community reorganization in the Gulf of Alaska following ocean climate regime shift;Anderson;Marine Ecology Progress Series,1999

3. The El Niño with a difference;Ashok;Nature,2009

4. Bakun , A. 1973 Coastal upwelling indices, west coast of North America, 1946-71 Special Scientific Report, Fisheries #671 103

5. The value of crossdating to retain high-frequency variability, climate signals, and extreme events in environmental proxies;Black;Global Change Biology,2016

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