Climate change is a threat to human societies and natural ecosystems, yet public opinion research finds that public awareness and concern vary greatly. Here, using an unprecedented survey of 119 countries, we determine the relative influence of socio-demographic characteristics, geography, perceived well-being, and beliefs on public climate change awareness and risk perceptions at national scales. Worldwide, educational attainment is the single strongest predictor of climate change awareness. Understanding the anthropogenic cause of climate change is the strongest predictor of climate change risk perceptions, particularly in Latin America and Europe, whereas perception of local temperature change is the strongest predictor in many African and Asian countries. However, other key factors associated with public awareness and risk perceptions highlight the need to develop tailored climate communication strategies for individual nations. The results suggest that improving basic education, climate literacy, and public understanding of the local dimensions of climate change are vital to public engagement and support for climate action.
Analyses of past typhoons have suggested that global climate change may result in increases in the intensity of these episodic events and that the effects of typhoons on the biogeochemistry of aquatic ecosystems will also be strengthened. We collected a 2-year time series of phytoplankton responses, including chlorophyll-a concentration, primary production and turnover rate in the Fei-Tsui Reservoir, Taiwan, on the basis of five typhoons in 2011 and eight in 2012 (21 weeks affected). We found approximately a two-fold increase in phytoplankton responses during the typhoon period compared with the non-typhoon period. However, there were no consistent correlations between phytoplankton responses and typhoon disturbance and length of typhoon stay. Vertical distributions of phytoplankton responses indicated that the peak values of these responses occurred both during the typhoon periods and during the non-typhoon periods occurring between two typhoons. Moreover, the strongest correlations were found between euphotic depth-averaged phosphate and primary production and turnover rate. Combined effects on phytoplankton responses could explain at least 70% of the variability. The regulation of phytoplankton responses by multiple processes and interactions among factors that operate during each typhoon event may add complexity to the challenge of detecting typhoon-driven mechanisms in such ecosystems. the aquatic food web, because it serves as a food source for all aquatic organisms that do not perform photosynthesis. Moreover, vertical migrations, as well as the diversity, community structure and temporal dynamics of phytoplankton, are responsible for steep nutrient gradients across the thermocline.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.