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Addressing Environmental Change through Emergent Integrated Environmental Observatories: A Case Study in the Czech Republic

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    0524377 - ÚVGZ 2021 RIV CH eng J - Journal Article
    Acosta, Manuel - Ač, Alexander - Pavelka, Marian - Havránková, Kateřina - Loescher, H. W. - Butler, J. H. - Janouš, Dalibor - Marek, Michal V.
    Addressing Environmental Change through Emergent Integrated Environmental Observatories: A Case Study in the Czech Republic.
    Environments. Roč. 7, č. 3 (2020), č. článku 19. E-ISSN 2076-3298
    R&D Projects: GA MŠMT(CZ) LM2015061
    Research Infrastructure: CzeCOS III - 90123
    Institutional support: RVO:86652079
    Keywords : climate-change * drought * vulnerability * increase * consequences * variability * impacts * europe * carbon * yields * climate change * infrastructure * ecosystem * Anthropocene * Europe
    OECD category: Ecology
    Method of publishing: Open access
    https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3298/7/3/19

    A growing body of scientific evidence indicates that we have entered the Anthropocene Epoch. Many assert that society has exceeded sustainable ecological planetary boundaries and that altered biogeophysical processes are no longer reversible to natural rates of ecosystem functioning. To properly and successfully address societal needs for the future, more holistic and complex methods need to be applied at various spatial and temporal scales. The increasingly interconnected nature of human and natural environments-from individuals to large megacities and entire continents and from cells through ecosystems to the biosphere as a whole (e.g., as seen in the carbon cycle)-demand new and often interdisciplinary and international approaches to address emerging global challenges. With that perspective in mind, the Czech Republic's National Climate Program was established in 1991 with the aim to understand the impact of global environmental change on society. The National Climate Program was updated in 2017 to formulate a new Climate Protection Policy. Here, we outline the multifaceted problems that climate change poses for the Czech Republic, as well as a new scientific infrastructure and approaches directed to better understanding the effects of climate change on our ecosystems, water resources, urban environment, agriculture, human health, and general economy.
    Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0308734

     
     
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