Publications by authors named "Alexandra Jonko"

Wildfires are a global crisis, but current fire models fail to capture vegetation response to changing climate. With drought and elevated temperature increasing the importance of vegetation dynamics to fire behavior, and the advent of next generation models capable of capturing increasingly complex physical processes, we provide a renewed focus on representation of woody vegetation in fire models. Currently, the most advanced representations of fire behavior and biophysical fire effects are found in distinct classes of fine-scale models and do not capture variation in live fuel (i.

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Article Synopsis
  • The concept of feedback is crucial for understanding how changes in a system, like the climate, can be either intensified or reduced by the system's own mechanisms.
  • In polar regions, climate is influenced by various interactions among the atmosphere, ocean, sea ice, ice sheets, and land surfaces, which are important for climate assessment.
  • Accurately measuring these polar feedbacks is essential for improving climate models, understanding polar climate change processes, and reducing uncertainty in future climate projections.
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For adaptation and mitigation planning, stakeholders need reliable information about regional precipitation changes under different emissions scenarios and for different time periods. A significant amount of current planning effort assumes that each K of global warming produces roughly the same regional climate change. Here using 25 climate models, we compare precipitation responses with three 2 K intervals of global ensemble mean warming: a fast and a slower route to a first 2 K above pre-industrial levels, and the end-of-century difference between high-emission and mitigation scenarios.

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