PCIC's Arelia Werner is a co-author of a recent paper in the discussion section of the journal Biogeosciences. In the paper, Peng et al. (2013) use the Canadian Terrestiral Ecosystem Model to investigate the effects of climate change and increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations on the amount of carbon that has been drawn down by plants in British Columbia since 1900.
You are here
News
-
Posted: August 28, 2013
-
Posted: August 28, 2013
PCIC Science Briefs are a regular series of brief reports on recent climate science literature, relevant to stakeholders in the Pacific and Yukon Region of Canada.
-
Posted: August 27, 2013
The Pacific Climate Impacts Consortium is hosting a three part series of meetings designed to engage users on our research themes.
-
Posted: August 20, 2013
PCIC is pleased to present our report for the Columbia Basin Trust, "Climate Extremes in the Canadian Columbia Basin: A Preliminary Assessment," available from our... more
-
Posted: July 24, 2013
PCIC Science Briefs are a regular series of brief reports on recent climate science literature, relevant to stakeholders in the Pacific and Yukon Region of Canada.
-
Posted: July 24, 2013
The rainy season in the southern Rocky Mountains of Alberta and British Columbia typically occurs during the months of May through early July and this year has been no exception.
-
Posted: July 23, 2013
PCIC is hosting a three-part series of user engagement meetings structured around PCIC’s three applied research themes: Climate Analysis and Monitoring, Regional Climate Impacts and Hydrologic Impacts.
-
Posted: July 4, 2013
As the climate continues to warm, we expect that extreme weather events will continue to intensify. Therefore understanding these events and improving our ability to forecast them becomes increasingly important.
-
Posted: June 20, 2013
PCIC scientists were among the many attending the 1st Joint Scientific Congress of the Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society, Canadian Geophysical Union and Canadian Water Resources Association, from May 26th to 30th 2013 in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.
-
Posted: May 30, 2013
PCIC Lead Hydrologist Markus Schnorbus was quoted in an article on the Fraser River in Canadian Geographic magazine. The article explores the climate-exacerbated impacts of pine beetle infestation and forest harvesting on the Fraser River. The article also explains how these will affect runoff, river temperature and, as a result, people and ecosystems that depend on the Fraser.