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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bielefeld :transcript Verlag,
    Keywords: Climatic changes -- Political aspects. ; Global warming -- Political aspects. ; Environmentalism. ; Climate change mitigation -- Political aspects. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (389 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783839426104
    Series Statement: Image Series ; v.55
    DDC: 320.6
    Language: English
    Note: Cover Image Politics of Climate Change -- Table of Contents -- Image Politics of Climate Change: lntroduction -- CHAPTER 1 THE EPISTEMIC VALUE OF VISUALIZATION IN CLIMATE SeiENCES -- The Creation of Global lmaginaries: The Antarctic Ozone Hole and the lsoline Tradition in the Atmospheric Seiences -- Images for Data Analysis: The Role of Visualization in Climate Research Processes -- CHAPTER 2 COMMUNICATING RESUL TS: THE STATUS OF CLIMATE EXPERT GRAPHS IN IPCC REPORTS -- Tricks," Hockey Sticks, and the Myth of Natural lnscription: How the Visual Rhetoric of Climategate Conflated Climate with Character -- The Color of Risk: Expert Judgment and Diagrammatic Reasoning in the IPCC's 'Burning Embers' -- CHAPTER 3 IMAGES OF CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE PRESS AND ON THE WEB -- Between Risk, Beauty and the Sublime: The Visualization of Climate Change in Media Coverage during COP 15 in Copenhagen 2009 -- Twist and Shout: Images and Graphs in Skeptical Climate Media -- Towards an lnteractive Visual Understanding of Climate Change Findings on the Net: Promises and Challenges -- Color Plates -- CHAPTER 4 FROM VISION TO ACTION? MAKING THEINVISIBLE IMAGINABLE THROUGH ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY -- Picturing the Clima(c)tic: Greenpeace and the Representational Politics of Climate Change Communication -- The Uncanny Polar Bear: Activists Visually Attack an Overly Emotionalized Image Clone -- How Photography Matters: On Producing Meaning in Photobooks on Climate Change -- The Pensive Photograph as Agent: What Can Non-lilustrative Images Do to Galvanize Public Support for Climate Change Action? -- CHAPTER 5 IMAGES OF CLIMATE CONTROL -- Picturing the State of the Nation's Environment: Early Aerial Photography in the United States from the 1930s to the late 1960s -- Picturing Climate Control: Visualizing the Unimaginable. , Images of Feasibility: On the Viscourse of Climate Engineering -- Authors.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-09-04
    Description: The sentence “every second breath you take comes from the Ocean” is commonly used in Ocean Literacy and science communication to highlight the importance of Ocean oxygen. However, despite its widespread use, it is often not phrased correctly. In contrast, awareness about the threat of the global oxygen loss in the Ocean, called deoxygenation, is low, particularly in comparison with other important stressors, such as Ocean acidification or increasing seawater temperatures. Deoxygenation is increasing in the coastal and open Ocean, primarily due to human-induced global warming and nutrient run-off from land, and projections show that the Ocean will continue losing oxygen as global warming continues. The consequences of oxygen loss in the Ocean are extensive and include decreased biodiversity, shifts in species distributions, displacement or reduction in fisheries resources, changes in biogeochemical cycling and mass mortalities. Low oxygen conditions also drive other chemical processes which produce greenhouse gases, toxic compounds and further degrade water quality. Degraded water quality directly affects marine ecosystems, but also indirectly impacts ecosystem services supporting local communities, regional economies and tourism. Although there are still gaps in our knowledge, we know enough to be very concerned about the consequences: the impacts might even be larger than from Ocean acidification or heat waves, and three out of the five global mass extinctions were linked to Ocean deoxygenation. The sense of urgency to improve Ocean health is reflected in the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development and the EU Mission: Restore our Ocean and Waters, and tackling the loss of oxygen in the Ocean is critical to achieving the aims of these two initiatives.
    Type: Report , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: text
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-10-21
    Description: EMB Future Science Brief No. 10 highlights the most recent science on Ocean oxygen, including causes, impacts and mitigation strategies of Ocean oxygen loss, and discusses whether “every second breath we take comes from the Ocean”. It closes with key policy, management and research recommendations to address Ocean deoxygenation and communicate more accurately about the role of the Ocean in Earth’s oxygen. The sentence “every second breath you take comes from the Ocean” is commonly used in Ocean Literacy and science communication to highlight the importance of Ocean oxygen. However, despite its widespread use, it is often not phrased correctly. In contrast, there is little awareness about the threat of the global oxygen loss in the Ocean, called deoxygenation, particularly in comparison with other important stressors, such as Ocean acidification or increasing seawater temperatures. Deoxygenation is increasing in the coastal and open Ocean, primarily due to human-induced global warming and nutrient run-off from land, and projections show that the Ocean will continue losing oxygen as global warming continues. The consequences of oxygen loss in the Ocean are extensive and include decreased biodiversity, shifts in species distributions, displacement or reduction in fisheries resources, changes in biogeochemical cycling and mass mortalities. Low oxygen conditions also drive other chemical processes which produce greenhouse gases, toxic compounds and further degrade water quality. The degraded water quality directly affects marine ecosystems, but also indirectly impacts ecosystem services supporting local communities, regional economies and tourism. Although there are still gaps in our knowledge, we know enough to be very concerned about the consequences: the impacts might even be larger than from Ocean acidification or heat waves, and three out of the five global mass extinctions were linked to Ocean deoxygenation. The sense of urgency to improve Ocean health is reflected in the UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development (Ocean Decade) and the EU Mission: Restore our Ocean and Waters (Mission Ocean), and tackling the loss of oxygen in the Ocean is critical to achieving the aims of these two initiatives.
    Description: Published
    Description: Refereed
    Keywords: Ocean oxygen ; Deoxygenation
    Repository Name: AquaDocs
    Type: Book/Monograph/Conference Proceedings
    Format: 84pp.
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