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Content provided by The Wilkes Center for Climate Science and Policy and The Wilkes Center for Climate Science. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Wilkes Center for Climate Science and Policy and The Wilkes Center for Climate Science or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.
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29: How Are Plant Ecosystems Adapting to the Shifting Climate?

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Manage episode 510075736 series 3693521
Content provided by The Wilkes Center for Climate Science and Policy and The Wilkes Center for Climate Science. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Wilkes Center for Climate Science and Policy and The Wilkes Center for Climate Science or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

When it comes to climate change, one big question is how are ecosystems adapting to shifting weather patterns, heavier precipitation events, and hotter temperatures for longer periods of time? Are some plants better equipped to withstand these changes than others? And if yes, then why and how?

Jacob Levine is a Wilkes Center Postdoctoral scholar here at the University of Utah. He is interested in how climate change is impacting plant ecosystems. Specifically, when rainstorms occur less frequently, but more intensely than before – as they have in California -- how are plants responding? So far, he says, his findings are intriguing.
Dr. Levine has also been interested in how high severity wildfires are impacting publicly managed forest lands in California compared with privately managed lands for timber harvesting. The goal of his research is to understand what types of forest management are beneficial for ecosystems and which types are not. This question has been subject to a rancorous policy debate between forest managers. For his part, Levine hopes his research can better inform better forest management practices overall, in ways that benefit and improve forestry for timber and supporting healthy ecosystems overall.
So, here is my conversation with Jacob Levine.

wilkescenter.utah.edu/podcast/29-how-are-plant-ecosystems-adapting-to-the-shifting-climate/

(Featured image: University of California Sedgwick Natural Reserve in northern Santa Barbara County California. Photo Courtesy of Jacob Levine)

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30 episodes

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Manage episode 510075736 series 3693521
Content provided by The Wilkes Center for Climate Science and Policy and The Wilkes Center for Climate Science. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Wilkes Center for Climate Science and Policy and The Wilkes Center for Climate Science or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

When it comes to climate change, one big question is how are ecosystems adapting to shifting weather patterns, heavier precipitation events, and hotter temperatures for longer periods of time? Are some plants better equipped to withstand these changes than others? And if yes, then why and how?

Jacob Levine is a Wilkes Center Postdoctoral scholar here at the University of Utah. He is interested in how climate change is impacting plant ecosystems. Specifically, when rainstorms occur less frequently, but more intensely than before – as they have in California -- how are plants responding? So far, he says, his findings are intriguing.
Dr. Levine has also been interested in how high severity wildfires are impacting publicly managed forest lands in California compared with privately managed lands for timber harvesting. The goal of his research is to understand what types of forest management are beneficial for ecosystems and which types are not. This question has been subject to a rancorous policy debate between forest managers. For his part, Levine hopes his research can better inform better forest management practices overall, in ways that benefit and improve forestry for timber and supporting healthy ecosystems overall.
So, here is my conversation with Jacob Levine.

wilkescenter.utah.edu/podcast/29-how-are-plant-ecosystems-adapting-to-the-shifting-climate/

(Featured image: University of California Sedgwick Natural Reserve in northern Santa Barbara County California. Photo Courtesy of Jacob Levine)

  continue reading

30 episodes

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