Scientists warn that the exclusion of data from Russian Arctic monitoring stations, following the country's invasion of Ukraine, is causing biases in mapping Arctic conditions. This loss of data could have serious implications for tracking and predicting global climate change. Russia, which makes up nearly half of the terrestrial Arctic, has seen a halt in global collaboration with researchers since the invasion.
Updated annual temperature anomalies in the #Arctic from 1950 to 2023 - wait until the last decade.. + Data from https://t.co/e7aUafgc7S + Graphic at https://t.co/ysoGwwYtqb https://t.co/nwzdY5u54b
Trending in #EnvironmentalStudies: https://t.co/mTKMCOgwD7 1) An increasingly biased view on Arctic change (@NatureClimate) 2) Earth system models must include permafrost carbon processes 3) Supply, demand & polarization challenges facing US climate policies 4) Artificial… https://t.co/aLlhzGWu1g
Russia makes up nearly half the terrestrial Arctic, but global collaboration with researchers there has ground to a halt since the invasion of Ukraine https://t.co/R6OOy1d0lN
Scientists warn that the loss of data from Russia's Arctic monitoring stations following its invasion of Ukraine could have serious implications for tracking and predicting climate change globally: https://t.co/F5ATcH40yK
Exclusion of data from Russian stations will increase the biases of data collected to map conditions in the Arctic, suggests a paper in @NatureClimate. The findings highlight the difficulty in quantifying current and future change in this region. https://t.co/4eA95IJdu9 https://t.co/3LbtGVW6Tz
Scientists warn missing Russian data causing Arctic climate blind spots @NatureClimate https://t.co/SjdSe5FMUz https://t.co/hc0HjUsHaB