Defining Ecological Drought for the Twenty-First Century
Shelley D. Crausbay(University of California, Santa Barbara), T. J. Sanford(Climate Central), Amanda E. Cravens(United States Geological Survey), Steve Colt(Alaska Pacific University), Nejem Raheem(Emerson College), Julio L. Betancourt(United States Geological Survey), Lauren E. Hay(United States Geological Survey), Melinda S. Dalton(United States Geological Survey), Chad McNutt(University Corporation for Atmospheric Research), Shawn L. Carter(United States Geological Survey), Michael J. Hayes(University of Nebraska–Lincoln), Deborah J. Bathke(University of Nebraska–Lincoln), Jamie McEvoy(Montana State University), Molly S. Cross(Wildlife Conservation Society), Jason B. Dunham(United States Geological Survey), Keith H. Nislow(US Forest Service), Max A. Moritz(University of California, Berkeley), Aaron R. Ramirez(University of California, Santa Barbara), Kimberly R. Hall(The Nature Conservancy)
Cited by 477
Related Papers
Stationarity Is Dead: Whither Water Management?
|Science|2008|4.5k
APPLIED HISTORICAL ECOLOGY: USING THE PAST TO MANAGE FOR THE FUTURE
|Ecological Applications|1999|1.4k
Pacific and Atlantic Ocean influences on multidecadal drought frequency in the United States
|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2004|1.1k
Mesoscale Disturbance and Ecological Response to Decadal Climatic Variability in the American Southwest
|Journal of Climate|1998|944