1. Research into land atmosphere interactions supports the Sustainable Development agenda
- Author
-
Hayman, Garry, Poulter, Benjamin, Ghude, Sachin D., Blyth, Eleanor, Sinha, Vinayak, Archibald, Sally, Ashworth, Kirsti, Barlow, Victoria, Fares, Silvano, Feig, Gregor, Hiyama, Tetsuya, Jin, Jiming, Juhola, Sirkku, Lee, Meehye, Leuzinger, Sebastian, Mahecha, Miguel D., Meng, Xianhong, Odee, David, Purser, Gemma, Sato, Hisashi, Saxena, Pallavi, Semeena, Valiyaveetil S., Steiner, Allison, Wang, Xuemei, Wolff, Stefan, Hayman, Garry, Poulter, Benjamin, Ghude, Sachin D., Blyth, Eleanor, Sinha, Vinayak, Archibald, Sally, Ashworth, Kirsti, Barlow, Victoria, Fares, Silvano, Feig, Gregor, Hiyama, Tetsuya, Jin, Jiming, Juhola, Sirkku, Lee, Meehye, Leuzinger, Sebastian, Mahecha, Miguel D., Meng, Xianhong, Odee, David, Purser, Gemma, Sato, Hisashi, Saxena, Pallavi, Semeena, Valiyaveetil S., Steiner, Allison, Wang, Xuemei, and Wolff, Stefan
- Abstract
Greenhouse gas emissions and land use change - from deforestation, forest degradation and agricultural intensification - are contributing to climate change and biodiversity loss. Important landbased strategies such as planting trees or growing bioenergy crops (with carbon capture and storage) are needed to achieve the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement and to enhance biodiversity. The integrated Land Ecosystems Atmospheric Processes Study (iLEAPS) is an international knowledge-exchange and capacity-building network, specialising in ecosystems and their role in controlling the exchange of water, energy and chemical compounds between the land surface and the atmosphere. We outline priority directions for land-atmosphere interaction research and its contribution to the sustainable development agenda.
- Published
- 2024