Don, A.; Bärwolff, M.; Kalbitz, K.; Andruschkewitsch, R.; Jungkunst, H. F.; Schulze, E. D.: No rapid soil carbon loss after a windthrow event in the High Tatra. Forest Ecology and Management 276, pp. 239 - 246 (2012)
Fiedler, S.; Höll, B. S.; Jungkunst, H. F.: Discovering the importance of lateral CO2 transport from a temperate spruce forest. Science of the Total Environment 368 (2-3), pp. 909 - 915 (2006)
Jungkunst, H. F.; Freibauer, A.; Neufeldt, H.; Bareth, G.: Nitrous oxide emissions from agricultural land use in Germany - a synthesis of available annual field data. Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science 169 (3), pp. 341 - 351 (2006)
Fiedler, S.; Höll, B. S.; Jungkunst, H. F.: Methane budget of a Black Forest spruce ecosystem considering soil pattern. Biogeochemistry 76 (1), pp. 1 - 20 (2005)
Höll, B. S.; Jungkunst, H. F.; Fiedler, S.; Stahr, K.: Indirect nitrous oxide emission from a nitrogen saturated spruce forest and general accuracy of the IPCC methodology. Atmospheric Environment 39 (32), pp. 5959 - 5970 (2005)
Jungkunst, H. F.; Fiedler, S.: Geomorphology - key regulator of net methane and nitrous oxide fluxes from the pedosphere. Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie 49 (4), pp. 529 - 543 (2005)
Jungkunst, H. F.; Fiedler, S.; Stahr, K.: N2O emissions of a mature Norway spruce (Picea abies) stand in the Black Forest (southwest Germany) as differentiated by the soil pattern. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 109 (7), p. D07302 (2004)
Thanks to FLUXCOM-X, the next generation of data driven, AI-based earth system models, scientists can now see the Earth’s metabolism at unprecedented detail – assessed everywhere on land and every hour of the day.
Extreme precipitation should increase with warmer temperatures. Data from tropical regions show that this correlation is obscured by the cooling effect of clouds. When cloud effects are corrected, the increase in extreme precipitation with rising temperatures becomes apparent.
More frequent strong storms are destroying ever larger areas of the Amazon rainforest. Storm damage was mapped between 1985 and 2020. The total area of affected forests roughly quadrupled in the period studied.
David Hafezi Rachti was awarded twice: for his EGU poster with this year’s “Outstanding Student and PhD candidate Presentation” (OSPP) and for his Bachelor thesis, he received the 1st prize of the “Young Climate Scientist Award 2024”.
The Global Carbon Project shows that fossil CO2 emissions will continue to rise in 2024. There is no sign of the rapid and substantial decline in emissions that would be needed to limit the impact of climate change
The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina will hold a joint conference on the challenges of achieving carbon neutrality in Berlin on October 29-30, 2024.
Experts from science, journalism, local authorities and non-governmental organizations consider a change of course in communication on climate issues to be urgently needed. The appeal was published on the occasion of the K3 Congress on Climate Communication with around 400 participants in Graz.
A recent study by scientists from the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry and the University of Leipzig suggests that increasing droughts in the tropics and changing carbon cycle responses due to climate change are not primarily responsible for the strong tropical response to rising temperatures. Instead, a few particularly strong El Niño events could be the cause.
A study by Leipzig University, the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research Halle-Jena-Leipzig (iDiv) and the MPI for Biogeochemistry shows that gaps in the canopy of a mixed floodplain forest have a direct influence on the temperature and moisture in the forest soil, but only a minor effect on soil activity.