Machado, L. A. T.; Kesselmeier, J.; Botía, S.; van Asperen, H.; Andreae, M. O.; de Araújo, A. C.; Artaxo, P.; Edtbauer, A.; Ferreira, R. R.; Franco, M. A.et al.; Harder, H.; Jones, S. P.; Dias-Júnior, C. Q.; Haytzmann, G. G.; Quesada, C. A.; Komiya, S.; Lavrič, J. V.; Lelieveld, J.; Levin, I.; Nölscher, A.; Pfannerstill, E.; Pöhlker, M. L.; Pöschl, U.; Ringsdorf, A.; Rizzo, L.; Yáñez-Serrano, A. M.; Trumbore, S. E.; Valenti, W. I. D.; de Arellano, J. V.-G.; Walter, D.; Williams, J.; Wolff, S.; Pöhlker, C.: How rainfall events modify trace gas mixing ratios in central Amazonia. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 24 (15), pp. 8893 - 8910 (2024)
Moonen, R. P.J.; Adnew, G. A.; de Arellano, J. V.-G.; Hartogensis, O. K.; Fontas, D. J. B.; Komiya, S.; Jones, S. P.; Röckmann, T.: Amazon rainforest ecosystem exchange of CO2 and H2O through turbulent understory ejections. EGUsphere (2025)
Botia, S.; Dias-Junior, C. Q.; Komiya, S.; van der Woude, A.; Terristi, M.; de Kok, R.; Koren, G.; van Asperen, H.; Jones, S. P.; D'Oliveira, F. A. F.et al.; Weber, U.; Marques-Filho, E.; Toro, I. M. C.; Araújo, A.; Lavric, J.; Walter, D.; Li, X.; Wigneron, J.-P.; Stocker, B.; de Souza, J. G.; O'Sullivan, M.; Sitch, S.; Ciais, P.; Chevallier, F.; Li, W.; Luijkx, I. T.; Peters, W.; Quesada, C. A.; Zaehle, S.; Trumbore, S. E.; Bastos, A.: Reduced vegetation uptake during the extreme 2023 drought turns the Amazon into a weak carbon source. ESS Open Archive (2025)
Extreme climate events endanger groundwater quality and stability, when rain water evades natural purification processes in the soil. This was demonstrated in long-term groundwater analyses using new analytical methods.
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.
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.
The Chapter of the Order has elected the writer, philosopher and filmmaker Alexander Kluge and the mathematician Gerd Faltings as domestic members of the Order and the geologist Susan Trumbore and the literary scholar Stephen Greenblatt as foreign members.
On June 24, Prof. Dr. Henrik Hartmann, head of the Julius Kühn Institute for Forest Protection and former group leader at the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, received an important award for his scientific achievements in the field of forestry. Our warmest congratulations!