Introduction to the Assessment—Characteristics of the Region:Characteristics of the region

This scene-setting chapter provides the basis for the climate change-related assessments presented in later chapters of this book. It opens with an overview of the geography, demography and major human activities of the North Sea and its boundary countries. This is followed by a series of sections d...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Quante, Markus, Colijn, Franciscus, Bakker, Jan P., Haerdtle, Wemer, Heinrich, Hartmut, Levebvre, Christiana, Noehren, Ingeborg, Olesen, Jørgen Eivind, Pohlmann, Thomas, Sterr, Horst, Sündermann, Jörgen, Tölle, Merja Helena
Other Authors: Quante, M., Colijn, F.
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Springer 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11370/271d5b58-de8c-43aa-9ac9-9b2d65200bac
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/271d5b58-de8c-43aa-9ac9-9b2d65200bac
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39745-0_1
https://pure.rug.nl/ws/files/791751087/Introduction_to_the_Assessment_Characteristics_of_the_Region.pdf
Description
Summary:This scene-setting chapter provides the basis for the climate change-related assessments presented in later chapters of this book. It opens with an overview of the geography, demography and major human activities of the North Sea and its boundary countries. This is followed by a series of sections describing the geological and climatic evolution of the North Sea basin, the topography and hydrography of the North Sea (i.e. boundary forcing; thermohaline, wind-driven and tidally-driven regimes; and transport processes), and its current atmospheric climate (focussing on circulation, wind, temperature, precipitation, radiation and cloud cover). This physical description is followed by a review of North Sea ecosystems. Marine and coastal ecosystems are addressed in terms of ecological habitats, ecological dynamics, and human-induced stresses representing a threat (i.e. eutrophication, harmful algal blooms, offshore oil and gas, renewable energy, fisheries, contaminants, tourism, ports, non-indigenous species and climate change). Terrestrial coastal range vegetation is addressed in terms of natural vegetation (salt marshes, dunes, moors/bogs, tundra and alpine vegetation, and forests), semi-natural vegetation (heathlands and grasslands), agricultural areas and artificial surfaces.