Mahecha, M. D.; Gans, F.; Brandt, G.; Christiansen, R.; Cornell, S. E.; Fomferra, N.; Kraemer, G.; Peters, J.; Bodesheim, P.; Camps-Valls, G.et al.; Donges, J. F.; Dorigo, W.; Estupinan-Suarez, L. M.; Gutierrez-Velez, V. H.; Gutwin, M.; Jung, M.; Londoño, M. C.; Miralles, D. G.; Papastefanou, P.; Reichstein, M.: Earth system data cubes unravel global multivariate dynamics. Earth System Dynamics 11 (1), pp. 201 - 234 (2020)
García, Y. G.; Shadaydeh, M.; Mahecha, M. D.; Denzler, J.: Extreme anomaly event detection in biosphere using linear regression and a spatiotemporal MRF model. Natural Hazards 98 (3), pp. 849 - 867 (2019)
Babst, F.; Bodesheim, P.; Charney, N.; Friend, A. D.; Girardin, M. P.; Klesse, S.; Moore, D. J.P.; Seftigen, K.; Björklund, J.; Bouriaud, O.et al.; Dawson, A.; DeRose, R. J.; Dietze, M. C.; Eckes, A. H.; Enquist, B.; Frank, D. C.; Mahecha, M. D.; Poulter, B.; Record, S.; Trouet, V.; Turton, R. H.; Zhang, Z.; Evans, M. E.K.: When tree rings go global: Challenges and opportunities for retro- and prospective insight. Quaternary Science Reviews 197, pp. 1 - 20 (2018)
Flach, M.; Sippel, S.; Gans, F.; Bastos, A.; Brenning, A.; Reichstein, M.; Mahecha, M. D.: Contrasting biosphere responses to hydrometeorological extremes: revisiting the 2010 western Russian Heatwave. Biogeosciences 16, pp. 6067 - 6085 (2018)
Cremer, F.; Urbazaev, M.; Berger, C.; Mahecha, M. D.; Schmullius, C.; Thiel, a. C.: An image transform based on temporal decomposition. IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters 15 (4), pp. 537 - 541 (2018)
Sippel, S.; El-Madany, T. S.; Migliavacca, M.; Mahecha, M. D.; Carrara, A.; Flach, M.; Kaminski, T.; Otto, F. E. L.; Thonicke, K.; Vossbeck, M.et al.; Reichstein, M.: Warm winter, wet spring, and an extreme response in ecosystem functioning on the Iberian Peninsula. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 99 (1), pp. S80 - S85 (2018)
von Buttlar, J.; Zscheischler, J.; Rammig, A.; Sippel, S.; Reichstein, M.; Knohl, A.; Jung, M.; Menzer, O.; Arain, M. A.; Buchmann, N.et al.; Cescatti, A.; Gianelle, D.; Kieley, G.; Law, B. E.; Magliulo, V.; Margolis, H.; McCaughey, H.; Merbold, L.; Migliavacca, M.; Montagnani, L.; Oechel, W.; Pavelka, M.; Peichl, M.; Rambal, S.; Raschi, A.; Scott, R. L.; Vaccari, F. P.; van Gorsel, E.; Varlagin, A.; Wohlfahrt, G.; Mahecha, M. D.: Impacts of droughts and extreme-temperature events on gross primary production and ecosystem respiration: a systematic assessment across ecosystems and climate zones. Biogeosciences 15 (5), pp. 1293 - 1318 (2018)
Wu, X.; Liu, H.; Li, X.; Tian, Y.; Mahecha, M. D.: Responses of winter wheat yields to warming-mediated vernalization variations across temperate Europe. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 5, 126 (2017)
Sippel, S.; Forkel, M.; Rammig, A.; Thonicke, K.; Flach, M.; Heimann, M.; Otto, F. E. L.; Reichstein, M.; Mahecha, M. D.: Contrasting and interacting changes in simulated spring and summer carbon cycle extremes in European ecosystems. Environmental Research Letters 12 (7), 075006 (2017)
Sierra, C.; Mahecha, M. D.; Poveda, G.; Álvarez-Dávila, E.; Gutierrez-Velez, V. H.; Reuf, B.; Feilhauer, H.; Anáya, J.; Armenteras, D.; Benavides, A. M.et al.; Buendiak, C.; Duque, Á.; Estupinan-Suarez, L. M.; González, C.; Gonzalez-Caro, S.; Jimenez, R.; Kraemer, G.; Londoño, M. C.; Orrego, S. A.; Posada, J. M.; Ruiz-Carrascalo, D.; Skowronek, S.: Monitoring ecological change during rapid socio-economic and political transitions: Colombian ecosystems in the post-conflict era. Environmental Science and Policy 76, pp. 40 - 49 (2017)
Mathieu, P.-P.; Borgeaud, M.; Desnons Rast M., Y.-L.; Brockmann, C.; See, L.; Fritz, S.; Kapur, R.; Mahecha, M. D.; Benz, U.: The ESA's Earth Observation Open Science Program. IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Magazine 5 (2), pp. 86 - 96 (2017)
Sippel, S.; Zscheischler, J.; Mahecha, M. D.; Orth, R.; Reichstein, M.; Vogel, M.; Seneviratne, S. I.: Refining multi-model projections of temperature extremes by evaluation against land–atmosphere coupling diagnostics. Earth System Dynamics 8 (2), pp. 387 - 403 (2017)
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.
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.
In the annual ranking of the world's most cited and thus most influential scientists, five authors from our institute are once again represented in 2024.
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.
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.
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.
EU funds the international research project AI4PEX to further improve Earth system models and thus scientific predictions of climate change. Participating scientists from 9 countries met at the end of May 2024 to launch the project at the MPI for Biogeochemistry in Jena, which is leading the project.