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About

Changes in the environment, land use, and climate can have significant impacts on our Nation’s economy, natural resources, infrastructure, as well as water, food, and energy security. Research conducted by the Climate R&D Program provides scientific data to improve projections of change under different management scenarios and strengthen our ability to respond and adapt to stressors.

Who We Are and What We Do

 
Video Transcript
USGS science helps to understand the causes and effects of environmental change. Ariana Sutton-Grier is the coordinator of the Climate Research and Development Program, whose scientists focus specifically on environmental changes that have occurred in the past, are taking place now, or will occur in the future.  “We really are doing it all—past, present, and future,” Sutton-Grier said. “We're trying to understand how things like climate change and other environmental changes are affecting our ecosystems.”
Program Mission

The Program is at the frontier of interdisciplinary and integrated scientific research understanding patterns, processes, and impacts (past, present, and future) of changing climate, environment, and land use on the Earth system.

 
Program Objectives 

The Program aims to address pressing socioenvironmental challenges by developing science applications that inform decision making. Current focuses are: 

  • Understanding the processes that influence cycling of water, nutrients, and carbon in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems including the impacts of environmental extremes and disturbance.
  • Documenting patterns of change, developing a process-based understanding of drivers of change, as well as predicting ecosystem response to change in land use/land cover, environmental conditions, and climate.
  • Using paleoclimate and instrumental records to document magnitudes, patterns, and impacts of past and recent change on North American ecosystems and use this knowledge to improve future climate models.

To address these goals, research is carried out in many ecosystems, including wetlands, tundra and sea ice, rangelands, forests, drylands, freshwater, coastal and marine systems, and mountain ecosystems, as well as some urban areas, across North America with the help of partners around the world.

Word cloud of science keywords from the Climate Research and Development Program. See the detailed description for complete l
Word cloud of science keywords from the USGS Climate Research and Development Program. Larger words were submitted more often and from multiple projects whereas smaller words were submitted less frequently. Words in the word cloud, listed in order from largest (used most often) to smallest (used least often) and the number of times each were submitted are: Submitted 17 times- climate change; Submitted 15 times - paleoclimate; Submitted 13 times - drought; Submitted 12 times - modeling; Submitted 11 times - land use & land cover change; Submitted 9 times -carbon, coastal ecosystems, ecosystems, fire, soils; Submitted 8 times - hazards & disturbances, wetlands, water; Submitted 7 times - climate, forests; Submitted 6 times - methods, rivers & streams, natural resource management; Submitted 5 times - abrupt warming, greenhouse gases, sea-level rise; Submitted 4 times - glaciers & land ice, Holocene, hydroclimate, mountain ecosystems, permafrost, snowpack, Arctic, oceans, watersheds; Submitted 3 times - biogeochemistry, climate proxies, drylands, floods, humans & urban ecosystems, lakes, minerology & sedimentology, nitrogen, productivity, sediment cores, stocks & fluxes, thresholds; Submitted 2 times - benthic ecosystems, biodiversity, biological soil crusts, carbon quality, charcoal, dissolved organic matter, ecosystem services, ecotones, groundwater, micropaleontology, nature-based solutions, nutrients, organic carbon, pollen, remote sensing, tree-rings, vegetation.

What is the Value of Climate R&D?

The value of scientific research can be measured in many ways. Be that through monetary worth, priceless partnerships and collaborations, or by the impacts and changes to the world that come from it. Here we explore the value of the Climate Research & Development Program.

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What is the Value of Climate R&D?

The value of scientific research can be measured in many ways. Be that through monetary worth, priceless partnerships and collaborations, or by the impacts and changes to the world that come from it. Here we explore the value of the Climate Research & Development Program.

Learn More

What Makes Climate R&D Unique?

USGS science is important to partners across many different sectors. Here are the ways in which research supported by the Climate Research and Development Program is unique and can be distinguished from other parts of the USGS.

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What Makes Climate R&D Unique?

USGS science is important to partners across many different sectors. Here are the ways in which research supported by the Climate Research and Development Program is unique and can be distinguished from other parts of the USGS.

Learn More