Thumbnail

Figure 11.3 Primary pathways of the impacts of sea ice change on Arctic humans (redrawn from Eamer et al., 2013). These pathways can be direct or indirect; some are associated with changes in Arctic biodiversity. Changing sea ice is one of the most well-known and well-characterized effects of Arctic climate change, and this change poses challenges as well as benefits – both of which call for adaptation.

2 Files

Name
Kind
Size
Language
Status
Modified
Options
AI
124KB
English
Active
01.01.70 00:00
Download
JPG
97KB
English
Active
01.01.70 00:00
Download

Meta Data

Publication:

Adaptation Actions for a Changing Arctic: Perspectives from the Baffin Bay/Davis Strait Region

Page number:

311

Type:

Schematic

Caption:

Figure 11.3 Primary pathways of the impacts of sea ice change on Arctic humans (redrawn from Eamer et al., 2013). These pathways can be direct or indirect; some are associated with changes in Arctic biodiversity. Changing sea ice is one of the most well-known and well-characterized effects of Arctic climate change, and this change poses challenges as well as benefits – both of which call for adaptation.

Copyright:

Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP)

Cartographer / Designer:

Burnthebook.co.uk