Global Change Responses

Global Change Responses RSS Feed

Global change is defined as changes in the global environment that may alter the capacity of the Earth to sustain life. Global change encompasses climate change, but it also includes other critical drivers of environmental change that may or may not interact with climate change, such as land use change, the alteration of the water cycle, changes in biogeochemical cycles, and biodiversity loss. Responses to global change may include actions such as adaptation, mitigation, and various forms of scenario and contingency planning to reduce risk.

 

Definition source: University of California Berkeley

You Might Also Be Interested In

Filter By

Content type
This ASTER image, acquired on July 23, 2001, shows Aletsch Glacier, the largest glacier of Europe. (Image by NASA Earth Observatory Team, based on data provided by the ASTER Science Team)
Article
Cumulus clouds gather over the Atlantic Ocean
Article
A researcher observes the edge of the Greenland Ice Sheet in 2001. (Image courtesy of Ted Scambos, National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado at Boulder).
Article
Landsat captured this image of the region around Prince Albert, Saskatchewan in 1990.
Article
The false-color image above is a MODIS image, captured on January 2, 2001, shows the extent of snow cover over the north-central United States.
Article
Photograph of cracks in the Larsen B Ice Shelf south of the Seal Nunataks on Mary 13, 2002
Article
Glaciologists used MAMM radar data to clock the movement of glaciers feeding the enormous Ross Ice Shelf.
Article