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Dive into the research topics where Andrea Seim is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea Seim.


Science Advances | 2015

Old World megadroughts and pluvials during the Common Era

Edward R. Cook; Richard Seager; Yochanan Kushnir; Keith R. Briffa; Ulf Büntgen; David Frank; Paul J. Krusic; Willy Tegel; Gerard van der Schrier; Laia Andreu-Hayles; M. G. L. Baillie; Claudia Baittinger; Niels Bleicher; Niels Bonde; David Brown; Marco Carrer; Richard J. Cooper; Katarina Čufar; Christoph Dittmar; Jan Esper; Carol Griggs; Björn E. Gunnarson; Björn Günther; Emilia Gutiérrez; Kristof Haneca; Samuli Helama; Franz Herzig; Karl-Uwe Heussner; Jutta Hofmann; Pavel Janda

An atlas of megadroughts in Europe and in the Mediterranean Basin during the Common Era provides insights into climate variability. Climate model projections suggest widespread drying in the Mediterranean Basin and wetting in Fennoscandia in the coming decades largely as a consequence of greenhouse gas forcing of climate. To place these and other “Old World” climate projections into historical perspective based on more complete estimates of natural hydroclimatic variability, we have developed the “Old World Drought Atlas” (OWDA), a set of year-to-year maps of tree-ring reconstructed summer wetness and dryness over Europe and the Mediterranean Basin during the Common Era. The OWDA matches historical accounts of severe drought and wetness with a spatial completeness not previously available. In addition, megadroughts reconstructed over north-central Europe in the 11th and mid-15th centuries reinforce other evidence from North America and Asia that droughts were more severe, extensive, and prolonged over Northern Hemisphere land areas before the 20th century, with an inadequate understanding of their causes. The OWDA provides new data to determine the causes of Old World drought and wetness and attribute past climate variability to forced and/or internal variability.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Climate Change Increases Drought Stress of Juniper Trees in the Mountains of Central Asia

Andrea Seim; Gulzar Omurova; Erlan Azisov; Kanaat Musuraliev; Kumar Aliev; Timur Tulyaganov; Lyutsian Nikolyai; Evgeniy Botman; Gerd Helle; Isabel Dorado Liñán; Sandra Jivcov; Hans W. Linderholm

Assessments of climate change impacts on forests and their vitality are essential for semi-arid environments such as Central Asia, where the mountain regions belong to the globally important biodiversity hotspots. Alterations in species distribution or drought-induced tree mortality might not only result in a loss of biodiversity but also in a loss of other ecosystem services. Here, we evaluate spatial trends and patterns of the growth-climate relationship in a tree-ring network comprising 33 juniper sites from the northern Pamir-Alay and Tien Shan mountain ranges in eastern Uzbekistan and across Kyrgyzstan for the common period 1935–2011. Junipers growing at lower elevations are sensitive to summer drought, which has increased in intensity during the studied period. At higher elevations, juniper growth, previously favored by warm summer temperatures, has in the recent few decades become negatively affected by increasing summer aridity. Moreover, response shifts are observed during all seasons. Rising temperatures and alterations in precipitation patterns during the past eight decades can account for the observed increase in drought stress of junipers at all altitudes. The implications of our findings are vital for the application of adequate long-term measures of ecosystem conservation, but also for paleo-climatic approaches and coupled climate-vegetation model simulations for Central Asia.


Journal of Climate | 2018

Evaluation of Tree Growth Relevant Atmospheric Circulation Patterns for Geopotential Height Field Reconstructions for Asia

Andrea Seim; Johannes Schultz; Christoph Beck; Achim Bräuning; Paul J. Krusic; Caroline Leland; Oyunsanaa Byambasuren; Eryuan Liang; Xiaochun Wang; Jee-Hoon Jeong; Hans W. Linderholm

AbstractAtmospheric circulations influence local and regional weather conditions and, thus, tree growth. To identify summer weather types relevant for tree growth, and their associated synoptic-sca...


European Journal of Forest Research | 2014

A recent growth increase of European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) at its Mediterranean distribution limit contradicts drought stress

Willy Tegel; Andrea Seim; Dietrich Hakelberg; Stephan Hoffmann; Metodi Panev; Thorsten Westphal; Ulf Büntgen


Climate Research | 2012

Climate sensitivity of a millennium-long pine chronology from Albania

Andrea Seim; Ulf Büntgen; Patrick Fonti; Hajri Haska; Franz Herzig; Willy Tegel; Valerie Trouet; Kerstin Treydte


Boreas | 2014

Fluvial system response to external forcing and human impact – Late Pleistocene and Holocene fluvial dynamics of the lower Guadalete River in western Andalucía (Spain)

Daniel Wolf; Andrea Seim; Dominik Faust


Quaternary International | 2013

Late Quaternary fluvial dynamics of the Jarama River in central Spain

Daniel Wolf; Andrea Seim; Fernando Díaz del Olmo; Dominik Faust


International Journal of Climatology | 2015

Climate sensitivity of Mediterranean pine growth reveals distinct east-west dipole

Andrea Seim; Kerstin Treydte; Valerie Trouet; David Frank; Patrick Fonti; Willy Tegel; Momchil Panayotov; Laura Fernández-Donado; Paul J. Krusic; Ulf Büntgen


Dendrochronologia | 2013

Exploring teleconnections between the summer NAO (SNAO) and climate in East Asia over the last four centuries – a tree-ring perspective

Hans W. Linderholm; Andrea Seim; Tinghai Ou; Jee-Hoon Jeong; Yu Liu; Xiaochun Wang; Guang Bao; Chris K. Folland


Trees-structure and Function | 2016

Dendroclimatological potential of three juniper species from the Turkestan range, northwestern Pamir-Alay Mountains, Uzbekistan

Andrea Seim; Timur Tulyaganov; Gulzar Omurova; Lyutsian Nikolyai; Evgeniy Botman; Hans W. Linderholm

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Ulf Büntgen

University of Cambridge

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Willy Tegel

University of Freiburg

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Franz Herzig

United States Department of State

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Xiaochun Wang

Northeast Forestry University

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M. G. L. Baillie

Queen's University Belfast

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