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Dive into the research topics where Jared Wesley Oyler is active.

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Featured researches published by Jared Wesley Oyler.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Artificial amplification of warming trends across the mountains of the western United States

Jared Wesley Oyler; Solomon Z. Dobrowski; Ashley P. Ballantyne; Anna E. Klene; Steven W. Running

Observations from the main mountain climate station network in the western United States (U.S.) suggest that higher elevations are warming faster than lower elevations. This has led to the assumption that elevation-dependent warming is prevalent throughout the region with impacts to water resources and ecosystem services. Here we critically evaluate this networks temperature observations and show that extreme warming observed at higher elevations is the result of systematic artifacts and not climatic conditions. With artifacts removed, the networks 1991–2012 minimum temperature trend decreases from +1.16°C decade−1 to +0.106°C decade−1 and is statistically indistinguishable from lower elevation trends. Moreover, longer-term widely used gridded climate products propagate the spurious temperature trend, thereby amplifying 1981–2012 western U.S. elevation-dependent warming by +217 to +562%. In the context of a warming climate, this artificial amplification of mountain climate trends has likely compromised our ability to accurately attribute climate change impacts across the mountainous western U.S.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Camouflage mismatch in seasonal coat color due to decreased snow duration

L. Scott Mills; Marketa Zimova; Jared Wesley Oyler; Steven W. Running; John T. Abatzoglou; Paul M. Lukacs

Most examples of seasonal mismatches in phenology span multiple trophic levels, with timing of animal reproduction, hibernation, or migration becoming detached from peak food supply. The consequences of such mismatches are difficult to link to specific future climate change scenarios because the responses across trophic levels have complex underlying climate drivers often confounded by other stressors. In contrast, seasonal coat color polyphenism creating camouflage against snow is a direct and potentially severe type of seasonal mismatch if crypsis becomes compromised by the animal being white when snow is absent. It is unknown whether plasticity in the initiation or rate of coat color change will be able to reduce mismatch between the seasonal coat color and an increasingly snow-free background. We find that natural populations of snowshoe hares exposed to 3 y of widely varying snowpack have plasticity in the rate of the spring white-to-brown molt, but not in either the initiation dates of color change or the rate of the fall brown-to-white molt. Using an ensemble of locally downscaled climate projections, we also show that annual average duration of snowpack is forecast to decrease by 29–35 d by midcentury and 40–69 d by the end of the century. Without evolution in coat color phenology, the reduced snow duration will increase the number of days that white hares will be mismatched on a snowless background by four- to eightfold by the end of the century. This novel and visually compelling climate change-induced stressor likely applies to >9 widely distributed mammals with seasonal coat color.


Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology | 2016

Remotely Sensed Land Skin Temperature as a Spatial Predictor of Air Temperature across the Conterminous United States

Jared Wesley Oyler; Solomon Z. Dobrowski; Zachary A. Holden; Steven W. Running

AbstractRemotely sensed land skin temperature (LST) is increasingly being used to improve gridded interpolations of near-surface air temperature. The appeal of LST as a spatial predictor of air temperature rests in the fact that it is an observation available at spatial resolutions fine enough to capture topoclimatic and biophysical variations. However, it remains unclear if LST improves air temperature interpolations over what can already be obtained with simpler terrain-based predictor variables. Here, the relationship between LST and air temperature is evaluated across the conterminous United States (CONUS). It is found that there are significant differences in the ability of daytime and nighttime observations of LST to improve air temperature interpolations. Daytime LST mainly indicates finescale biophysical variation and is generally a poorer predictor of maximum air temperature than simple linear models based on elevation, longitude, and latitude. Moderate improvements to maximum air temperature int...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Decreasing net primary production due to drought and slight decreases in solar radiation in China from 2000 to 2012

J. Wang; Jie Dong; Yonghong Yi; G. Lu; Jared Wesley Oyler; William K. Smith; Maosheng Zhao; Junwen Liu; Steven W. Running

Terrestrial ecosystems have continued to provide the critical service of slowing the atmospheric CO2 growth rate. Terrestrial net primary productivity (NPP) is thought to be a major contributing factor to this trend. Yet our ability to estimate NPP at the regional scale remains limited due to large uncertainties in the response of NPP to multiple interacting climate factors and uncertainties in the driver data sets needed to estimate NPP. In this study, we introduced an improved NPP algorithm that used local driver data sets and parameters in China. We found that bias decreased by 30% for gross primary production (GPP) and 17% for NPP compared with the widely used global GPP and NPP products, respectively. From 2000 to 2012, a pixel-level analysis of our improved NPP for the region of China showed an overall decreasing NPP trend of 4.65 Tg C a−1. Reductions in NPP were largest for the southern forests of China (−5.38 Tg C a−1), whereas minor increases in NPP were found for North China (0.65 Tg C a−1). Surprisingly, reductions in NPP were largely due to decreases in solar radiation (82%), rather than the more commonly expected effects of drought (18%). This was because for southern China, the interannual variability of NPP was more sensitive to solar radiation (R2 in 0.29–0.59) relative to precipitation (R2 < 0.13). These findings update our previous knowledge of carbon uptake responses to climate change in terrestrial ecosystems of China and highlight the importance of shortwave radiation in driving vegetation productivity for the region, especially for tropical forests.


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2013

Global evaluation of MTCLIM and related algorithms for forcing of ecological and hydrological models

Theodore J. Bohn; Ben Livneh; Jared Wesley Oyler; Steven W. Running; Bart Nijssen; Dennis P. Lettenmaier


International Journal of Climatology | 2015

Creating a topoclimatic daily air temperature dataset for the conterminous United States using homogenized station data and remotely sensed land skin temperature

Jared Wesley Oyler; Ashley P. Ballantyne; Kelsey Jencso; Michael D. Sweet; Steven W. Running


Hydrology and Earth System Sciences | 2012

Future humidity trends over the western United States in the CMIP5 global climate models and variable infiltration capacity hydrological modeling system

David W. Pierce; Anthony L. Westerling; Jared Wesley Oyler


International Journal of Climatology | 2016

Development of high‐resolution (250 m) historical daily gridded air temperature data using reanalysis and distributed sensor networks for the US Northern Rocky Mountains

Zachary A. Holden; Alan K. Swanson; Anna E. Klene; John T. Abatzoglou; Solomon Z. Dobrowski; Samuel A. Cushman; John R. Squires; Gretchen G. Moisen; Jared Wesley Oyler


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Decreasing net primary production due to drought and slight decreases in solar radiation in China from 2000 to 2012: Decreasing NPP Due To Solar Radiation

J. Wang; Jie Dong; Yonghong Yi; G. Lu; Jared Wesley Oyler; William K. Smith; Maosheng Zhao; J. Liu; Steve Running


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Camouflage mismatch in seasonal coat color due to decreased snow duration : Correction

L. Scott Mills; Marketa Zimova; Jared Wesley Oyler; Steven W. Running; John T. Abatzoglou; Paul M. Lukacs

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G. Lu

Qinghai University

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J. Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jie Dong

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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