Photo Credits
- Home Page Background Photo
© 2009 JupiterImages Corporation - Home Page Puzzle Collage
Design by Adrian Apodaca, National Science Foundation. - Top row, left to right
David Cappaert, Bugwood.org; © University Corporation for Atmospheric Research; © 2009 JupiterImages Corporation. - Second row
Eva Horne, Konza Prairie Biological Station; © 2009 JupiterImages Corporation (2). - Third row
© 2009 JupiterImages Corporation; Jeffrey Kietzmann, National Science Foundation; © Forrest Brem, courtesy of NatureServe; Digital Vision, Getty Images. - Fourth row
Jim Laundre, Arctic LTER; © 2009 JupiterImages Corporation; Lynn Betts, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service; Peter West, National Science Foundation. - Bottom row
David Gochis © University Corporation for Atmospheric Research; © University Corporation for Atmospheric Research. - Home Page Navigation Photos
- Butterfly image
NSF-funded researchers are studying the impacts of climate change on the well-known annual cycle of the monarch butterfly.
Credit: David Cappaert, Bugwood.org - Sky image
NSF-funded 'sky' research includes studies of physical and chemical atmospheric phenomena. Computational models of atmospheric processes allow researchers to predict what the climate of the future might be like.
Credit: © 2009 JupiterImages Corporation - Breaking wave image
NSF-funded 'sea' researchers study the ocean's composition, currents, ecosystems and atmospheric interactions. The seafloor is an important source of information about Earth's climatic past; layers of sediment contain a wealth of information about the sea and atmospheric conditions that were present when the sediment layers were first deposited.
Credit: Digital Vision, Getty Images - Ice image
NSF-funded 'ice' researchers study Earth's cryosphere, which includes both polar regions as well as high-altitude glaciers and snow cover on Earth's landmasses. Ice and snow play a critical role in Earth's climate system.
Credit: Jeffrey Kietzmann, National Science Foundation - Tractor in field image
NSF-funded 'land' research includes studies on land use and how changing land use affects the global carbon cycle.
Credit: Lynn Betts, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service - Frog image
The Panamanian golden frog (Atelopus zeteki) is a member of the harlequin frogs (Genus: Atelopus). Scientists estimate that about 67 species of harlequin frogs have gone extinct due to fungus outbreaks. Evidence links these outbreaks with climate change.
Credit: © Forrest Brem, courtesy of NatureServe - Cars image
Human activities, including the use of fossil fuels in automobiles, are responsible for an increase in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere over the last 250 years.
Credit: © 2009 JupiterImages Corporation
- Butterfly image