Overview
Extreme weather refers to meteorological and hydrological events that fall well outside the normal range of conditions for a location and season, in intensity, duration, or frequency, and that carry an unusually large potential for harm. The category encompasses tropical cyclones and hurricanes, floods and flash floods, heat waves and cold spells, droughts, severe storms, and extreme precipitation events. Such events arise from atmospheric and oceanic dynamics and are increasingly analyzed in the context of a warming climate, which alters the probability distribution of temperature and precipitation extremes and intensifies the hydrological cycle. Their consequences span infrastructure damage, agricultural loss, ecosystem disruption, and substantial impacts on public health, including injury, displacement, and effects on mental health among vulnerable and migrant populations. Research in this area examines vulnerabilities in environment and health arising from extreme hydrological events and determinants for risk reduction, the public-health burden of climate change in specific regions, and links between changing precipitation regimes, soil and ecosystem processes, and food production. The journal publishes peer-reviewed work bearing on the drivers, impacts, and adaptation and risk-reduction strategies associated with extreme weather, integrating environmental, agricultural, and health perspectives.
Research published in this journal
12 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Impact of Climate Change on Public Health in Rwanda
Biotechnology: A Panacea to Climate Change Disasters- Brief Review
Factors Affecting Atlantic Salmon Populations Adversely; Using the River Dee, Scotland, as an Example
Cyclone in the “Malvinas Islands” and the Spiral Galaxies
Climate Change Sustainable Net-Zero Emissions by Uptake Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide by Terrestrial and Aquatic Plants
Application of Permaculture Practices to Improve Sustainable Agriculture in the Maltese Islands
Spatial Heterogeneity of Soil Respiration Response to Precipitation Pulse in a Temperate Mixed Forest in Central China
Mathematical Analysis of Alternative Power Systems in a Northern Wisconsin Home
Serum Vitamin D Level in Oral Lichen Planus Patients of North India- A Case-Control Study.
Mental Health Scenario of Climate Migrant Women among Slum Dwellers in Dhaka City
Do we need to keep Increasing Crop Productivity for all Times to Come?
How this research is being cited
The 12 articles above have been cited 50 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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2025 · Clinical Oral Investigations
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2025 · Clinical and Experimental Dermatology
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2025 · Clinical Oral Investigations
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2024 · Nutrients
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2024 · Nutrients
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2023 · Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine
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2023 · Annals of Medicine & Surgery
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2023 · Preventive Veterinary Medicine
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Extreme Weather, linking to each citing work.