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How Lightly Grazed Lands Can Lock Away Huge Sums of Carbon

A new study finds that scaling back grazing on most pastureland worldwide would dramatically increase the amount of carbon stored in soils.

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An Underwater Plume From Kavachi

Kavachi is one of the most active submarine volcanoes in the Pacific.

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Study Shows a Healthy Diet is Linked with a Slower Pace of Aging, Reduced Dementia Risk

A healthier diet is associated with a reduced dementia risk and slower pace of aging, according to a new study at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health and The Robert Butler Columbia Aging Center. 

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Tsetse Fly Fertility Damaged After Just One Heatwave, Study Finds

The fertility of both female and male tsetse flies is affected by a single burst of hot weather, researchers at the University of Bristol and Stellenbosch University in South Africa have found.

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Illinois Study: Tropical Birds Could Tolerate Warming Better Than Expected

Consider the globe, spinning silently in space. Its poles and its middle, the equator, remain relatively stable, thermally speaking, for the duration of Earth’s annual circuit around the sun. 

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Antarctic Sea Ice at Near-Historic Lows

In the waters around Antarctica, ice coverage in 2024 shrank to near-historic lows for the third year in a row. 

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Diverse Habitats Help Salmon Weather Unpredictable Climate Changes

Restored salmon habitat should resemble financial portfolios, offering fish diverse options for feeding and survival so that they can weather various conditions as the climate changes, a new study shows.

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New Study Shows How AI Can Help Us Better Understand Global Threats to Wildlife

A new study published today by the University of Sussex shows how researchers are using AI technology and social media to help identify global threats to wildlife. 

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Summer Solstice Triggers Synchronised Beech Tree Reproduction Across Europe

A new study published in Nature Plants has found that the summer solstice is a “starting gun” to synchronise beech tree reproduction across vast distances in Europe.

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Sonic Youth: Healthy Reef Sounds Increase Coral Settlement

A healthy coral reef is noisy, full of the croaks, purrs, and grunts of various fishes and the crackling of snapping shrimp. 

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