Researchers have developed a new method for assessing the impact of ozone-depleting chemicals released into the atmosphere.
articles
Soil Temperature Can Predict Pest Spread in Crops
A new study from North Carolina State University shows soil temperature can be used to effectively monitor and predict the spread of the corn earworm (Helicoverpa zea), an important pest that ravages corn, cotton, soybeans, peppers, tomatoes and other vegetable crops.
Faster in the Past: New Seafloor Images – The Highest Resolution of Any Taken off the West Antarctic Ice Sheet – Upend Understanding of Thwaites Glacier Retreat
The Thwaites Glacier in West Antarctica – about the size of Florida – has been an elephant in the room for scientists trying to make global sea level rise predictions.
The Power of Compost - Making Waste a Climate Champion
A new way of using compost could boost global crop production and deliver huge benefits to the planet, according to a study co-led by The University of Queensland.
Could the Drying Up of Europe’s Great Rivers Be the New Normal?
Along the fabled Danube River, which snakes its way for 1,800 miles from the Black Forest in Germany to the Black Sea in Romania, scores of towns — such as the small Romanian port of Zimnicea on the Bulgarian border — depend on the waterway for their livelihood.
Albatrosses From Space: Wildlife Detectives Needed!
British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and RSPB are recruiting albatross detectives to help to search for wandering albatrosses in satellite images taken from space.


