Small particles from tires inhibited the growth and caused adverse behavioral changes in organisms found in freshwater and coastal estuary ecosystems, two new Oregon State University studies found.
articles
Data-Driven Study Digs Into the State of U.S. Farm Livelihoods
U.S. agricultural systems are world leaders in the production of food, fuel and fiber.
Hyperspectral Sensing and AI Pave New Path for Monitoring Soil Carbon
Just how much carbon is in the soil?
Scientists Say Environmental DNA Can Detect Whales and Dolphins in New York Waters
A team of scientists used an emerging genetic tool that analyzes DNA in water samples to detect whales and dolphins in New York waters.
British Columbians Worried Pandemic Will Never End, and Climate Change Is Only Adding to the Fear
If you’re feeling like the pandemic is never-ending, you’re not alone.
It’s Personal: Stanford-Led Research Reveals How People’s Experience With Climate-Related Disasters Affects Their Willingness to Take and Accept Protective Actions
Two new studies – a survey of residents in hurricane-battered Florida and Texas and a survey of people in wildfire-scarred California – reveal that negative personal experiences are among key variables in pushing people to take or accept protective measures like flood insurance and planned power shut offs.