NOAA’s habitat restoration work in the Great Lakes strengthens healthy fisheries and ecosystems, benefits local economies, and supports resilient communities.
articles
Air pollution: The silent killer called PM2.5
Millions of people die prematurely every year from diseases and cancer caused by air pollution.
Climate Change May Not Expand Drylands
Does a warmer climate mean more dry land? For years, researchers projected that drylands — including deserts, savannas and shrublands — will expand as the planet warms, but new research from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) challenges those prevailing views.
Combining Public Health and Environmental Science to Develop Pollen Forecasting
New research, wich brings healthcare data together with ground-breaking ecological techniques, could set a roadmap for refining pollen forecasts in the future.
In Panama, Nitrogen-Fixing Trees Unlock Phosphorus and Other Scarce Nutrients
A new study, published this week in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, reveals that nitrogen-fixing trees play an underrecognized role in recovering tropical forests by enriching nutrient-poor soils with scarce elements such as phosphorus and molybdenum.
The Secrets of the Best Rainbows on Earth
Rainbows are some of the most spectacular optical phenomena in the natural world and Hawai‘i has an amazing abundance of them.