Climate change may be depriving juvenile fish of their most crucial early food source by throwing off the synchronization of when microscopic plants known as phytoplankton bloom and when fish hatch, according to Princeton University researchers.
articles
Machine Learning Helps to Predict Blackouts Caused by Storms
Thunderstorms are common all over the world in summer.
Biodiversity Highest on Indigenous-Managed Lands
More than one million plant and animal species worldwide are facing extinction, according to a recent United Nations report.
A Small Number of Leaky Natural Gas Wells Produce Large Emissions of Greenhouse Gases
Wells that extract natural gas from underground often leak large amounts of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, into the air.
Study Suggests Economic Growth Benefits Wildlife but Growing Human Populations Do Not
In a world first, researchers at ZSL and UCL compared changes in bird and mammal populations with socio-economic trends in low- and lower-middle income countries over the past 20 years.
To Learn How Poison Frogs Are Adapting to Warmer Temperatures, Scientists Got Crafty
There’s a species of poison frog called the “strawberry poison frog” or the “blue jeans frog,” depending on who you ask.