NOAA and partners have launched a new buoy in Fagatele Bay within NOAA’s National Marine Sanctuary of American Samoa to measure the amount of carbon dioxide in the waters around a vibrant tropical coral reef ecosystem.
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When Storms Turn Carbon Sinks into Carbon Sources – A Q&A with Chris Osburn
Chris Osburn is an associate professor of marine, earth and atmospheric sciences at NC State.
What Makes a Place a Home?
Invasive lionfish (Pterois volitans and P. miles) are now ubiquitous throughout the Caribbean and Western Atlantic on both shallow and deep reefs.
Making AI More Human Is Key to Widespread Acceptance
The key to people trusting and co-operating with artificially intelligent (AI) agents lies in their ability to display humanlike emotions, according to a new study by researchers at the University of Waterloo.
Ammonium Fertilized Early Life on Earth
A team of international scientists—including researchers at the University of St. Andrews, Syracuse University and Royal Holloway, University of London—have demonstrated a new source of food for early life on the planet.
Massey Scientists Discover Potential Breakthrough in The Understanding of Tumor Dormancy and Earn $1.2M To Investigate Novel Cancer Therapeutics
Scientists at VCU Massey Cancer Center may have uncovered a primary method through which cancer cells exist undetected in an organism and received more than $1 million to investigate the potential for novel therapeutics that target and destroy cells in a specific state of tumor dormancy.