Current carbon cycle models may underestimate the amount of carbon dioxide released from the soil during rainy seasons in temperate forests like those found in the northeast United States, according to Penn State researchers.
articles
Louisiana Students Cultivate Wetland Grasses in School Aquaponics Systems for Wetland Restoration
Louisiana is losing coastal wetlands at an average rate of a football field every hour.
Climate Data at Your Fingertips
A web tool developed by SDSU researchers offers instant access to global climate data.
Nitrogen-Fixing Trees Help Tropical Forests Grow Faster and Store More Carbon
Planting fixers could benefit reforestation and climate mitigation plans.
Rethinking Fire With Data Analytics and Systems Design
MIT frameworks are helping the U.S. Forest Service find solutions to fire.
USask Research Identifies Potential Cause of Minamata Mercury Poisoning
One of the world’s most horrific environmental disasters—the 1950s and ’60s mercury poisoning in Minamata, Japan—may have been caused by a previously unstudied form of mercury discharged directly from a chemical factory, research by the University of Saskatchewan (USask) has found.