As with many introduced species the beachgrasses come with ecological costs to the native flora and fauna.
articles
Using Waste Heat to Power an Environmentally Sustainable Future
City’s Dr Martin White explores a novel organic Rankine system for converting waste heat into electricity.
From Fire to Dust: Plutonium Particles From British Nuclear Testing in Outback Australia More Complex Than Previously Thought, Scientists Warn
More than 100 kg of highly toxic uranium (U) and plutonium (Pu) was dispersed in the form of tiny ‘hot’ radioactive particles after the British detonated nine atomic bombs in remote areas of South Australia, including Maralinga.
New Recreational Fishing Technologies May Pose Risks to Fisheries
Scientists need to work closely with resource management agencies to assess impacts
Overwintering Fires on the Rise
New research shows that this type of wildfire—which can survive the winter to re-emerge in spring—is becoming more common in high northern latitudes as the climate warms.
Sargassum Now World’s Largest Harmful Algal Bloom Due to Nitrogen
Because of anthropogenic emissions of oxides of nitrogen (NOx), the NOx deposition rate is about five-fold greater than that of pre-industrial times largely due to energy production and biomass burning.


