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  • Flooding Hot Spots: Why Seas Are Rising Faster on the U.S. East Coast

    Seen from a pedestrian footbridge overlooking Myrtle Park — a sliver of land that Norfolk, Virginia is allowing to revert to wetlands — the panorama of surrounding homes illustrates the accelerating sea level rise that has beleaguered this neighborhood along the Lafayette River.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Winter Wave Heights and Extreme Storms on the Rise in Western Europe

    Average winter wave heights along the Atlantic coast of Western Europe have been rising for almost seven decades, according to new research.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Landmark Paper Finds Light at End of the Tunnel for World’s Wildlife and Wild Places

    A new WCS paper published in the journal BioScience finds that the enormous trends toward population stabilization, poverty alleviation, and urbanization are rewriting the future of biodiversity conservation in the 21st century, offering new hope for the world’s wildlife and wild places.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NASA's GPM Sees Tropical Cyclone Fakir Forming Near Madagascar

    The southwest Indian Ocean cyclone season started on November 15, 2017 and will officially end on April 30, 2018. A tropical cyclone called Fakir formed on April 23 near northeastern Madagascar and the Global Precipitation Measurement mission or GPM core satellite looked at the storm's rainfall rates. 

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Trees with Grassy Areas Soften Summer Heat

    Trees cool their environment  and "heat islands" like Munich benefit from it. However, the degree of cooling depends greatly on the tree species and the local conditions. In a recent study, scientists at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) compared two species of urban trees.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Corals Are in Serious Trouble. This Lab Could Help Save Them

    Nestled among giant fish tanks at the California Academy of Sciences, there's a black box—just big enough to hold six aquariums and maybe five humans. What it lacks in size, though, it makes up for in preciousness: Running here is a experiment that could help save corals from annihilation.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Scientists suggest protecting ‘reefs of hope’ may offset climate-change damage to coral reefs

    Among the most damaging effects that climate change has wrought on the natural world are those sustained by coral reefs.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Tiny Microenvironments in the Ocean Hold Clues to Global Nitrogen Cycle

    Nitrogen is essential to marine life and cycles throughout the ocean in a delicately balanced system. Living organisms—especially marine plants called phytoplankton—require nitrogen in processes such as photosynthesis. In turn, phytoplankton growth takes up carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and helps regulate global climate.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Research Brief: Grassland Plants React Unexpectedly to High Levels of Carbon Dioxide

    Plants are responding in unexpected ways to increased carbon dioxide in the air, according to a twenty-year study conducted by researchers at the University of Minnesota and published in the journal Science. For the first 12 years, researchers found what they expected regarding how different types of grasses reacted to carbon dioxide. However, researchers’ findings took an unanticipated turn during the last eight years of the study.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Economic and Policy Drivers of Soil Organic Carbon Accumulation in Chinese Croplands Identified

    China’s croplands have experienced drastic changes in management practices related to fertilization, tillage and residue treatment since the 1980s. The impact of these changes on soil organic carbon (SOC) has drawn major attention from the scientific community and decision-makers because changes in SOC may not only affect future food production but also water and soil quality, as well as greenhouse gas emissions.  

    >> Read the Full Article

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