New research shows that phytoplankton iron storage strategies may determine which species thrive in changing oceans and impact marine food webs, according to a recent paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Fire and water. Timeless, opposing forces, they are actually linked in powerful ways that can have major impacts on communities and ecosystems.
Images of extreme weather and alarming headlines about climate change have become common.
Annual update improves understanding of changing climate, wildlife impacts.
Seventy percent of the current infrastructure in the Arctic has a high potential to be affected by thawing permafrost in the next 30 years.
Berkeley Lab working with water managers to produce “actionable science”.
The future of the world’s coral reefs is uncertain, as the impact of global heating continues to escalate.
Researchers show that humans are reversing a long-term cooling trend tracing back at least 50 million years, and it's taken just two centuries.
Under future climate scenarios, changing winds may make it harder for North American birds to migrate south in the autumn but easier for them to come north in the spring.
Ozone layer depletion has increased snowfall over Antarctica in recent decades, partially mitigating the ongoing loss of the continent’s ice sheet mass, new University of Colorado Boulder research finds.
Page 943 of 1231
ENN Daily Newsletter
ENN Weekly Newsletter