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ENN ENN ENN Environmental News Network -- Know Your Environment
13
Tue, May
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  • After a Flood, How Do Insects and Other Invertebrates Recover?

    After a 100-year flood struck south central Oklahoma in 2015, a study of the insects, arthropods, and other invertebrates in the area revealed striking declines of most invertebrates in the local ecosystem, a result that researchers say illustrates the hidden impacts of natural disasters.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • How to save at-risk birds? Talk to ranchers says biology researcher

    They might seem like unlikely allies, but ranchers and prairie conservationists have a future working together.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Save the bees

    More than a decade after beekeepers first raised the alarm about a dangerously low global bee population, much progress has been made in understanding the mystery of colony collapse.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Exceptionally Large Amount of Winter Snow in Northern Hemisphere This Year

    The new Arctic Now product developed by the Finnish Meteorological Institute shows with one picture the extent of the area in the Northern Hemisphere currently covered by ice and snow.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Study Helps Explain Greenland Glaciers’ Varied Vulnerability to Melting

    More accurate maps of bed topography reveal physical processes controlling retreat.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Mountains Become Islands: Ecological Dangers of Increasing Land Use in East Africa

    The mountains of East Africa are a treasure trove of biodiversity. However, their ecosystems may be at a higher risk than previously realized. Dr. Andreas Hemp and Dr. Claudia Hemp have discovered that Mount Kilimanjaro is turning into an "ecological island". Agriculture and housing construction have eliminated the natural vegetation that used to serve as a bridge to the surrounding area, enabling the diversity of species to develop to its current levels. Neighbouring mountain regions are presumably also being isolated from their surrounding areas. The researchers have published their study in the journal Global Change Biology.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • 'Lazy Lawn Mowers' Can Help Support Suburban Bee Populations and Diversity

    Homeowners concerned about the decline of bees, butterflies and other pollinating insects need look no further than their own back yards, says ecologist Susannah Lerman at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the USDA Forest Service. In new research, she and colleagues suggest that homeowners can help support bee habitat in suburban yards, specifically their lawns, by changing lawn-mowing habits.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Digging Deep: Harnessing the Power of Soil Microbes for More Sustainable Farming

    There’s a farm in Arkansas growing soybeans, corn, and rice that is aiming to be the most scientifically advanced farm in the world. Soil samples are run through powerful machines to have their microbes genetically sequenced, drones are flying overhead taking hyperspectral images of the crops, and soon supercomputers will be crunching the massive volumes of data collected.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • How cash can promote tropical forest conservation

    Paying rural villagers to cut down fewer trees boosts conservation not only while the payments are being made but even after they’re discontinued, according to a new CU Boulder study involving 1,200 tropical forest users in five developing countries.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • These veterans have a mission: This time, it’s fighting for coral

    A team of military veterans is putting their hard-earned skills toward a different challenge: Restoring damaged corals in hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico.

    >> Read the Full Article

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