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ENN ENN ENN Environmental News Network -- Know Your Environment
06
Sat, Sep
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  • Sanchi Oil Spill Contamination Could Take Three Months to Reach Mainland

    Water contaminated by the oil currently leaking into the ocean from the Sanchi tanker collision is likely to take at least three months to reach land, and if it does the Korean coast is the most likely location. However, the oil’s fate is highly uncertain, as it may burn, evaporate, or mix into the surface ocean and contaminate the environment for an extended duration.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Airing dirty laundry: Students develop new way to measure plastics released in environment while washing clothes

    Two undergraduate students researching pollution have helped develop a new way to measure how much plastic is released into the environment from laundering clothes – which may be contributing to plastic pollution choking the world's oceans.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Blame it on the rain: Study ties phosphorus loading in lakes to extreme precipitation events

    While April showers might bring May flowers, they also contribute to toxic algae blooms, dead zones and declining water quality in U.S. lakes, reservoirs and coastal waters, a new study shows.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • In urban streams, pharmaceutical pollution is driving microbial resistance

    In urban streams, persistent pharmaceutical pollution can cause aquatic microbial communities to become resistant to drugs. So reports a new study published today in the journal Ecosphere. 

    >> Read the Full Article
  • U.S. Waterways Are Getting Saltier, With Possible Effects on Drinking Water

    Streams and rivers across much of the U.S. are getting saltier and more alkaline due to an uptick in the use of road deicers and fertilizers in recent decades, according to a  50-year-long analysis of 232 monitoring sites by the U.S. Geological Survey.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • In urban streams, pharmaceutical pollution is driving microbial resistance

    Resilient bacteria might help streams but could threaten human health

    (Millbrook, NY) In urban streams, persistent pharmaceutical pollution can cause aquatic microbial communities to become resistant to drugs. So reports a new study published today in the journal Ecosphere. 

    Emma Rosi, an aquatic ecologist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies and lead author on the study explains, "Wastewater treatment facilities are not equipped to remove many pharmaceutical compounds. We were interested in how stream microorganisms - which perform key ecosystem services like removing nutrients and breaking down leaf litter - respond to pharmaceutical pollution." 

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Frog genome mapping sheds new light on environmental contaminants

    A University of Victoria molecular biologist has gained new insights into how environmental contaminants may disrupt thyroid systems. The discovery was made while assembling the genome of the North American bullfrog.

    Caren Helbing’s findings could help explain the mechanisms of early development, as well as how environmental contaminants cause thyroidrelated diseases and malfunctions.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • NUS Researchers Pioneer Water-Based, Eco-Friendly and Energy-Saving Air-Conditioner

    A team of researchers from the National University of Singapore (NUS) has pioneered a new water-based air-conditioning system that cools air to as low as 18 degrees Celsius without the use of energy-intensive compressors and environmentally harmful chemical refrigerants. This game-changing technology could potentially replace the century-old air-cooling principle that is still being used in our modern-day air-conditioners. Suitable for both indoor and outdoor use, the novel system is portable and it can also be customised for all types of weather conditions.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • US Rivers and Streams are Compromised by Increasing Salt Loads

    Human activities are exposing US rivers and streams to a cocktail of salts, with consequences for infrastructure and drinking water supplies. So reports a new study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that is the first to assess the combined, long-term changes in freshwater salinity and alkalization across the country.

    >> Read the Full Article
  • Noise Pollution Causes Chronic Stress in Birds, with Health Consequences for Young

    Birds exposed to the persistent noise of natural gas compressors show symptoms remarkably similar to those in humans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, new research shows.

    >> Read the Full Article

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