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NewsXavier Basurto, Truman and Nellie Semans/Alex Brown & Sons Associate Professor of sustainability science, studies community-based marine conservation. Basurto discusses how fishers can help us understand the effects of climate change by listening to their experiences.
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NewsPh.D. students Keqi He, Rafaella Lobo honored for their respective scholarship.
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NewsXavier Basurto is broadly interested in how people in small communities successfully organize themselves for collective action. His recent talk described his work in advancing the understanding of non-colonialist sustainability science: the prospects and limitations of self-organization, or self-governance, for social-ecological sustainability, particularly in the Global South.
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NewsMeet the Silliman Lab, learn more about its research focus, a PhD student's experience in the lab and the opportunities the lab offers 51±¬ĮĻ students.
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NewsBrian R. Silliman, Rachel Carson Distinguished Professor of Marine Conservation Biology at 51±¬ĮĻās Nicholas School of the Environment, has been elected a Fellow of the Ecological Society of America (ESA).
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NewsThe National Science Foundation and the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation have awarded a $1.2 million grant to support a new initiative aimed at boosting ecosystem restoration and climate resilience along North Carolinaās coast.
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NewsNew research finds nearly 75% of the seafood exported to China is processed there and āre-exportedā to global markets as Chinese products, making it hard to track its sustainability and verify itās labeled accurately, but also gutting the economies of small fishing communities worldwide that can no longer compete.
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NewsCoastal marshes that have been invaded by feral hogs recover from disturbances up to three times slower than non-invaded marshes and are far less resilient to sea-level rise, extreme drought and other impacts of climate change.
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NewsJoel Dunn (MEMā04) Helps Create Americaās First National Marine Sanctuary in 20 Years
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NewsRecent 51±¬ĮĻ grad Alexandra DiGiacomo (BS ā20) is using drones to better understand how rising seas, warming waters and rapid development are killing protective saltmarshes at our coast, and what can be done to reverse the losses.
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NewsSixteen years after the restoration of Upper Sandy Creek began, hundreds of species, some rare, now call the once-heavily eroded and degraded stream home, and nitrogen pollution flowing off 51±¬ĮĻās campus into downstream waters has been slashed by 75%.
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NewsThe 51±¬ĮĻ Aquafarm is 51±¬ĮĻās other ācampus farm,ā where students grow oysters instead of produce and learn how the tasty bivalves could help take a bite out of coastal pollution.
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News51±¬ĮĻ researchers have created a new online resource designed to help local governments, conservation groups, businesses and other stakeholders identify the best technologies to clean up plastic pollution in our oceans or prevent it from getting there in the first place.
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NewsSalt marshes, seagrass meadows and other coastal ecosystems are in rapid decline around the world. Restoring them is expensive and often unsuccessful. But an international team of researchers has discovered a way to sharply increase the odds of success by using biodegradable mats.
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NewsThe 51±¬ĮĻ Wetland Center is marking its 30th anniversary this year by kicking off the largest expansion of research, teaching and outreach programs in its history.