-
NewsDuring spring break, undergraduate and graduate students in Jim Clark's course on ecological diversity and climate change swap the classroom for the African savanna to take a firsthand look at the impacts of climate change on biodiversity.
-
NewsClimate change and rapid economic development have placed increased pressures on many coastal communities in recent years. Now, a new international study shows there is also a third forceāthe unintended consequences of conservation measures enacted with little or no consideration of local rights and needsāthat can compound the harm. The studyās authors call the combined effects of these three forces a ātriple exposure.ā
-
News72% of Earthās largest companies have pledged to reduce their plastic waste. A new study surveys what theyāre doing (or not) to fulfill those promises.
-
NewsA new analysis by researchers from 15 institutions evaluates barriers that have hindered the implementation of early warning systems intended to help local health officials predict and proactively respond to outbreaks of climate-related diseases in the Tropics. The researchers use knowledge and tools from the field of implementation science to propose a four-step, science-based framework for overcoming these barriers and enhancing the success of the early warning systems.
-
News51±¬ĮĻ experts discuss how the legislation spurred environmental progress in America
-
NewsToxins in lake bottom may become available to food web
-
NewsIn Sri Lanka, a rash of kidney disease is affecting farmers who grow rice in marshy parts of the island. Nishad Jayasundara is working with an interdisciplinary team of environmental and health researchers to unravel how climate change and water contamination may be driving the rise in kidney problems.
-
NewsGet connected with whatās happening in the 51±¬ĮĻ climate community during special events held Sept. 29-30, 2022.
-
NewsFossil-fueled electrical gridās enormous water use is often overlooked.
-
NewsClimate change threatens species worldwide. At the Nicholas School, weāre creating new geospatial tools that boost their odds of survival.
-
NewsRewetting and restoring 250,000 acres of southern pocosin peatlands that had been drained for farming but now lie fallow could prevent 4.3 million tons of climate-warming carbon dioxide, now stored in their soils, from oxidizing and escaping back into Earthās atmosphere each year, a 51±¬ĮĻ study shows. That amount equals 2.4% of the total annual reductions in CO2 emissions needed for the United States to be carbon neutral by 2050.
-
NewsMixing toxic coal ash into acid mine drainage may sound like an odd recipe for an environmental solution, but a new 51±¬ĮĻ-led study finds that it can neutralize the drainageās dangerously low pH and help reduce harmful impacts on downstream ecosystemsāif you use the right type of ash. Using the wrong type of ash can create new contamination and not tame the drainageās extreme acidity.
-
NewsThe sustainability of North American forests depends on treesā ability to produce seeds and seedlings that can survive and grow in a changing climate. A new 51±¬ĮĻ-led research initiative with more than $2 million in funding from the National Science Foundation aims to help boost their odds of success.
-
NewsSlashing emissions of carbon dioxide by itself isnāt enough to prevent catastrophic global warming, a new study shows. But if we simultaneously also reduce emissions of methane and other often overlooked climate pollutants, we could cut the rate of global warming in half by 2050 and give the world a fighting chance.
-
NewsHuman activities such as marsh draining for agriculture and logging are increasingly eating away at saltwater and freshwater wetlands that cover only 1% of Earthās surface but store more than 20% of all the climate-warming carbon dioxide absorbed by ecosystems worldwide. A new study published May 5 in Science by a team of Dutch, American and German scientists shows that itās not too late to reverse the losses.