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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • New Research Confirms Land-Sea Relationship Is Major Driver of Coral Reef Health Outcomes

    Climate change has long been considered as one of the greatest drivers of declining coral reefs, but the specifics of human impact have been largely unverified.

  • Then vs. Now: Did the Horn of Africa Reach a Drought Tipping Point 11,700 Years Ago?

    ‘Wet gets wetter, dry gets drier’. That mantra has been used for decennia to predict how global warming will affect the hydrological cycle in different world regions. 

  • Telecommunications Cable Used to Track Sea Ice Extent in the Arctic

    A telecommunications fiber optic cable deployed offshore of Oliktok Point, Alaska recorded ambient seismic noise that can be used to finely track the formation and retreat of sea ice in the area, researchers report in The Seismic Record.

  • Top Fish Predators Could Suffer Wide Loss of Suitable Habitat by 2100 Due to Climate Change

    A study of 12 species of highly migratory fish predators—including sharks, tuna, and billfish such as marlin and swordfish—finds that most of them will encounter widespread losses of suitable habitat and redistribution from current habitats in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean (NWA) and the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) by 2100. 

  • Theory Meets Practice: Marine Protected Areas Overwhelmingly Manage With Climate Change in Mind

    Scientific findings don’t always translate neatly into actions, especially in conservation and resource management. 

  • Oldest Extant Plant Has Adapted to Extremes and Is Threatened by Climate Change

    A comprehensive study led by scientists from Freiburg and Beijing has characterized the adaptations of the moss Takakia to high altitudes and documented its population decline.

  • Measuring the Extent of Global Droughts in Unprecedented Detail

    Researchers from the University of Bonn are re-analyzing satellite data to calculate global water distribution.

  • NASA Data Shows Fierce Surface Temperatures During Phoenix Heat Wave

    Streets and other built surfaces in the region absorbed and retained heat long after sunset and grew hotter over many days of persistent high temperatures.

  • Nitrogen Runoff Strategies Complicated by Climate Change

    As climate change progresses, rising temperatures may impact nitrogen runoff from land to lakes and streams more than projected increases in total and extreme precipitation for most of the continental United States, according to new research from a team of Carnegie climate scientists led by Gang Zhao and Anna Michalak published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

  • Pause in Recent Coral Recovery on Much of Great Barrier Reef

    In-water monitoring by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (AIMS) shows hard coral cover across the Great Barrier Reef remains at similar levels to that recorded in 2022, with small decreases in the Northern, Central and Southern regions.

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