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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
  • Scouting Watering Holes from Space

    Satellites may make it easier for nomadic herders in Senegal to survive the lean season.

  • Rising Water Temperatures Threaten the Reproduction of Many Fish Species

    Every degree of ocean warming increases the pressure on fish stocks.

  • Beavers Gnawing Away at the Permafrost

    The large rodents are massively changing landscapes in the Arctic, which could have serious consequences for the frozen soils and our future climate.

  • Typhoon Changed Earthquake Patterns

    Work shows for the first time that massive erosion influences seismicity - and does so in a geological instant.

  • Farewell Smooth Handfish: What Can We Learn From the World’s First Marine Fish Extinction?

    Earlier this month, a group of Australian scientists confirmed a depressing landmark for our blue planet: the first marine fish of modern times has been declared Extinct on the IUCN RedList.

  • Grazing Disputes in Kyrgyzstan Reveal Pasture Access Concerns for Herders

    In early June, livestock herders from two neighboring districts in Kyrgyzstan’s Naryn oblast, or administrative region, clashed over disagreements regarding pasture access.

  • Leaping Listeria

    As the world wrestles with the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, which arose after the virus jumped from an animal species to the human species, University of Delaware researchers are learning about new ways other pathogens are jumping from plants to people.

  • Climate Change Threat To Tropical Plants

    Tropical plants closer to the equator are most at risk from climate change because it is expected to become too hot for many species to germinate in the next 50 years, UNSW researchers have found.

  • ‘Mind-Blowing’ Antarctic Scenery, Wildlife Highlight Research Trip

    University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa PhD student Fabien Vivier may have experienced the trip of his lifetime recently as part of a three-week expedition to Antarctica.

  • A Dust Plume to Remember

    While dust routinely blows across the Atlantic Ocean, scientists rarely see plumes as large and dense with particles as the one that darkened Caribbean skies in June 2020.

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