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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
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  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
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  • Sci/Tech
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  • UNB Research Lab Receives Federal Funding For Spruce Budworm Study

    A research lab at the University of New Brunswick has received federal funding for a study into the impact of spruce budworm outbreaks on the environment and climate change.

  • Survey Indicates Slight Decline in Underwater Grass Abundance

    Despite record-rainfall in 2018, underwater grass abundance remains strong

  • Organic Carbon Hides in Sediments, Keeping Oxygen in Atmosphere

    A new study from researchers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) and Harvard University may help settle a long-standing question—how small amounts of organic carbon become locked away in rock and sediments, preventing it from decomposing.

  • Fracking Likely to Result in High Emissions

    In the last ten years natural gas production has soared in the United States. This is mainly due to shale gas, which currently accounts for about 60 per cent of total US gas production. 

  • Elephant Extinction Will Raise Carbon Dioxide Levels in Atmosphere

    One of the last remaining megaherbivores, forest elephants shape their environment by serving as seed dispersers and forest bulldozers as they eat over a hundred species of fruit, trample bushes, knock over trees and create trails and clearings.

  • Chemicals Found in Fungus Could Help in Battle Against Mountain Pine Beetle

    University of Alberta research has discovered new chemicals carried by fungi in the mountain pine beetle that could be used to build better traps in the battle against the ravaging forest pest.

  • Is Deadly Candida Auris a Product of Global Warming?

    A drug-resistant fungus species called Candida auris, which was first identified ten years ago and has since caused hundreds of deadly outbreaks in hospitals around the world, may have become a human pathogen in part due to global warming, according to three scientists led by a researcher at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

  • Tuna Are Spawning in Marine Protected Areas

    Marine protected areas are large swaths of coastal seas or open ocean that are protected by governments from activities such as commercial fishing and mining.

  • How Climate Change Disrupts Relationships

    Higher mean temperatures as associated with climate change can have a severe impact on plants and animals by disrupting their mutually beneficial relationship: The pasque flower (Pulsatilla vulgaris), for example, is very sensitive to rising temperatures by flowering earlier each year, whereas one of its major pollinators, a solitary bee species, does not quite keep pace by hatching earlier. 

  • Monarch Butterflies Rely on Temperature-Sensitive Internal Timer While Overwintering

    The fact that millions of North American monarch butterflies fly thousands of miles each fall and somehow manage to find the same overwintering sites in central Mexican forests and along the California coast, year after year, is pretty mind-blowing.

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