Several University of Georgia researchers teamed up to create a statistical method that may allow public health and infectious disease forecasters to better predict disease reemergence, especially for preventable childhood infections such as measles and pertussis.
A group of UK and Peruvian researchers have carried out the first detailed study of how rural communities interact with peatlands in the Peruvian Amazon, a landscape that is one of the world’s largest stores of carbon.
Tropical forests are being deforested at an alarming rate to make way for agriculture and pastureland; the good news is that they can regrow naturally when the fields are abandoned.
While poor hygiene may be a deal breaker in human relationships, in bee colonies it can be a matter of life and death.
Dozens of deep-sea corals thrive off the California coast, but many are still unknown to science.
In and around the tangled roots of the forest floor, fungi and bacteria grow with trees, exchanging nutrients for carbon in a vast, global marketplace.
The Cocos Keeling Islands, a remote archipelago in the Indian Ocean, are covered with an estimated 414 million pieces of plastic pollution, weighing 238 tons, according to a new study published in the journal Scientific Reports.
Accurately predicting whether, and when, a species may go extinct has never been more critical.
A new study shows that invasive species can have a dramatic impact on native species — and that a strong proactive response can help mitigate those impacts.
It might seem counterintuitive, but if cities and towns were properly designed, they could help species face the threat posed by climate change.
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