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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
  • Monkeys faring better than plants in increasingly patchy forests of Costa Rica

    Cattle ranching, agriculture and other human activities are turning Costa Rican forests into isolated patchy fragments, causing more problems for native plant populations than for monkey species sharing the same habitat.

  • New pheromone insight may help predict mountain pine beetle outbreaks

    Researchers at the University of British Columbia have shed new light on how mountain pine beetles produce an important pheromone called trans-verbenol, which could aid in efforts to better predict outbreaks.

  • Coral reefs suffering in Philippines despite outlawing damaging fishing practices

    Some of the fishing methods used in today’s small-scale fisheries are causing more damage to coral reefs than ever, a new UBC study has found.

  • New Genetic Test Detects Manatees' Recent Presence in Fresh or Saltwater

    U.S. Geological Survey scientists have developed the first laboratory test that can pick up traces of manatees’ genetic material in the waterways where they live.  Using a water sample collected in the field, the innovative environmental DNA test can reveal whether one or more of the elusive marine mammals has been in the area within the past month.

  • Arctic sea ice becoming a spring hazard for North Atlantic ships

    More Arctic sea ice is entering the North Atlantic Ocean than before, making it increasingly dangerous for ships to navigate those waters in late spring, according to new research led by the University of Manitoba.

  • Soil Fungi May Help Determine the Resilience of Forests to Environmental Change, According to UC Santa Cruz Study

    Nature is rife with symbiotic relationships, some of which take place out of sight, like the rich underground exchange of nutrients that occurs between trees and soil fungi.

  • Topsy-Turvy Currents Key to Removing Nitrate From Streams

    Scientists calculate ‘speed limit’ for pumping pollutant to hungry algae, bacteria.

  • After a Flood, How Do Insects and Other Invertebrates Recover?

    After a 100-year flood struck south central Oklahoma in 2015, a study of the insects, arthropods, and other invertebrates in the area revealed striking declines of most invertebrates in the local ecosystem, a result that researchers say illustrates the hidden impacts of natural disasters.

  • How to save at-risk birds? Talk to ranchers says biology researcher

    They might seem like unlikely allies, but ranchers and prairie conservationists have a future working together.

  • Save the bees

    More than a decade after beekeepers first raised the alarm about a dangerously low global bee population, much progress has been made in understanding the mystery of colony collapse.

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