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  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
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    • Sustainability
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  • Sci/Tech
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  • Press Releases
  • More Carbon in the Ocean Can Lead to Smaller Fish

    As humans continue to send large quantities of carbon into the atmosphere, much of that carbon is absorbed by the ocean, and UConn researchers have found high CO2 concentrations in water can make fish grow smaller.

  • Dozens of Pesticides Linked with Mammary Gland Tumors in Animal Studies

    Findings have implications for how federal agencies assess pesticides for breast cancer risk.

  • Can Sleep Protect Us from Forgetting Old Memories?

    From lowering your risk of obesity and cardiovascular disease to improving your concentration and overall daily performance, sleep has been proven to play a critical role in our health.

  • Yes, the Air Was Better During Lockdown

    The drop in traffic-related air pollution in the Boston area found by Tufts researchers offers lessons for the future.

  • Medical Folk Wisdom: What Is It, And How Does It Affect Public Health?

    A study co-authored by a Texas A&M professor shows that the endorsement of widespread but factually inaccurate beliefs could impact health behavior and policy.

  • Scientists Unlock Genetic Secrets of Wine Growers’ Worst Enemy

    Pest colonizes grape vines, forms root and leaf tumors, repels other predators.

  • Fighting Malaria, Sustainably

    Bruce Lipshutz receives a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to make antimalarial drugs inexpensively — and green.

  • Travel Resumes as Study Says Brazil Flights Spread Virus

    Domestic and international air travel helped spread the novel coronavirus in Brazil, a study has found, as tourism bodies push for global travel to resume amid infection resurgences in some countries.

  • ‘Little Brain’ or Cerebellum Not So Little After All

    When we say someone has a quick mind, it may be in part thanks to our expanded cerebellum that distinguishes human brains from those of macaque monkeys, for example.

  • Policies to Mitigate Wildfire Impacts Have Implications for Public Health, Amplified Amid the COVID-19 Pandemic

    As the western United States enters the 2020 wildfire season with anticipated above normal significant fire potential, a new report from Physicians, Scientists, and Engineers for Healthy Energy (PSE) provides the most expansive synthesis to date on the public health dimensions of wildfire and California’s approaches to wildfire prevention and the mitigation of wildfire-related impacts.

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