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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
  • Study Finds Flightless Puffins Vulnerable to Winter Storms for Two Months a Year

    Puffins lose the ability to fly for up to two months every year – twice as long as previously believed.

  • New Research Shows Wildlife & Marine Environment Benefit when Island-Ocean Connections Are Restored

    Restoring and rewilding islands that have been decimated by damaging invasive species provides benefits to not only the terrestrial ecosystem but to coastal and marine environments as well. 

  • Warming Seas’ Negative Impact on Giant Kelp Starts in Early Life – Otago Study

    Rising ocean temperatures are driving deterioration of kelp forests worldwide, but a University of Otago study hopes to help turn the tide and restore the valuable habitats.

  • In Bolivia, Mercury Pollution Spreads Amid a Surge in Gold Mining

    Across Bolivia, even in protected areas recognized by the United Nations for their diversity of wildlife, more than 1,000 artisanal mining operations are razing trees, diverting waterways, and reshaping the land in their search for gold.

  • In the Tropics, Nitrogen-Fixing Trees Take a Hit From Herbivores

    The ability of tropical forests to grow and store carbon is limited, in part, by herbivory. Insects and other animals prefer to feed on nitrogen-fixing trees, reducing the success of fixers and the nitrogen they provide.

  • Hurricane’s Effects Killed Sturgeon in Apalachicola River

    As hurricane Michael churned through the Gulf of Mexico to make landfall near Florida’s Apalachicola River in 2018, it left a sea of destruction in its wake.

  • Biodiversity Unbalanced as Ice-Free Antarctic Areas Grow

    A study into the impact of global warming on the biodiversity of the Antarctic has identified how predicted expansion of ice-free areas will impact native animals and plants, paving the way for the invasion of non-native species in Antarctica.

  • To Save Nature, Focus on Populations, Not Species

    Human-released greenhouse gasses are causing the world to warm, and with that warming comes increasing stress for many of the planet’s plants and animals. 

  • Fertilizing the Ocean to Store Carbon Dioxide

    The urgent need to remove excess carbon dioxide from Earth’s environment could include enlisting some of our planet’s smallest inhabitants, according to an international research team led by Michael Hochella of the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

  • The Evolution of Asia’s Mammals Was Dictated by Ancient Climate Change and Rising Mountains

    The idea that climate change and geological events can shape evolution isn’t a new one: anyone who’s heard of dinosaurs knows that a big change in the environment (like, say, a meteor hitting the Earth 66 million years ago and causing a chain reaction of storms, earthquakes, cold, and darkness) can dictate how animals live, die, and evolve. 

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