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News Archives

Atmospheric ScienceEcology Forests
  • News

    A Duke Forest tour featured research from the SEEDS Lab.
  • News

    Modeling experiments show Pacific warm and cold patches persisted even when continents were in different places
  • Community forestry project in Madhesh Province, Nepal
    News

    Mixed Approach to Reforestation Better Than Planting or Regeneration Alone

    Reforestation in low- and middle-income countries can remove up to 10 times more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere at lower cost than previously estimated, making it a potentially more effective option to fight climate change.
  • Larch trees in Daxing’an Mountains, China
    News

    Manganese's Surprising Role in Soil Carbon Sequestration

    Exchangeable manganese cuts carbon storage in boreal forests
  • Duke Forest green foliage and sun through trees
    News

    New NSF Grant Will Fund Continental-Scale Study of Climate Impacts on Forest Regeneration and Wildlife

    The sustainability of North American forests depends on trees’ ability to produce seeds and seedlings that can survive and grow in a changing climate. A new 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû-led research initiative with more than $2 million in funding from the National Science Foundation aims to help boost their odds of success.
  • Smog over skyline
    News

    Curbing Other Climate Pollutants, Not Just CO2, Gives Earth a Chance

    Slashing emissions of carbon dioxide by itself isn’t enough to prevent catastrophic global warming, a new study shows. But if we simultaneously also reduce emissions of methane and other often overlooked climate pollutants, we could cut the rate of global warming in half by 2050 and give the world a fighting chance.
  • Pinecone
    News

    Studies Find the Seeds of a Forest’s Renewal After Wildfire, Drought

    A forest’s ability to regenerate after devastating wildfires, droughts or other disturbances depends largely on seed production. Findings from two new studies led by 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû researchers could boost recovery and replanting after these disasters by providing foresters with new guidance on which tree species produce more seeds and how their productivity can vary from location to location.
  • Gas flare
    News

    Hundreds of Large Methane Releases Detected at Oil and Gas Sites Worldwide

    Using satellite images, scientists have detected hundreds of very large and previously unreported methane releases at oil and natural gas production sites across the globe.
  • News

    Scientists, led by alumna Jacqueline Gerson PhD'21 and faculty member Emily Bernhardt, recorded the highest levels of atmospheric mercury pollution in the world in a pristine patch of the Peruvian Amazon
  • pine trees
    News

    What’s Driving the East-West Divide in Trees’ Response to Climate Change?

    Many North American tree species have begun to slowly migrate northward in response to global warming, but western and eastern forests are responding differently. A new Duke-led study reveals why.
  • Jim Clark collecting field data in the French Alps.
    News

    For Larger, Older Trees, It’s All Downhill from Here

    As trees age and grow, it seems logical to assume their seed production will continue to grow, too, but a Duke-led study of 597 species worldwide nips that assumption in the bud.
  • Elephants
    News

    To Protect Africa’s Endangered Elephants, Scientists Follow Their Footprints

    A new GPS-enabled study led by 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû scientists provides the first landscape-scale documentation of elephant movements across and between seven national parks in Gabon and helps answer not only the questions of where and when the animals move, but also why.
  • Forest in Sequoia National Park
    News

    Climate Impacts Drive East-West Divide in Forest Seed Production

    New research reveals western North American forests may be less able than eastern forests to regenerate following large-scale diebacks linked to climate change. Over time, this could dramatically alter the continent’s landscape.
  • Wuhan
    News

    China’s COVID Lockdown Significantly Cut Air Pollution-Related Hospitalizations

    The stringent lockdown imposed by the Chinese government to slow the spread of COVID-19 early this year significantly eased the strain on hospitals there. Admissions due to non-COVID respiratory illnesses decreased by nearly 5,000, a new study by an international team of scientists shows.
  • Masked student
    News

    Online Tool Calculates Risk of Classroom Transmission of Airborne COVID-19

    91ÉçÇø¸£Àû researchers have developed a new online calculator that teachers, administrators and students can use to estimate the risk of airborne transmission of the COVID-19 virus in classrooms.

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Research area

  • (-) Atmospheric Science
  • Climate Change
  • Ecology & Conservation
  • Economics, Policy & Governance
  • Energy
  • Environmental Health
  • Food Systems
  • (-) Forests
  • Geosciences
  • Oceans
  • Sustainability
  • Technology
  • Toxicology
  • Urban Environment
  • Water
  • Wetlands
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