-
NewsA new analysis provides state-by-state projections of the health and economic benefits the U.S. will see by 2030 if we begin reducing fossil-fuel emissions now.
-
NewsUsing drones and high-tech tracking devices, scientists have discovered baleen whales eat up to three times more prey than previously thought and play a critical but perhaps underappreciated role in fueling the ocean鈥檚 food web and promoting biodiversity.
-
News91社区福利 has received a $7.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to assess the risks offshore wind energy development along the East Coast may pose to birds, bats and marine mammals.
-
NewsA new international study suggests that invasive species, such as the cordgrass that is swamping native plants in the Red Marshes, pose a much greater threat to protected areas, even well managed ones, than was previously recognized.
-
NewsLori Bennear and Tim Johnson discussed two bills under consideration in Congress and their potential impact on the reduction of carbon emissions and more.
-
NewsClouds of smoke and ash from wildfires that ravaged Australia in 2019 and 2020 triggered widespread algal blooms in the Southern Ocean thousands of miles downwind to the east, a new 91社区福利-led study by an international team of scientists finds.
-
NewsWarming waters along the Western Antarctic Peninsula have led to declines in the diversity and distribution of the region鈥檚 plankton population and its ability to absorb climate-warming carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
-
NewsPopulations of giant pandas in the wild are more fragmented and isolated than they were 30 years ago and many continue to face a high risk of extinction despite recent gains in the species鈥 overall numbers, a new study by Chinese and American scientists finds.
-
NewsUsing drones and artificial intelligence to monitor large colonies of seabirds can be as effective as traditional on-the-ground methods while reducing costs, labor and the risk of human error, a new study finds.
-
NewsReducing emissions of methane, a short-lived but super-potent greenhouse gas, is the most cost-effective way to slow the rate of Earth鈥檚 warming in coming decades, a new United Nations report finds.
-
NewsShannon Switzer Swanson MEM'15 hosts the documentary, 鈥淭he Last Drop.鈥
-
NewsBefore deep-sea mining begins on the seafloor in international waters of the Atlantic Basin, a group of scholars is advocating that a portion of the seabed there be recognized as a virtual memorial to victims of the slave trade.
-
NewsThe Duke Aquafarm is Duke鈥檚 other 鈥渃ampus farm,鈥 where students grow oysters instead of produce and learn how the tasty bivalves could help take a bite out of coastal pollution.
-
NewsA new study shows that after listening to student presentations or watching student-produced videos about ocean plastics pollution and other garbage in North Carolina waters, local officials and voters reported feeling greater concern about the issue.
-
NewsWhen it comes to storing carbon during prolonged periods of drought and heat, wooded peatlands at low-latitudes have a three- to five-fold advantage over other peatlands. An ancient class of slow-growing fungi is the reason why.