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NewsFrom Costa Rica to Thailand, the rising senior has forged an interdisciplinary path.
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NewsAt the Nicholas School of the Environment, researchers and entrepreneurs are joining forces to solve environmental problems.
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NewsA Duke Forest tour featured research from the SEEDS Lab.
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NewsReforestation 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.
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NewsXavier Basurto, Truman and Nellie Semans/Alex Brown & Sons Associate Professor of sustainability science, studies community-based marine conservation. Basurto discusses how fishers can help us understand the effects of climate change by listening to their experiences.
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NewsThis year鈥檚 global Earth Day theme is 鈥減lanet vs plastics鈥, and calls for the rapid phase out all single-use plastics.
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NewsExchangeable manganese cuts carbon storage in boreal forests
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NewsXavier Basurto is broadly interested in how people in small communities successfully organize themselves for collective action. His recent talk described his work in advancing the understanding of non-colonialist sustainability science: the prospects and limitations of self-organization, or self-governance, for social-ecological sustainability, particularly in the Global South.
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NewsThe sustainability of North American forests depends on trees鈥 ability to produce seeds and seedlings that can survive and grow in a changing climate. A new 91社区福利-led research initiative with more than $2 million in funding from the National Science Foundation aims to help boost their odds of success.
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NewsA forest鈥檚 ability to regenerate after devastating wildfires, droughts or other disturbances depends largely on seed production. Findings from two new studies led by 91社区福利 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.
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NewsPhD student Renata Poulton Kamakura has been working with Duke Landscape Services and undergraduate students in the Theory and Applications of Sustainability (ENV 245) course to determine how the more than 17,000 trees on the 91社区福利 campus benefit sustainability鈥攊ncluding their effect on carbon sequestration and stormwater mitigation.
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NewsWhen it comes to making communities and businesses greener, re-thinking the 鈥渓ittle鈥 stuff we often take for granted鈥攍ike zoning, logistics and cement鈥攃an yield big benefits.
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NewsScientists, 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
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NewsNew research finds nearly 75% of the seafood exported to China is processed there and 鈥榬e-exported鈥 to global markets as Chinese products, making it hard to track its sustainability and verify it鈥檚 labeled accurately, but also gutting the economies of small fishing communities worldwide that can no longer compete.
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NewsMany 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.