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  1. 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû
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  1. 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû
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News Archives

Environmental HealthOceans
  • plastic bottles in water
    News

    Kids’ Presentations Sway Local Leaders’ and Voters’ Attitudes on Ocean Plastics Pollution

    A 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.
  • Whale swims past boat
    News

    Ocean Mammals at Crossroads; Which Conservation Measures Will Help Chart the Way Forward?

    Ocean mammals are at a crossroads, with some species at risk of extinction and others showing signs of recovery, a new study by an international team of researchers shows.
  • Fishing gear entangles a North Atlantic right whale
    News

    New Grant Funds Study on Cumulative Stresses Affecting Endangered North Atlantic Right Whales

    A new $411,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Defense’s Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP) is funding a four-year study by 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû researchers to better understand the cumulative effects of human and natural stresses on critically endangered North Atlantic right whales.
  • Global map estimating gross primary production
    News

    Study Yields New Estimates of Marine Primary Production, a Key Cog in the Global Carbon Cycle

    Harnessing the power of artificial intelligence, satellites and field observations, Duke researchers have produced new estimates of how much photosynthesis and primary production – key components in the global carbon cycle – are occurring in Earth’s oceans, and how these processes may be changing in response to a changing climate.
  • Fish
    News

    Policies that Treat 'Fish as Food' Could Help Solve World Hunger, Scientists Say

    Policies that more strongly recognize the value of sustainable seafood as a source of nutrition, not just a source of livelihoods, could strengthen global food security and help take a big bite out of world hunger, a new analysis by an international team of experts shows.
  • Coastal restoration
    News

    Scientists Shine Light on ‘Bright Spots’ in Coastal Ecosystem Restoration

    A new paper outlines some of the greatest coastal restoration successes in recent decades and identifies lessons we can learn from them to protect and restore similar environments worldwide.
  • Fishing boats
    News

    Vessel-Tracking Data Reveals Identities of Companies Profiting from High Seas Fishing

    Researchers have used automatic identification systems (AIS) satellite data and other spatial analysis tools to identify more than 1,000 companies that fish in the high seas—waters that lie outside national jurisdiction where fishing has raised fears about environmental and labor violations.
  • Artificial pond created when rainwater filled in abandoned gold mining pit
    News

    Mine Ponds Amplify Mercury Risks in Peru’s Amazon

    The proliferation of pits and ponds created in recent years by miners digging for small deposits of alluvial gold in Peru’s Amazon has dramatically altered the landscape and increased the risk of mercury exposure for indigenous communities and wildlife, a new study shows.
  • Plastic bottle floats on the ocean
    News

    New Webpage Highlights 52 Technologies to Fight Plastic Pollution in Our Oceans

    91ÉçÇø¸£Àû researchers have created a new online resource designed to help local governments, conservation groups, businesses and other stakeholders identify the best technologies to clean up plastic pollution in our oceans or prevent it from getting there in the first place.
  • 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.
  • Dana Hunt
    News

    $300K NSF Grant Will Fund Study of Hurricanes’ Impacts on Marine Microbes

    The National Science Foundation has awarded Dana Hunt, associate professor of microbial ecology, a $299,693 grant to support research on how hurricanes and other disturbances shape microbial productivity and function in the oceans.
  • COVID Testing Line
    News

    Window for Slowing COVID’s Spread was Smaller than Projected

    A new 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû-led analysis shows that during the early months of the COVID pandemic, the average number of new infections caused by an infected individual (i.e. the basic reproduction number, R0) was 4.5, or more than twice as many as the initial 2.2 rate estimated by the World Health Organization at the time.
  • Cuvier’s beaked whale
    News

    New Study Documents Record-Breaking Whale Dive of 3 Hours 42 Minutes

    In 2017, a Cuvier’s beaked whale that had been tagged by a team of 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû marine scientists dove deep into the waters off Cape Hatteras, N.C, and stayed below the surface for 3 hours and 42 minutes before coming up for air – making it the longest whale dive ever recorded.
  • Barracuda
    News

    Artificial Reefs Take on a Towering Presence as Havens for Marine Predators

    Acting like high-rise timeshares in the sea, shipwrecks and other artificial reefs can support dense populations of sharks, mackerels, barracudas, jacks and other large migratory marine predators essential to ocean health, according to a new study at 30 sites along the North Carolina coast.
  • Spinner dolphin
    News

    Tourists Spend More to View Hawaii’s Famed Spinner Dolphins than Swim with Them

    A new study finds that dolphin-viewing tours are more profitable than tours where customers can swim with the animals – a much more disruptive option that can deprive spinner dolphins of rest and inhibit their ability to avoid predators while foraging in nearby waters at night.

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