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  1. 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû
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News Archives

ForestsGeosciences
  • graphic of lead and other bio-accessible metals
    News

    New Tests Track Sources of Lead Contamination in Urban Soils and Assess Its Risks

    By distinguishing between lead from modern sources and lead from pre-1970s vehicle exhaust fumes and leaded paint, the new test may be especially useful for assessing the hidden risks of legacy contamination.
  • Satellite image of Australian wildfires
    News

    Australian Wildfires Triggered Massive Algal Blooms in Southern Ocean

    Clouds 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 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû-led study by an international team of scientists finds.
  • Antarctic sunset
    News

    As Antarctic Sea Ice Shrinks, Microbial Biodiversity and CO2 Absorption Decline

    Warming waters along the Western Antarctic Peninsula have led to declines in the diversity and distribution of the region’s plankton population and its ability to absorb climate-warming carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • Boys sell bat meat
    News

    Reducing Wildlife Trafficking and Forest Loss Could Prevent Future Pandemics

    Governments might be able to prevent future pandemics by investing as little as $22 billion a year in programs to curb wildlife trafficking and stem the destruction of tropical forests, a new analysis by an international team of scientists and economists shows.
  • Meadow vole abundance projections for 2040 RCP 4.5 climate scenario
    News

    New Models Show How Species Will be Relocated by Climate Change

    Scientists at 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû are harnessing the power of big data and geospatial analysis to create new ways to track the effects of climate change on species and food webs.
  • Mid-Ocean Ridge
    News

    First Estimate of Sub-Seafloor Hydrogen Budget Sheds Light on a Hidden Biosphere

    By providing the first estimate of how much hydrogen is available to fuel microbial life in the sunless sub-seafloor crust beneath the Mid-Ocean Ridge (MOR), a new 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû-led study sheds light on one of Earth’s least understood biospheres.
  • School of tuna under water
    News

    Changes in Tuna’s Carbon Ratios Signal a Global Shift in Oceanic Food Web

    The ratio of carbon isotopes in three common species of tuna has changed substantially since 2000, suggesting major shifts are taking place in phytoplankton populations that form the base of the ocean’s food web, a new international study finds.
  • Map of Areas of the state with the largest number of groundwater users
    News

    Half of Piedmont Drinking Wells May Exceed NC’s Hexavalent Chromium Standards

    A new study which combines measurements from nearly 1,400 drinking water wells across North Carolina estimates that more than half of the wells in the state’s central region contain levels of cancer-causing hexavalent chromium in excess of state safety standards.
  • Drought-stricken forest
    News

    Researchers Develop Tool to Diagnose Dying Forests

    Predicting if droughts and heat waves will kill forests is difficult, but new work by scientists and engineers at Duke, Princeton, Stanford and the University of Alabama (UA) could help scientists spot problems early enough that they can still mitigate the threats and help restore at-risk forests.
  • News

    With the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) poised to loosen coal ash rules for dry onsite storage and large fill projects, a new study from 91ÉçÇø¸£Àû finds that leaving those contaminants exposed may significantly heighten the risk of toxic contamination to nearby soil and waterways.

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Research area

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