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JA Purity IV JA Purity IV
  • Top Stories
  • ENN Original
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Ecosystems
  • Pollution
  • Wildlife
  • Policy
  • More
    • Agriculture
    • Green Building
    • Sustainability
    • Business
  • Sci/Tech
  • Health
  • Press Releases
  • What’s Happening to the Most Remote Coral Reefs on Earth?

    Scientists from the Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation have published their findings on the state of coral reefs in the Chagos Archipelago, considered the last frontier for coral reefs.

  • Stressed-Out Young Oysters May Grow Less Meat On Their Shells

    Early exposure to tough conditions—particularly warmer waters and nightly swings of low oxygen—could leave lasting scars on oysters’ ability to grow meaty tissue. 

  • The Hidden $25 Trillion Cost of the Planet's Energy and Transport Systems

    The hidden social, environmental and health costs of the energy and transport sectors is equal to more than a quarter of the globe’s entire economic output, new research from the University of Sussex Business School and Hanyang University reveals.

  • Plant Clock Could Be the Key to Producing More Food for the World

    A University of Melbourne led study has established how plants use their metabolism to tell time and know when to grow - a discovery that could help leverage growing crops in different environments, including different seasons, different latitudes or even in artificial environments and vertical gardens.

  • When Using Pyrite to Understand Earth’s Ocean and Atmosphere: Think Local, Not Global

    The ocean floor is vast and varied, making up more than 70% of the Earth’s surface. Scientists have long used information from sediments at the bottom of the ocean — layers of rock and microbial muck — to reconstruct the conditions in oceans of the past.

  • Climate Change-Driven Snowmelt in Alps Triggers Abrupt Seasonal Change

    Spring snowmelt in the Alps is occurring earlier in the year due to climate change and as a result triggering abrupt deviations in mountain ecosystems. 

  • Carnegie Mellon Research Shows How Wildfires May Have Larger Effects on Cloud Formation and Climate Change than Previously Thought

    As the frequency and size of wildfires continues to increase worldwide, new research from Carnegie Mellon University scientists shows how the chemical aging of the particles emitted by these fires can lead to more extensive cloud formation and intense storm development in the atmosphere. 

  • Sensing Suns

    Red supergiants are a class of star that end their lives in supernova explosions. 

  • Oahu Marine Protected Areas Offer Limited Protection of Coral Reef Herbivorous Fishes

    Marine protected areas (MPAs) around Oʻahu do not adequately protect populations of herbivorous reef fishes that eat algae on coral reefs.

  • On Calm Days, Sunlight Warms the Ocean Surface and Drives Turbulence, Study Finds

    In tropical oceans, a combination of sunlight and weak winds drives up surface temperatures in the afternoon, increasing atmospheric turbulence, unprecedented new observational data collected by an Oregon State University researcher shows.

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