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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
  • Even a Limited India-Pakistan Nuclear War Would Bring Global Famine, Says Study

    Soot from firestorms would reduce faraway crop production for years.

  • Giant Clam Shells: Unprecedented Natural Archives for Paleoweather

    Paleoclimate research offers an overview of Earth’s climate change over the past 65 million years or longer and helps to improve our understanding of the Earth’s climate system.

  • Texas A&M Research Team Finds Life Deep Beneath Ocean Floor

    The cores show life present at 2,600 feet below the Indian Ocean seafloor. The discovery could lead to similar finds around the world.

  • Orchid Mantis Ambushes Foraging Butterflies

    The orchid mantis, Hymenopus coronatus, which inhabits Southeast Asia, possesses a unique flower-like characteristics, which allows the predator to ambush floral visitors as prey.

  • HKU Scientists Find High Concentrations of Toxic Phenyltin Compounds in Local Chinese White Dolphins and Finless Porpoises Confirming Their Biomagnification Through Marine Food Chains

    Professor Kenneth Leung and his research team have been monitoring organotin pollution in the marine environment of Hong Kong since 2004.

  • Scientists Release Crop Production Outlook under Shadow of Locusts

    The report assesses that, by the end of January 2020, the impact of the desert locust on cereal production in Horn of Africa and South-Asia is limited.

  • Environmental DNA in Rivers Offers New Tool for Detecting Wildlife Communities

    Ecologists in England and Scotland, collaborating with ecologists Christopher Sutherland and Joseph Drake at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, report this week on a new method of identifying an “entire community of mammals” – including elusive and endangered species that are otherwise difficult to monitor – by collecting DNA from river water.

  • Microbes Far Beneath the Seafloor Rely on Recycling to Survive

    Scientists from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) reveal how microorganisms could survive in rocks nestled thousands of feet beneath the ocean floor in the lower oceanic crust, in a study published on March 11 in Nature.

  • Feeding Wildlife Can Disrupt Animal Social Structures

    A team of researchers from the University of Georgia and San Diego State University has found that the practice of feeding wildlife could be more detrimental to animals than previously thought.

  • Melting Glaciers Will Challenge Some Salmon Populations and Benefit Others

    A new Simon Fraser University-led study looking at the effects that glacier retreat will have on western North American Pacific salmon predicts that while some salmon populations may struggle, others may benefit.

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