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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
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  • Press Releases
  • NASA Prototypes New Tracking Tag for Sea Otters and other Wildlife with USGS and Monterey Bay Aquarium

    Today's technology offers far better solutions, creating a network of animal trackers that can deliver accurate, GPS-enabled otter locations more frequently.

  • Large Herbivores Can Reduce Fire Risks

    he use of large herbivores can be an effective means to prevent and mitigate wildfires, especially in places facing land abandonment.

  • From Safe Drinking Water to Sustainable Fisheries, NOAA GLERL’s Experimental Lake Erie Hypoxia Forecast Is Even More Useful Than Anticipated

    By forecasting potential hypoxic upwelling events that could impact water quality, NOAA GLERL’s Experimental Hypoxia Forecast Model helps drinking water plant managers be prepared to adjust their treatment processes as needed.

  • Research On Greater Amberjack To Be One Of Largest Fish Studies Of Its Kind

    Texas A&M-Galveston’s Jay Rooker and David Wells will be part of a team to see if the species is facing declining numbers.

  • Fire Encroaching on Giant Sequoias

    In the midst of another brutal fire season, several of California’s natural treasures have also been threatened.

  • Why Saving World’s Peatlands Can Help Stabilize the Climate

    The Aweme borer is a yellowish-brown moth with an inch-and-a half wingspan. In the often-colorful world of lepidopterology — the study of moths and butterflies — it’s not particularly flashy, but it is exceedingly rare. 

  • Climate Change Is Already Affecting Chesapeake Bay Fisheries

    As climate change affects habitats, fisheries species face change, too.

  • 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 Duke University-led study by an international team of scientists finds.

  • When Predators Matter! Study of Voles on Arctic Island Advances Knowledge of Small-Mammal Population Dynamics

    A decades-long study of voles on the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard is offering insights into a longstanding puzzle of Arctic ecology---effectively, what drives the well-established population cycles of small Arctic mammals, such as voles and lemmings.

  • Troubled Waters: How Global Marine Wildlife Protection Can Undermine Fishing Communities

    New research led by the University of Oxford, published in Conservation Letters, has examined the conflict between small-scale fisheries and marine mammals, using the experience of fisheries on the west coast of South America to highlight a worldwide issue.

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