Feature Channels: Nature

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23-Feb-2022 12:45 PM EST
The secret of mycorrhizal fungi
Universite de Montreal

Researchers from Université de Montréal have found that mycorrhizas promote greater tree species diversity in North American forests.

Newswise: New study shows that Earth’s coldest forests are shifting northward with climate change
22-Feb-2022 4:40 PM EST
New study shows that Earth’s coldest forests are shifting northward with climate change
Northern Arizona University

The boreal forest is a belt of cold-tolerant conifer trees that stretches nearly 9,000 miles across northern North American and Eurasia; it makes up almost a quarter of the Earth's forest area. It's also the coldest—and most rapidly warming—forest biome on the planet, and its shifting characteristics amid climate change are raising concerns about increased fire activity, decreased biodiversity and other long-term adverse effects for the human and natural ecosystems.

Released: 21-Feb-2022 2:05 PM EST
Peace has led to more deforestation in Colombia
Frontiers

The consequences of peace and armed conflict for deforestation depend on the location, reports a new publication in Frontiers in Environmental Science.

Newswise: NSF study examines Alaskan children’s interactions with nature
Released: 18-Feb-2022 1:25 PM EST
NSF study examines Alaskan children’s interactions with nature
South Dakota State University

The experiences children have at a young age help form their identity and relationships with the natural world—and where they grow up impacts that environmental identity and sense of place.

Newswise: Onset of Modern Sea Level Rise Began in 1863, International Study Finds
Released: 18-Feb-2022 11:55 AM EST
Onset of Modern Sea Level Rise Began in 1863, International Study Finds
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Modern rates of sea level rise began emerging in 1863 as the Industrial Age intensified, according to a new study by an international team including Rutgers researchers that has pinpointed the onset of a significant period of climate change. The study is out now out in Nature Communications.

Released: 18-Feb-2022 8:00 AM EST
How racialized trauma functions as a barrier to enjoying nature
Ohio State University

A new study shows that historical trauma – and the transgressions people engaged in to overcome barriers to outdoor recreation – shape many Black and Indigenous Americans’ views about using public lands for leisure.

Released: 17-Feb-2022 5:05 PM EST
Fewer rainy days leading to earlier spring in northern climes
Ohio State University

A drop in the total number of rainy days each year is contributing to an earlier arrival of spring for plants in northern climates, a new study finds.

Newswise: Where wild honeybees survive
Released: 17-Feb-2022 2:05 AM EST
Where wild honeybees survive
University of Würzburg

Until recently, experts considered it unlikely that the honeybee had survived as a wild animal in Europe.

Newswise: Vanilla cultivation in the right place pays off for people and nature
Released: 15-Feb-2022 5:25 PM EST
Vanilla cultivation in the right place pays off for people and nature
University of Göttingen

Madagascar is the most important country for vanilla production – the fragrant ingredient that is a favourite flavour for ice cream, cakes and cookies.

Newswise: For female yellowthroats, there’s more than one way to spot a winning mate
11-Feb-2022 10:00 PM EST
For female yellowthroats, there’s more than one way to spot a winning mate
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

One population of female common yellowthroats prefers males with larger black masks, but another group of females favors a larger yellow bib. A new study has found that both kinds of ornaments are linked to superior genes.

Released: 11-Feb-2022 4:45 PM EST
The latest research news in Physics for the media
Newswise

Here are some of the latest articles we've posted in the Physical Science channel.

       
Newswise: Gabon provides blueprint for protecting oceans
Released: 8-Feb-2022 4:05 PM EST
Gabon provides blueprint for protecting oceans
University of Exeter

Gabon's network of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) provides a blueprint that could be used in many other countries, experts say.

Newswise: Dog feces and urine could be harming nature reserves, according to new study
Released: 8-Feb-2022 3:05 AM EST
Dog feces and urine could be harming nature reserves, according to new study
British Ecological Society

New research finds that dogs being walked in nature reserves contribute a significant amount of nutrients to the environment through their faeces and urine, which researchers warn could negatively impact local biodiversity.

27-Jan-2022 2:15 PM EST
Love of nature is partially heritable, study of twins shows
PLOS

Identical twins’ nature experiences more similar than fraternal twins but local environment also key.

     
Newswise: UK plants flowering a month earlier due to climate change
Released: 2-Feb-2022 5:05 PM EST
UK plants flowering a month earlier due to climate change
University of Cambridge

Climate change is causing plants in the UK to flower a month earlier on average, which could have profound consequences for wildlife, agriculture and gardeners.

Released: 1-Feb-2022 2:05 PM EST
More than 9,000 tree species yet to be discovered
Stellenbosch University

A new study puts the total number of tree species on Earth at 73 274, with another 9 186 still to be discovered. Roughly 40% of these undiscovered tree species are in South America.

Newswise: Safe havens for coral reefs predicted to decline dramatically as Earth warms
25-Jan-2022 12:00 PM EST
Safe havens for coral reefs predicted to decline dramatically as Earth warms
PLOS

High-resolution modeling suggests significant loss of locations that protect against thermal stress.

Newswise: Birds Bring Us Together for the Great Backyard Bird Count
Released: 31-Jan-2022 10:35 AM EST
Birds Bring Us Together for the Great Backyard Bird Count
Cornell University

For a quarter of a century the annual Great Backyard Bird Count has been a bright spot for nature lovers. The 25th edition of the event is coming up February 18 through 21.

Released: 31-Jan-2022 10:15 AM EST
Forest management increases climate benefits provided by boreal forests
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)

The carbon stock in managed boreal forest landscapes is increasing, while it is relatively unchanged in less intensively utilized forests where carbon losses due to forest fires have instead been significant during 1990-2017, according to a new report by the International Boreal Forest Research Association (IBFRA).

Newswise: New species of ‘incredibly rare’ insect discovered
Released: 28-Jan-2022 4:40 PM EST
New species of ‘incredibly rare’ insect discovered
Anglia Ruskin University

A British scientist has discovered a new species that belongs to a group of insects so rare that its closest relative was last seen in 1969.

Released: 28-Jan-2022 4:05 PM EST
New Study Shows High Levels of Mercury in the Peruvian Amazon
Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI)

New study Amazon forests capture high levels of atmospheric mercury pollution from artisanal gold mining published in Nature Communications. An international team of researchers documented substantial mercury accumulation in soils, biomass, and resident songbirds in some of the Amazon’s most protected and biodiverse areas.

Newswise: Green backyards help increase urban climate resilience: Here is how
Released: 24-Jan-2022 4:05 PM EST
Green backyards help increase urban climate resilience: Here is how
Pensoft Publishers

Green spaces in cities have a number of positive effects: they’re good for our physical and mental health, they’re good for the environment, and they can even help fight off the effects of climate change.

Newswise: Boom in mouse population has implications for Lyme disease, basements, predators
Released: 18-Jan-2022 9:05 AM EST
Boom in mouse population has implications for Lyme disease, basements, predators
University of Rhode Island

A wildlife biologist at the University of Rhode Island has observed a significant growth in the local population of white-footed mice this year, which could increase Lyme disease risk next year while also providing additional food to area predators and increasing the likelihood that homeowners find mice in their basements.

Newswise: Strong evidence shows Sixth Mass Extinction of global biodiversity in progress
Released: 14-Jan-2022 3:45 PM EST
Strong evidence shows Sixth Mass Extinction of global biodiversity in progress
University of Hawaii at Manoa

The history of life on Earth has been marked five times by events of mass biodiversity extinction caused by extreme natural phenomena.

Newswise: Citizen science helps nurture our health through nature
Released: 13-Jan-2022 7:05 PM EST
Citizen science helps nurture our health through nature
University of South Australia

From lifting our moods, to boosting our immune systems, the intrinsic health benefits of being in nature are well known. But as urbanisation continues to encroach on green spaces, finding ways to connect with natural environments is becoming more challenging.

Newswise: UNH Researchers Discover Destructive Southern Pine Beetle in Northern Forests
Released: 13-Jan-2022 12:25 PM EST
UNH Researchers Discover Destructive Southern Pine Beetle in Northern Forests
University of New Hampshire

Researchers at the University of New Hampshire have discovered the southern pine beetle, one of the most damaging tree-dwelling insects in the Southeast, in forests in Maine and New Hampshire. The southern pine beetle has never been seen this far north and has forestry experts concerned, specifically about the pitch pine barren found throughout New England.

Newswise: URI student takes birdwatching community by storm, discovers bird never before seen in Rhode Island
Released: 11-Jan-2022 11:45 AM EST
URI student takes birdwatching community by storm, discovers bird never before seen in Rhode Island
University of Rhode Island

Miller found the bird – a species never previously observed in the Ocean State – during an all-day event he organized in which dozens of local birders sought rare birds along the Rhode Island coast.

Newswise: Assessing diversity to Improve soil health, pollinator habitat through prairie restoration
Released: 6-Jan-2022 10:05 AM EST
Assessing diversity to Improve soil health, pollinator habitat through prairie restoration
South Dakota State University

A group of grassland scientists will assess how the biodiversity of restoration mixes, specifically species richness, genetic composition and relatedness, may impact soil health and pollinator habitat.

Newswise: Climate Cycles Create California Precipitation Uncertainty
Released: 10-Dec-2021 3:50 PM EST
Climate Cycles Create California Precipitation Uncertainty
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

What’s at the heart of California’s uncertain future precipitation? New study finds natural cycles are likely cause.

Released: 3-Dec-2021 1:20 PM EST
A conservation incentive yields increase of protected Atlantic Rainforest areas, but with limited results
Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)

A study by the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil investigated a fiscal transfer mechanism whereby states transfer part of their sales tax revenue to municipalities in exchange for the creation of environmental conservation units.

Newswise:Video Embedded septic-system-waste-pervasive-throughout-florida-s-indian-river-lagoon
VIDEO
Released: 2-Dec-2021 8:30 AM EST
Septic System Waste Pervasive Throughout Florida’s Indian River Lagoon
Florida Atlantic University

There are more than 300,000 septic systems permitted in six counties adjacent to the 156-mile-long Indian River Lagoon (IRL) in Florida. Researchers assessed water quality and measured stable nitrogen isotopes in groundwater, surface water, and macrophyte tissue to identify nitrogen sources impacting the lagoon.

Released: 29-Nov-2021 2:55 PM EST
Study Outlines Challenges to Ongoing Clean-up of Burnt and Unburnt Nurdles Along Sri Lanka’s Coastline
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

When a fire broke out on the deck of the M/V XPress Pearl cargo ship on May 20, 2021, an estimated 70-75 billion pellets of preproduction plastic material, known as nurdles, spilled into the ocean and along the Sri Lankan coastline. That spill of about 1,500 tons of nurdles, many of which were burnt by the fire, has threatened marine life and poses a complex clean-up challenge.

Released: 29-Nov-2021 11:50 AM EST
Can United Nations conference save Antarctic glaciers?
University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Nebraska scientist says time is running out for West Antarctic ice sheet

Released: 29-Nov-2021 11:45 AM EST
Recycling of tectonic plates a key driver of Earth’s oxygen budget
Cornell University

A new study co-led by a Cornell researcher has identified serpentinite – a green rock that looks a bit like snakeskin and holds fluids in its mineral structures – as a key driver of the oxygen recycling process, which helped create and maintain the sustaining atmosphere for life on Earth.

29-Nov-2021 7:05 AM EST
Exploring pathways to reduce the economic and environmental risks of climate change
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)

A new study by an international team of researchers explored the physical and macroeconomic impacts associated with mitigation pathways with different levels of temperature overshoot.

29-Nov-2021 4:05 AM EST
Why we must avoid temperature overshoot
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)

A new international study coordinated by IIASA shows how near-term mitigation can help to prevent an overshoot in global temperatures, thereby reducing climate risks and bringing long-term economic gains.

Released: 24-Nov-2021 2:50 PM EST
Living walls can reduce heat lost from buildings by over 30%
University of Plymouth

Retrofitting an existing masonry cavity walled building with a green or living wall can reduce the amount of heat lost through its structure by more than 30%, according to new research.

Newswise: Global warming, not just drought, drives bark beetles to kill more ponderosa pines
Released: 23-Nov-2021 1:15 PM EST
Global warming, not just drought, drives bark beetles to kill more ponderosa pines
Los Alamos National Laboratory

In California’s Sierra Nevada, western pine beetle infestations amped up by global warming were found to kill 30% more ponderosa pine trees than the beetles do under drought alone.

Newswise: Nations are overusing natural resources faster than they are meeting basic human needs
Released: 19-Nov-2021 6:10 PM EST
Nations are overusing natural resources faster than they are meeting basic human needs
University of Leeds

For at least the last 30 years, not a single country has met the basic needs of its residents without overconsuming natural resources, according to new research led by the University of Leeds.

Newswise: Decoding biological mysteries with algae: NAU team wins $3M from NSF to model microbiome
Released: 18-Nov-2021 10:05 AM EST
Decoding biological mysteries with algae: NAU team wins $3M from NSF to model microbiome
Northern Arizona University

The tiny cosmos of organisms living on a streamer of algae in a river could help scientists learn what turns an environment from healthy to toxic and back again. A multidisciplinary team led by NAU has won $3 million from the NSF to translate the codex contained in the microbiome of common algae into computer algorithms that can predict a wide range of microbial interactions.

Newswise: Flowering plants: an evolution revolution
Released: 17-Nov-2021 4:05 AM EST
Flowering plants: an evolution revolution
University of Bristol

Researchers at the University of Bristol have identified the huge impact of flowering plants on the evolution of life on Earth.

Newswise: Climate change will destroy familiar environments, create new ones and undermine efforts to protect sea life
Released: 14-Nov-2021 12:55 AM EST
Climate change will destroy familiar environments, create new ones and undermine efforts to protect sea life
Oregon State University

Climate change is altering familiar conditions of the world’s oceans and creating new environments that could undermine efforts to protect sea life in the world’s largest marine protected areas, new research from Oregon State University shows.

Released: 11-Nov-2021 2:20 PM EST
The global ocean out of balance
McGill University

Surprising as it sounds, all life forms in the ocean, from small krill to large tuna, seem to obey a simple mathematical law that links an organism’s abundance to its body size.

Released: 11-Nov-2021 8:15 AM EST
Synthesizing Nanomaterials from Nature’s Blueprints
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Molecular self-assembly expert Chun-Long Chen describes the challenges and opportunities in bio-inspired nanomaterials in a special issue of Chemical Reviews.

Newswise: Introduced birds are not replacing roles of human-caused extinct species
Released: 10-Nov-2021 5:10 PM EST
Introduced birds are not replacing roles of human-caused extinct species
University College London

Human-caused bird extinctions are driving losses of functional diversity on islands worldwide, and the gaps they leave behind are not being filled by introduced (alien) species, finds a new study led by UCL and University of Gothenburg researchers.

Newswise:Video Embedded size-matters-for-bee-superorganism-colonies
VIDEO
8-Nov-2021 3:35 PM EST
Size Matters for Bee ‘Superorganism’ Colonies
University of California San Diego

Researchers studying honey bees have found that colony size matters in determining how members make decisions in the face of dynamic survival conditions. Large, established colonies are less likely to take chances while smaller colonies are much more willing to take risks.

Released: 5-Nov-2021 11:50 AM EDT
Planting new forests with high functional diversity helps improve productivity
Chinese Academy of Sciences

As forests age, differences in species functional traits become more important and reliable in predicting forest productivity, according to an international study led by Prof. MA Keping at the Institute of Botany of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IBCAS).

Released: 4-Nov-2021 5:05 PM EDT
Revealing the ramifications of ocean acidification for coralline algae
University of Tsukuba

Scientists have long suspected that coralline algae are particularly sensitive to changes in ocean chemistry. Now, researchers have found that most species of coralline algae studied are negatively affected by ocean acidification.

Released: 4-Nov-2021 8:45 AM EDT
Restoring coral health
King Abdullah University of Science & Technology (KAUST)

Coral reef ecosystems are severely threatened by climate change. The urgent need to address the issue is driving a new era of innovation in reef science, shown by a global multidisciplinary exploration of different approaches to enhance coral resilience.



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