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Newswise: Why did Earth once turn into a giant frozen snowball? Australian scientists now have an answer
Released: 8-Feb-2024 12:05 PM EST
Why did Earth once turn into a giant frozen snowball? Australian scientists now have an answer
University of Sydney

Australian geologists have used plate tectonic modelling to determine what most likely caused an extreme ice-age climate in Earth’s history, more than 700 million years ago.

Released: 16-Aug-2023 11:05 AM EDT
UC Irvine scientists say deepening Arctic snowpack drives greenhouse gas emissions
University of California, Irvine

Human-caused climate change is shortening the snow cover period in the Arctic.

Newswise: Marine fossils are a reliable benchmark for degrading and collapsing ecosystems
Released: 11-Jul-2023 1:25 PM EDT
Marine fossils are a reliable benchmark for degrading and collapsing ecosystems
Florida Museum of Natural History

Biologists attempting to conserve and restore denuded environments are limited by their scant knowledge of what those environments looked like before the arrival of humans.

Newswise: About 13,000 years ago, the water outflow from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic Ocean was twice that of today’s
Released: 16-May-2023 11:55 AM EDT
About 13,000 years ago, the water outflow from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic Ocean was twice that of today’s
Universitat de Barcelona

About 13,000 years ago, a climate crisis caused a global drop in temperatures in the northern hemisphere. This episode of intense cold, known as the Younger Dryas, also caused severe aridity across the Mediterranean basin, which had a major impact on terrestrial and marine ecosystems.

Released: 8-May-2023 4:00 PM EDT
UC Irvine, NASA JPL researchers discover a cause of rapid ice melting in Greenland
University of California, Irvine

While conducting a study of Petermann Glacier in northwest Greenland, researchers at the University of California, Irvine and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory uncovered a previously unseen way in which the ice and ocean interact. The glaciologists said their findings could mean that the climate community has been vastly underestimating the magnitude of future sea level rise caused by polar ice deterioration.

Newswise: Researchers discover that the ice cap is teeming with microorganisms
Released: 2-May-2023 12:50 PM EDT
Researchers discover that the ice cap is teeming with microorganisms
Aarhus University

There are no plants, and only very few animals: people rarely come here. The large glaciers in Greenland have long been perceived as ice deserts. Gigantic ice sheets where conditions for life are extremely harsh.

Newswise: Large animals travel more slowly because they can’t keep cool
11-Apr-2023 12:25 PM EDT
Large animals travel more slowly because they can’t keep cool
PLOS

Whether an animal is flying, running or swimming, its traveling speed is limited by how effectively it sheds the excess heat generated by its muscles, according to a new study led by Alexander Dyer from the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) and the Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany published April 18th in the open access journal PLOS Biology.

Newswise: How to prepare for ocean acidification, a framework
Released: 28-Mar-2023 12:00 PM EDT
How to prepare for ocean acidification, a framework
California Academy of Sciences

In a paper published today in the journal Environmental Research Letters, an international research team composed of scientists affiliated with more than a dozen institutions, including the California Academy of Sciences, propose a first-of-its-kind framework for governments around the world to evaluate their preparedness for—and guide future policies to address—ocean acidification, among the most dire threats to marine ecosystems.

Newswise: Sea ice will soon disappear from the Arctic during the summer months – and it has happened before
Released: 22-Mar-2023 10:50 AM EDT
Sea ice will soon disappear from the Arctic during the summer months – and it has happened before
Aarhus University

The "Last Ice Area" north of Greenland and Canada is the last sanctuary of all-year sea ice in this time of rising temperatures caused by climate change.

Newswise: Climate Change Alters a Human-Raptor Relationship
Released: 14-Mar-2023 7:00 AM EDT
Climate Change Alters a Human-Raptor Relationship
Cornell University

Bald Eagles and dairy farmers exist in a mutually beneficial relationship in parts of northwestern Washington State. According to a new study, this "win-win" relationship has been a more recent development, driven by the impact of climate change on eagles' traditional winter diet of salmon carcasses, as well as by increased eagle abundance following decades of conservation efforts.

Released: 3-Mar-2023 8:45 AM EST
Ocean Surface Tipping Point Could Accelerate Climate Change
University of Texas at Austin, Jackson School of Geosciences

The oceans help to limit global warming by soaking up carbon dioxide emissions. But scientists have discovered that intense warming in the future could lessen that ability, leading to even more severe warming.

Newswise: Monitoring an ‘anti-greenhouse’ gas: Dimethyl sulfide in Arctic air
Released: 31-Jan-2023 1:15 PM EST
Monitoring an ‘anti-greenhouse’ gas: Dimethyl sulfide in Arctic air
Hokkaido University

Data stored in ice cores dating back 55 years bring new insight into atmospheric levels of a molecule that can significantly affect weather and climate.

Newswise: Kill dates for re-exposed black mosses
Released: 26-Jan-2023 1:15 PM EST
Kill dates for re-exposed black mosses
Geological Society of America (GSA)

In their new paper for the Geological Society of America journal Geology, Dulcinea Groff and colleagues used radiocarbon ages (kill dates) of previously ice-entombed dead black mosses to reveal that glaciers advanced during three distinct phases in the northern Antarctic Peninsula over the past 1,500 years.

Newswise: A Climate Change Cautionary Tale: Summer Heatwaves, Low Oxygen Proves Deadly for Bay Scallops as Fishery Collapses in New York
Released: 19-Jan-2023 9:55 AM EST
A Climate Change Cautionary Tale: Summer Heatwaves, Low Oxygen Proves Deadly for Bay Scallops as Fishery Collapses in New York
Stony Brook University

A new study by Stony Brook University researchers published in the journal Global Change Biology demonstrates that warming waters and heat waves have contributed to the loss of an economically and culturally important fishery, the production of bay scallops.

Newswise: Landscaping for drought: We’re doing it wrong
Released: 11-Jan-2023 11:10 AM EST
Landscaping for drought: We’re doing it wrong
University of California, Riverside

Despite recent, torrential rains, most of Southern California remains in a drought.

Newswise: When cyclones and fires collide…
Released: 27-Nov-2022 8:05 PM EST
When cyclones and fires collide…
University of South Australia

As strong winds and torrential rains inundate Australia’s south-eastern coast, new research suggests that high intensity bushfires might not be too far behind, with their dual effects extending damage zones and encroaching on previously low-risk residential areas.

Newswise: Saving Egypt’s Coral Reefs is Necessary to Preserve Oceans’ Ecosystems
8-Nov-2022 10:40 AM EST
Saving Egypt’s Coral Reefs is Necessary to Preserve Oceans’ Ecosystems
Stony Brook University

An international group of marine scientists has published a letter in Science that is a call to action for policy makers, government agencies and ocean conservation groups to take major steps to preserve Egypt’s coral reefs, which generate billions of dollars annually from tourism and tourism-related commerce.

Newswise:Video Embedded high-res-maps-of-entire-polar-regions-provide-new-clues-for-climate-researchers
VIDEO
Released: 27-Oct-2022 7:00 AM EDT
High-Res Maps of Entire Polar Regions Provide New Clues for Climate Researchers
University of Minnesota College of Science and Engineering

A team of researchers led by the University of Minnesota Twin Cities has released four more years of high-resolution imagery data, which has been added to eight years of previous data, to create the most detailed polar region terrain maps ever created.

Newswise: The Lightness of Water Vapor Adds Heft to Global Climate Models
Released: 24-Oct-2022 4:45 PM EDT
The Lightness of Water Vapor Adds Heft to Global Climate Models
University of California, Davis

Clouds are notoriously hard to pin down, especially in climate science.

Newswise: Timely study on rising groundwater offers hope for drought-stricken East Africa
Released: 19-Oct-2022 5:05 AM EDT
Timely study on rising groundwater offers hope for drought-stricken East Africa
University of Bristol

New research indicates better groundwater supply management could hold the key to help combat the impact of climate change in East Africa, where countries are currently facing the worst drought and food insecurity in a generation.

Released: 27-Sep-2022 11:05 AM EDT
Climate change is turning the trees into gluttons
Ohio State University

Trees have long been known to buffer humans from the worst effects of climate change by pulling carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Now new research shows just how much forests have been bulking up on that excess carbon.

Newswise:Video Embedded scientists-harness-artificial-intelligence-to-advance-ability-to-measure-arctic-sea-ice-and-improve-climate-forecasting
VIDEO
12-Sep-2022 10:25 AM EDT
Scientists harness Artificial Intelligence to advance ability to measure Arctic sea ice and improve climate forecasting
University of Bristol

Pioneering research deploying Artificial Intelligence (AI) and satellite modelling means the thickness of Arctic sea ice can be measured all year round for the first time, bringing significant benefits for future weather forecasts and shipping in the region.

Newswise: Snow research fills gap in understanding Arctic climate
Released: 17-Aug-2022 4:55 PM EDT
Snow research fills gap in understanding Arctic climate
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Comprehensive data from several seasons of field research in the Alaskan Arctic will address uncertainties in Earth-system and climate-change models about snow cover across the region and its impacts on water and the environment.

Newswise: Simultaneous climate events risk damaging entire socioeconomic systems
3-Aug-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Simultaneous climate events risk damaging entire socioeconomic systems
PLOS Climate

In heatwaves where heat and drought combine, effects can destabilize interlinked sectors, including health, energy and food production systems.

   
Newswise: New study calculates retreat of glacier edges in Alaska’s Kenai Fjords National Park
1-Aug-2022 2:05 PM EDT
New study calculates retreat of glacier edges in Alaska’s Kenai Fjords National Park
University of Washington

A new study measured 38 years of change for glaciers in Kenai Fjords National Park, which lies south of Anchorage, and found that 13 of 19 glaciers show substantial retreat, four are relatively stable, and two have advanced. It also finds trends in which glacier types are disappearing fastest.

Newswise:Video Embedded coastal-glacier-retreat-linked-to-climate-change
VIDEO
Released: 14-Jul-2022 2:15 PM EDT
Coastal Glacier Retreat Linked to Climate Change
University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin)

More of the world’s coastal glaciers are melting faster than ever, but exactly what’s triggering the large-scale retreat has been difficult to pin down because of natural fluctuations in the glaciers’ surroundings. Now, researchers have developed a methodology that they think cracks the code to why coastal glaciers are retreating, and in turn, how much can be attributed to human-caused climate change.

Released: 14-Jul-2022 2:05 PM EDT
As Globe Warms, Infected Pines Starve and Disease-Causing Fungi Thrive
Ohio State University

The high heat and low water conditions produced by global warming weaken pine trees’ resistance to disease by hindering their ability to mount an effective defense at the same time that pathogenic fungi in their tissues become more aggressive, new research suggests.

Newswise: Wildfires May Have Sparked Ecosystem Collapse During Earth’s Worst Mass Extinction
Released: 30-Jun-2022 10:40 AM EDT
Wildfires May Have Sparked Ecosystem Collapse During Earth’s Worst Mass Extinction
University College Cork

Researchers at University College Cork (UCC) and the Swedish Museum of Natural History examined the end-Permian mass extinction (252 million years ago) that eliminated almost every species on Earth, with entire ecosystems collapsing.

Newswise: Don’t Feel Bad Not Mowing the Lawn, it’s Actually a Good Thing
Released: 1-Jun-2022 6:05 PM EDT
Don’t Feel Bad Not Mowing the Lawn, it’s Actually a Good Thing
University of New Hampshire

Not a fan of mowing the lawn? Good news, cutting the grass less may be better for the environment. Trimming the number of times you run the mower around the yard, known as “low mow”, can help reduce carbon emissions, build soil organic matter and even enhance pollinating habitats for bees.

Newswise: California Shellfish Farmers Adapt to Climate Change
Released: 23-May-2022 12:35 PM EDT
California Shellfish Farmers Adapt to Climate Change
San Diego State University

Because of their proximity to the ocean, Californians get to enjoy locally-sourced oysters, mussels, abalone and clams.

Released: 12-May-2022 4:10 PM EDT
Large-Scale Ocean Sanctuaries Could Protect Coral Reefs From Climate Change
Ohio State University

Earth’s oceans are home to some of the most diverse ecosystems on the planet, but warming temperatures are causing many marine animals, including coral, to die out.

Released: 28-Apr-2022 3:45 PM EDT
Study: Diminishing Arctic Sea Ice Has Lasting Impacts on Global Climate
University at Albany, State University of New York

As the impacts of climate change are felt around the world, no area is experiencing more drastic changes than the northern polar region.

Newswise: Solar energy explains fast yearly retreat of Antarctica’s sea ice
23-Mar-2022 5:05 PM EDT
Solar energy explains fast yearly retreat of Antarctica’s sea ice
University of Washington

Sea ice around Antarctica retreats more quickly than it advances, an asymmetry that has been a puzzle. New analysis shows that the Southern Hemisphere is following simple rules of physics, as peak midsummer sun causes rapid changes. In this aspect, it seems, it's Arctic sea ice that is more mysterious.

Newswise:Video Embedded salt-marsh-grass-on-georgia-s-coast-gets-nutrients-for-growth-from-helpful-bacteria-in-its-roots
VIDEO
Released: 22-Mar-2022 11:40 AM EDT
Salt Marsh Grass On Georgia’s Coast Gets Nutrients for Growth From Helpful Bacteria in Its Roots
Georgia Institute of Technology

A new study led by Georgia Tech points to possible help for restoring marine ecosystems — and provides more data on the role microbes play in marsh plant health and productivity.

Newswise: Nature Study: Ocean Life May Adapt to Climate Change, But With Hidden Costs
Released: 21-Mar-2022 4:05 PM EDT
Nature Study: Ocean Life May Adapt to Climate Change, But With Hidden Costs
University of Vermont

A first-of-its-kind study shows that some ocean animals may be able evolve their way out of troubles caused by climate change—but at a high cost. By artificially evolving 23 generations of a marine copepod, Acartia tonsa, a team of scientists at the University of Vermont found that the tiny creatures could adapt to the high temperatures and carbon dioxide levels forecast for the warming oceans. But to get there, the populations had to spend a lot of their genetic flexibility—leaving them vulnerable to new stresses, like low food.

Newswise: U.S. fires four times larger, three times more frequent since 2000
Released: 16-Mar-2022 3:40 PM EDT
U.S. fires four times larger, three times more frequent since 2000
University of Colorado Boulder

New analysis confirms a palpable change in fire dynamics already suspected by many.

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.

Newswise: UF study shows how climate change can worsen impact of invasive plants
Released: 8-Feb-2022 9:50 AM EST
UF study shows how climate change can worsen impact of invasive plants
University of Florida

Scientists have long hypothesized that climate change, by intensifying stressors like drought or wildfires, would make an ecosystem more vulnerable to invasive plants. Those invasive plants may in turn alter the environment in ways that amplify the impacts of climate change, explained Luke Flory, a professor of ecology in the UF/IFAS agronomy department. A new long-term field study conducted by Flory’s lab offers the first experimental evidence to support this hypothesis.

Newswise: Increased storminess may give rise to North Atlantic’s ‘cold blob’
Released: 2-Feb-2022 9:10 AM EST
Increased storminess may give rise to North Atlantic’s ‘cold blob’
Penn State Institute for Computational and Data Sciences

While climate change is making much of the world warmer, temperatures in a subpolar region of the North Atlantic are getting cooler. A team of researchers report that changes in the wind pattern, among other factors, may be contributing to this “cold blob.”

Newswise: Desert shrubs cranked up water use efficiency to survive a megadrought. It may not be enough.
15-Dec-2021 4:15 PM EST
Desert shrubs cranked up water use efficiency to survive a megadrought. It may not be enough.
University of Utah

Shrubs in the desert Southwest have increased their water use efficiency at some of the highest rates ever observed to cope with a decades-long megadrought. That’s the finding of a new study from University of Utah researchers, who found that although the shrubs’ efficiency increases are unprecedented and heroic, they may not be enough to adapt to the long-term drying trend in the West.

Newswise: Rutgers Study Unveils Carbon Mitigation Solutions to Combat Climate Change
Released: 7-Dec-2021 10:55 AM EST
Rutgers Study Unveils Carbon Mitigation Solutions to Combat Climate Change
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Increasing adoption of certain agricultural practices can help combat climate change, according to a new report by researchers from Rutgers and the University of Maine. The study explores how New Jersey’s plants and soils can help to absorb and store carbon dioxide from greenhouse gas emissions.

Newswise: Antarctic drilling project to offer insight into climate future
Released: 30-Nov-2021 11:25 AM EST
Antarctic drilling project to offer insight into climate future
Binghamton University, State University of New York

An international team of researchers including faculty at Binghamton University, State University of New York will drill into the ocean floor to discover the West Antarctic Ice Sheet's sensitivity to global warming.

Released: 24-Nov-2021 4:30 PM EST
Collapse of ancient Liangzhu culture caused by climate change
University of Innsbruck

Referred to as "China's Venice of the Stone Age", the Liangzhu excavation site in eastern China is considered one of the most significant testimonies of early Chinese advanced civilisation.

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.

Released: 1-Nov-2021 3:30 PM EDT
Climate change will triple impacts to world’s “life zones” unless emission rates are dramatically reduced
Wildlife Conservation Society

A new study from WCS and multiple partners that modeled changes in the world’s 45 different “life zones” from climate change revealed that climate impacts may soon triple over these areas if the earth continues “business-as-usual” emissions.

Newswise: Study finds U.S. bishops silent on moral issue of climate change
Released: 19-Oct-2021 4:50 PM EDT
Study finds U.S. bishops silent on moral issue of climate change
Creighton University

The study, “U.S. Catholic bishops’ silence and denialism on climate change,” examined more than 12,000 columns published from June 2014 to June 2019 by bishops in official publications for 171 of the 178 U.S. Catholic dioceses.

Newswise: Large effect of solar activity on Earth's energy budget
Released: 12-Oct-2021 1:50 PM EDT
Large effect of solar activity on Earth's energy budget
Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

This is the result of a new study by researchers from DTU Space at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) and of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, who have traced the consequences of eruptions on the Sun on clouds and Earth's energy balance.

Released: 5-Oct-2021 2:30 PM EDT
Improving the evidence: Scientists review quantitative climate migration literature
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)

Quantitative empirical studies exploring how climatic and other environmental drivers influence migration are increasing year by year. PIK scientists have now reviewed methodological approaches used in the quantitative climate migration literature.

Released: 29-Sep-2021 11:15 AM EDT
Human behavior sabotages CO2-reducing strategies
University of Utah

University of Utah researchers compared every U.S. state’s CO2 emissions with their investment in the two solutions from 2009 to 2016. State governments’ policies aimed at helping consumers improve energy efficiency had no effect on CO2 emission. Investment in renewable energy sources led to more CO2 emissions in the residential sector.

Newswise: Could Climate Change be Altering the Marine Food Web?
Released: 28-Sep-2021 11:45 AM EDT
Could Climate Change be Altering the Marine Food Web?
Stony Brook University

Research by scientists at Stony Brook University’s School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (SoMAS) reveals that climate velocity is affecting where large marine mammals are distributed relative to their prey species, which could have important implications for marine food web dynamics.


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