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Biodiversity & Conservation

The vast majority of manatee deaths have been in the Indian River Lagoon, a biological diverse east coast estuary that has been plagued with water quality problems and widespread seagrass losses. Photo Courtesy of The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission

Florida’s Majestic Manatees Are Starving to Death

By Amy Green

A woman walks her dog, under smoke from California fires on Nov. 9, 2018. Credit: Paul Harris/Getty Images

Warming Trends: Indoor Air Safer From Wildfire Smoke, a Fish Darts off the Endangered List and Dragonflies Showing the Heat in the UK

By Katelyn Weisbrod

Transition from Sawgrass to coastal habitat in Everglades National Park. Credit: National Park Service

Moving Water in the Everglades Sends a Cascade of Consequences, Some Anticipated and Some Not

By Amy Green

Researchers analyze glacial melt on July 10, 2013 in Kangerlussuaq, Greenland. Credit: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Warming Trends: Tuna for Vegans, Battery Technology and Climate Drives a Tree-Killer to Higher Climes

By Katelyn Weisbrod

Smoke rises from an illegally lit fire in a section of Amazon rainforest, south of Novo Progresso in Para state, Brazil, on Aug. 15, 2020. Credit: Carl De Souza/AFP via Getty Images

In the Amazon, the World’s Largest Reservoir of Biodiversity, Two-Thirds of Species Have Lost Habitat to Fire and Deforestation

By Georgina Gustin

View from Pennsylvania to New Jersey over the Delaware River. Credit: Jumping Rocks/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images.

The Riverkeeper’s Quest to Protect the Delaware River Watershed as the Rains Fall and Sea Level Rises

By Daelin Brown

Beewise's Beehome is a high-tech beehive that helps beekeepers remotely monitor and care for their bees. Credit: Beewise

Warming Trends: Climate Clues Deep in the Ocean, Robotic Bee Hives and Greenland’s Big Melt

By Katelyn Weisbrod, Bob Berwyn

Anglers fish at Eben G. Fine Park on Thursday. Credit: Cliff Grassmick/Digital First Media/Boulder Daily Camera via Getty Images

Warming Trends: Music For Sinking Cities, Pollinators Need Room to Spawn and Equal Footing for ‘Rough Fish’

By Katelyn Weisbrod

Stephanie Jenouvrier has been studying emperor penguins for decades. Her latest paper shows that the birds face a dire future if greenhouse gas emissions continue to be emitted at current rates. Photo Courtesy of Stephanie Jenouvrier © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

Warming Trends: Penguins in Trouble, More About the Dead Zone and Does Your Building Hold Climate Secrets?

By Katelyn Weisbrod

Emily Choy releases a thick-billed murre after measuring its physiological response to heat on Coats Island, Nunavut, Canada. Credit: Douglas Noblet

Can Arctic Animals Keep Up With Climate Change? Scientists are Trying to Find Out

By Haley Dunleavy

Two swan chicks remained on the Charles River with their father as of late June. Credit: Derrick Z. Jackson

A Watershed Moment: How Boston’s Charles River Went From Polluted to Pristine

By Derrick Z. Jackson

Prospective pilgrims walk on the road, which has water spray cooling system, to stone Jamarat pillars that symbolize the devil as a part of the annual Islamic Hajj pilgrimage during the first day of Eid Al-Adha in Mecca, Saudi Arabia on Sept. 2, 2017. Credit: Firat Yurdakul/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Warming Trends: Increasing Heat is Dangerous for Pilgrims, Climate Warnings Painted on Seaweed and Many Plots a Global Forest Make

By Katelyn Weisbrod

Wendy Bragg, a marine ecologist and doctoral student at the University of California, Santa Cruz, holds a black abalone just before it's resettled along the Big Sur coast. , Credit: Anne Marshall-Chalmers

On California’s Coast, Black Abalone, Already Vulnerable to Climate Change, are Increasingly Threatened by Wildfire

By Anne Marshall-Chalmers

he Link River Dam helps hold water for irrigation in Upper Klamath Lake. Credit: Anne Marshall-Chalmers

‘There Are No Winners Here’: Drought in the Klamath Basin Inflames a Decades-Old War Over Water and Fish

By Anne Marshall-Chalmers

Soy fields cut into the Amazon rainforest of Brazil. Credit: Ricardo Beliel/Brazil Photos/LightRocket via Getty Images

Planes Sampling Air Above the Amazon Find the Rainforest is Releasing More Carbon Than it Stores

By Georgina Gustin

Remote sensing of methane from high altitude aircraft reveals plumes of the gas coming from the open face, on the left, and from a vent, on the right, at the River Birch landfill outside New Orleans in April 2021. Researchers from the University of Arizona, Arizona State University, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and Carbon Mapper calculate the rate of methane venting at approximately 2,000 kilograms per hour, which would be 48 metric tons per day. Credit: University of Arizona, Arizona State University, NASA JPL and Carbon Mapper.

EPA Struggles to Track Methane Emissions From Landfills. Here’s Why It Matters

By James Bruggers, Amy Green, Phil McKenna, and Robert Benincasa

Shells on Riccione beach after a storm in Emilia-Romagna, Italy. Credit: DeAgostini/Getty Images

Warming Trends: Stories of a Warming Sea, Spotless Dragonflies and Bad News for Shark Week

By Katelyn Weisbrod

Forests of the Living Dead

By Liza Gross

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