Earth

  1. Climate

    Cell phone towers monitor African rains

    Scientists used cell phone towers to monitor African rains, a method that could track weather in regions without robust meteorological infrastructure.

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  2. Earth

    Bird’s-eye views of the globe highlight avian trouble spots

    Recent maps reveal trouble spots for the world’s imperiled birds.

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  3. Climate

    Windblown dust may muck up regional climate predictions

    Climate simulations don’t accurately portray the behavior of windblown dust, which may result in inaccurate regional forecasts.

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  4. Earth

    ‘Tambora’ links volcano to the ‘year without a summer’

    Author Gillen D’arcy Wood links the volcano to historical changes in art, opium, cholera and more.

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  5. Earth

    Humans have long history with causing extinctions

    Data suggests major die-offs of large animals during the last Ice Age were linked to people, not climate.

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  6. Climate

    Adapting to climate change: Let us consider the ways

    Many organisms do have tools to deal with sudden environmental changes, as freelance writer and Science News “Wild Things” blogger Sarah Zielinski reports.

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  7. Oceans

    Saharan dust explains Bahamas’ paradoxical existence

    Windswept dust from the Sahara Desert may fertilize bacteria that built the Bahamas.

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  8. Climate

    How species will, or won’t, manage in a warming world

    Fast evolution and flexibility, in biology and behavior, may allow some species to adapt to a warming world. Others may need help from humans, or risk dying out.

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  9. Environment

    Decline in birds linked to common insecticide

    In addition to harming bee populations, neonicotinoid insecticides may also be detrimental to bug-eating birds.

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  10. Environment

    Microplastics lodge in crab gills and guts

    Crabs can absorb microplastic particles through their gills and by eating polluted mussels.

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  11. Ecosystems

    If you really hate a species, try eating it

    Dining on invasive fish such as snakehead and lionfish can reduce their numbers, but we can’t entirely eat our way out this problem.

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  12. Earth

    Gravity variations foretell flood risk months in advance

    Tiny gravitational tugs from saturated river basins allow NASA satellites to forecast flood risk.

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