Do you talk to your plants?
Hot and Dry Summer Impacts UK Butterfly Populations
The latest results from the UK Butterfly Monitoring Scheme (UKBMS) suggest the heatwave and drought of summer 2022 has had a negative impact on some UK butterfly species.
Path to Net-Zero Carbon Capture and Storage May Lead to Ocean
Lehigh Engineering researcher Arup SenGupta has developed a novel way to capture carbon dioxide from the air and store it in the “infinite sink” of the ocean.
NOAA Science Report Features New Data-Gathering Drones, Advances in Wind, Weather and Water Forecasts
Discovering a 207-year-old whaling ship, advancing air-quality forecasts, improving storm surge and wind forecasts, and deploying the first-ever drone-based tagging of endangered whales.
New, exhaustive study probes hidden history of horses in the American West
Indigenous peoples as far north as Wyoming and Idaho may have begun to care for horses by the first half of the 17th Century, according to a new study by researchers from 15 countries and multiple Native American groups.
Form is (mal)function: Protein’s shape lets bacteria disarm it
Shigella bacteria can infect humans but not mice. A team can now explain why. Their findings may explain the multifariousness of a key weapon of our immune system.
How Plants Adapt to Nitrogen Deficiency
Nitrogen as a fertilizer can increase yields.
Scientists Aboard NOAA Research Vessel Collect Samples From Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt During Unprecedented Bloom
Opportunistic sampling shows geographic scope of distribution, offer some of the first sampling opportunities.
A reconstruction of prehistoric temperatures for some of the oldest archaeological sites in North America
Scientists often look to the past for clues about how Earth's landscapes might shift under a changing climate, and for insight into the migrations of human communities through time. A new study offers both by providing, for the first time, a reconstruction of prehistoric temperatures for some of the first...
Deep ocean currents around Antarctica headed for collapse
Antarctic circulation could slow by more than 40 per cent over the next three decades, with significant implications for the oceans and the climate.