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News

A gif of satellite imagery shows smoke blowing over the Amazon as fires burn within it.
Posted inNews

Fire, Not Deforestation, Is Now the Amazon’s Biggest Carbon Emitter

by Andrew Chapman 3 November 20253 November 2025

Forest degradation in the Amazon increased by 400% in 2024. It was largely driven by wildfires during the forest’s worst fire season in more than 20 years.

Against a gray background, strands of multicellular green organisms glow in artificial light.
Posted inNews

Marine Heat Waves Slow the Ocean’s Carbon Flow

by Mack Baysinger 3 November 20253 November 2025

When plankton find themselves in hot water, organic matters stalls at the surface and disrupts transport of carbon to the deep ocean.

A satellite view of the southwestern coastline of the Netherlands shows a crisscross of rivers, estuaries, and canals.
Posted inNews

The Role of a Ditch in the Matrix

by Emily Gardner 31 October 202531 October 2025

These constructed waterways are often a “no-man’s-land” between terrestrial scientists and limnologists. But ditches’ role in transport, agriculture, biodiversity, greenhouse gas emissions, and even archaeology means it’s time to take a closer look.

A piece of permafrost soil falling into the ocean in Alaska
Posted inNews

In Arctic Soils, Methane-Eating Microbes Just Might Win Out over Methane Makers

by Nathaniel Scharping 31 October 20252 November 2025

Methanotrophs, including those that capture methane from the air, seem to outcompete methanogens in dry environments, a new study shows.

A person in a white hat stands in a tropical forest to take carbon measurements.
Posted inNews

REDD+ Results and Realities

by Rebecca Owen 31 October 202531 October 2025

A new study examines the efficacy of REDD+ projects in reducing deforestation and raises questions about the carbon credits the initiative relies on.

People sit around a conference table with satellite maps of the Brazilian state of Acre projected on a screen.
Posted inNews

In Parts of the Brazilian Amazon, Science Leads the Fight Against Forest Fire

by Meghie Rodrigues 30 October 202530 October 2025

The state of Acre counts on science to optimize its limited resources for monitoring and combating forest fires and environmental destruction.

Microscopic image of clumps of soil in a matrix of polyester fibers
Posted inNews

Microplastics Have Widely Varying Effects on Soil

by Mark DeGraff 29 October 202529 October 2025

A new study finds that a microplastic concentration of just 0.4% alters the drainage of soil, which could affect the growth of crops and other plants.

An image of Earth from the International Space Station shows clouds floating over the ocean, with the darkness of space in the background.
Posted inNews

Earth System Engineers Take Planetary Alterations to Extreme Scales

by Grace van Deelen 29 October 202529 October 2025

A new framework argues Earth scientists should employ the concept of ecosystem engineering across geologic time and space.

A group of rocks point upwards at a 45-degree angle. They are surrounded by green brush and lit up by warm sunset light.
Posted inNews

AI is Changing our Understanding of Earthquakes

by Alexandra Witze 28 October 202528 October 2025

Machine learning is expanding scientists’ catalogs of quakes and refining maps of underground faults. It also promises to improve quake forecasts.

Three dust devils on the Martian surface, seen from above and appearing as small white splotches.
Posted inNews

Martian Dust Devils Reveal Dynamic Surface Winds

Javier Barbuzano, Science Writer by Javier Barbuzano 28 October 202528 October 2025

A new wind map covering the whole of Mars includes some of the fastest winds ever detected on the Red Planet.

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Global Climate Models Need the Nitrogen Cycle—All of It

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3 November 202531 October 2025
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Publishing Participatory Science: The Community Science Exchange

20 October 202517 October 2025
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