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Climate Change

A satellite image of a tropical forest.
Posted inEditors' Vox

Tropical Carbon and Water Observed from Above

by J. Worden, S. Saatchi and A. Bloom 6 April 202129 March 2023

Satellite observations show how tropical forest carbon fluxes respond to changes in water from climate variability.

Lake in a shape of a city in the middle of pure and fresh rain forest scenery viewed from a bird’s perspective.
Posted inNews

Chasing Carbon Unicorns

Rishika Pardikar, Science Writer by Rishika Pardikar 5 April 202124 April 2026

According to a new report, net zero targets many governments are pursuing are distractions from the urgent need to drastically reduce carbon emissions.

Tree rings visible in a slice of oak
Posted inNews

Oak Trees Offer a Continuous Climate Record for Central Europe

by Stacy Kish 2 April 20212 September 2022

A method using nonpooled, continuous stable carbon and oxygen isotopes recorded in oak trees benefits climate reconstructions.

A line of controlled fire burns across a dry grassland in South Africa.
Posted inNews

Zooming In on Small Fires in Africa

Lakshmi Supriya, Science Writer by L. Supriya 2 April 20215 September 2023

By analyzing high-resolution satellite images, researchers found that fires burning in Africa were undercounted by as much as 80%.

Different heat stress indicators change in different ways, but climate models project a clear trend of increasing heat stress worldwide.
Posted inResearch Spotlights

Global Warming Causes Uneven Changes in Heat Stress Indicators

by Morgan Rehnberg 1 April 202122 February 2023

Different indicators change in different ways, but climate models project a clear trend of increasing heat stress.

A firefighter sprays water onto burning brush beside a road.
Posted inOpinions

Tackling Challenges of a Drier, Hotter, More Fire-Prone Future

by Rong Fu, A. Hoell, Justin Mankin, A. Sheffield and I. Simpson 1 April 202123 February 2023

Research is increasingly showing how drought, heat, and wildfire influence each other. Ongoing collaborations provide templates for how best to study these phenomena and plan for their future impacts.

Several Velella velella on the beach
Posted inNews

Why Trillions of Jellyfish Washed Ashore from Canada to California

Jenessa Duncombe, Staff Writer by Jenessa Duncombe 31 March 20216 December 2021

Although warming oceans may make population booms and mass strandings more common, the species may ultimately be one of the beneficiaries of climate change.

Max Torbenson coring a pine tree
Posted inNews

Podcast: What Tree Rings Can Tell Us About the U.S. Civil War

by S. M. Hanlon 30 March 20215 March 2026

Climate change–induced drought may have had an influence on the Civil War.

Red rocks of the Chinle Formation at Petrified Forest National Park
Posted inNews

Red Rocks: Using Color to Understand Climate Change

by R. Mazumdar 30 March 20213 January 2023

A recent study on hematite formation during the Triassic may help predict the effects of climate change on contemporary monsoonal environments.

Yurok and Karuk igniters conduct traditional burning in an orchard near the Klamath River in California.
Posted inFeatures

Fire as Medicine: Learning from Native American Fire Stewardship

Jane Palmer, Science Writer by Jane Palmer 29 March 202128 September 2021

For centuries, Indigenous peoples have worked to live in harmony with fire. Can integrating such cultural practices into contemporary wildfire management help prevent catastrophic wildfires?

Posts pagination

Newer posts 1 … 104 105 106 107 108 … 260 Older posts
Over a dark blue-green square appear the words Special Report: The State of the Science 1 Year On.

Features from AGU Publications

Research Spotlights

As Wildfires Increase in the West, So Does Suppression Spending

10 June 202610 June 2026
Editors' Highlights

A Snapshot of Continental Crust in the Making

17 June 202616 June 2026
Editors' Vox

Small-Scale Indian Ocean Dynamics Underpin Marine Ecology and Climate

4 June 20263 June 2026
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