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  1. How Lyme disease became unstoppable

    … strings of nature, and the consequences of its unraveling are impossible to reckon. Lyme, like Covid-19, is a zoonotic … into Long Island Sound, with estuary areas and lakes and rivers. And it is wooded, second-generation wooded growth, … north. And as Ostfeld has stated in interviews with other publications, it is likely doing the same for the …

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  2. The Lost Snail of the Yangtze

    … heck is was. Nearly a century later, malacologists still are arguing about what sort of animal Helicostoa is. No … All around the world, the rapids and gorges of our largest rivers harbor mysterious animals like Helicostoa , whose … those benefits. Instead, this story reminds us of just how difficult it is to be responsible for a planet. …

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  3. Jonathan J. Cole: In Memory

    … of the carbon stored in soils is exported to streams, rivers, and lakes. His work in the Hudson River and … is derived from land-based carbon, and that some fish are in fact made of maple leaves. Jon … Center. Colleague Stuart Findlay remembers Jon as a ‘big thinker’, who always saw how the various pieces of a …

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  4. Gary M. Lovett: Scientist, Mentor, Advocate, & Friend

    … early research transformed how scientists calculate forest nitrogen budgets. He was among the first to document that … growth, carbon sequestration, and nitrogen pollution to streams. One of his first efforts translating science … managed to have fun in the process. Better colleagues are hard to find,” comments Cary President Emeritus …

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  5. Fifty-year-old law proves we can address environmental challenges

    … and other pollutants ran uncontrolled into streams and rivers; drainage from coal mines made streams so acid that … oil floating in slicks, sometimes several inches thick, are observed frequently. Debris and trash are commonly … contributing to America’s persistent problems with social justice and inequality. If we had focused on the …

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  6. July: Stay cool

    … us understand why water is so cool and refreshing, or know just how frigid Michigan’s waters can be on the hottest … water has the highest heat capacity of any substance you are likely to encounter in your everyday life, which means … cube on the counter in 70 degree air and the second in a big glass of 60 degree water, and watch what happens). Water …

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  7. Dosing the coast: Baltimore County’s leaky pipes are medicating the Chesapeake Bay

    Dosing the coast: Baltimore County’s leaky pipes are medicating the Chesapeake Bay Faulty … that is poorly quantified. Mixtures of drugs in lakes, rivers, and streams can disrupt animal biology and behavior, … need to examine and account for all pollution pathways, not just obvious ones like wastewater treatment plant …

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  8. Antidepressant pollution alters crayfish behavior, with impacts to stream ecosystems

    … Pharmaceutical pollution is found in streams and rivers globally, but little is known about its effects on … the effects of antidepressant pollution on crayfish. Just two weeks of citalopram exposure caused changes in … Studies, says, “Animals living in streams and rivers are exposed to a chronic mix of pharmaceutical pollution as …

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  9. Road salt: Protecting China’s drivers, but at what cost?

    … It’s estimated that globally over 66 million tonnes are used for de-icing every year. The use of chloride … can wash into the surrounding soil, as well as lakes and streams, possibly contaminating reservoirs and drinking … early 1970s that scientists discovered their presence in rivers, lakes and groundwater, and began to discuss their …

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  10. Cary Institute to offer immersive, paid research experience for teachers

    … Jane Lucas , who will lead Cary BIORETS. “When people are better informed about big ecological processes, they are more invested in … for Cary BIORETS, emphasized that the program isn’t just open to biology teachers. “We would love math …

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