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  1. Birds and Hittites: How isotopes have helped a plant ecologist have fun!

    … has given many seminars presenting biogeochemical and isotope-based ecosystem ecology research. However, in … phosphorus. Phosphorus is monoisotopic meaning we cannot use stable isotopes to trace or describe its dynamics. It makes …

  2. Climate change is pushing the American redstart’s breeding range southward

    … American robins, eastern bluebirds, chickadees, tufted titmouses, and house wrens were also impacted. The team … the following year. He also collected tail feathers, whose isotope ratios record the latitude at which each bird had spent the …

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  3. To Be Equitable, US Urban Green Infrastructure Planning Must Transform

    … of green infrastructure projects. “Many US cities use green infrastructure to comply with storm water … at the University of Connecticut’s Center for Land Use Education and Research. Stormwater … of the Urban Systems Lab. More details and other project publications can be found at www.giequity.org . …

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  4. How Lyme disease became unstoppable

    … than 50 percent as land conversion to exurban and suburban use has exploded. This trend has been particularly intense … suggests that their emergence is often driven by land-use changes like deforestation, residential and commercial … north. And as Ostfeld has stated in interviews with other publications, it is likely doing the same for the …

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  5. Strategies for achieving equitable green infrastructure in US urban planning

    … nonprofit institutions, and community advocates can use the toolkit to achieve more equitable green … also an associated press release .) Discover related resources, including publications, essays, a white paper , a Story Map , …

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  6. Livestock antibiotics and rising temperatures disrupt soil microbial communities

    … was selected because it is a common antibiotic whose use is expanding on cattle farms. Monensin is inexpensive, … inefficiently) to process carbon, less is converted into a stable organic form, which would become trapped in the soil. …

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  7. With global challenges in mind, keeping a decades-long success story at the forefront

    … analysis,” says Likens. Measurements began at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in June 1963, followed by … showed there has been a remarkable decline in polluting sulfur concentrations and acidity,” says Likens. “That … to the public, “I would argue that cartoons with their use of satire — in this case focused on the environmental …

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  8. Mohonk Lake is getting warmer and more stagnant with climate change

    … because lake bottoms are home to microbial decomposers that use oxygen when they break down dead plants and animals. … excess nutrients that flow into water bodies from these sources. Fewer nutrients means Mohonk Lake is not prone to … algae can bloom in the bright, windless conditions of a stable water column. In recent years, we are also seeing …

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  9. The Future of Biodiversity

    … have no scientific foundation for the notion of a future ‘stable climate’. Thus far, we only have goals for reducing … have much to do with leadership. Our individual actions to use recyclables and alternative energy sources contribute to a collective sense of enfranchisement …

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  10. Bats not the enemy in the fight against COVID-19

    … health sectors in these surveillance activities shall be of use to public health. This would help in the development … would be so much easier and safer. Virologists get quick publications easily from bats and bats have few defenders …

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