Environment

 
 
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Celebrating our native pantry

AUSTRALIAN GEOGRAPHIC | SEPT 2020

Appetites for Australian native food ingredients are growing globally, creating a burgeoning industry based on ancient Aboriginal knowledge.

Seagrass Can Stash Away Dangerous Heavy Metals

HAKAI Magazine | Feb 2024

In Australia’s largest estuary, humble seagrass is the thin green line between safety and heavy-metal contamination.

Capturing Carbon with Seaweed: What We Know, What We Don’t, and What We’re Totally Unsure About

Hakai Magazine | Nov 2023

Towering underwater kelp forests are often likened to trees, but seaweed carbon sequestration is far more complex than in soil-bound ecosystems.

 

How Much Climate Change Have You Already Witnessed in Your Life?

science Alert | Aug 2023

This impacts all of us, but some more than most.

SeppFriedhuber/Getty Images via ScienceAlert

The Montreal Protocol Turned Out to Have an Amazing World-Changing Side Effect

science Alert | May 2023

The best climate treaty we've ever had.

Bats And Humans Are Closer Than Ever, And The Risks Have Never Been So Clear

science Alert | Nov 2022

"We've been warning about this for decades."

Water, water, used to be everywhere

Cosmos Weekly | Sept 2022

Australia’s water laws desperately need a reboot to correct past injustices and set the country on a more sustainable path.

 

Scientists Track Eels to Their Ocean Breeding Grounds in World-First

Science Alert | Oct 2022

Solving one of nature’s most enduring mysteries.

World’s largest ice sheet threatened by warm water surge

NATURE NEWS | AUG 2022

Shifting winds and ocean currents are pushing warm waters into East Antarctica, contributing to ice loss, an analysis finds.

Chile’s constitutional rewrite confronts climate change and enshrines water rights

COSMOS Magazine | Aug 2022

Chile is one of the first countries in the world to reimagine its constitution amid the climate crisis. What can other nations learn from Chileans’ efforts?

Waste not, want not: The advent of solar panel recycling

Cosmos Weekly | May 2022

There is a problem piling up on Australian rooftops. But recycling used or broken solar panels represents a lucrative new market, too.

Reanalyzing Seaweed Ecosystems’ Role as Carbon Sinks

Hakai Magazine | May 2022

Researchers argue carbon offset hopefuls have jumped the gun in touting seaweed’s carbon-sucking potential.

What triggers torpor?

eLife Sciences | Dec 2021

Hummingbirds save energy using torpor, a survival strategy similar to hibernation, to cope with the demands of the breeding season and increase fat stores before migration.

Catching fishy imports to tackle seafood fraud

Cosmos Weekly | Oct 2021

Tracking the origins of seafood reveals some fishy business that could be combatted with better import controls.

Good news, bad news: how climate science is being used in court

Cosmos Weekly | July 2021

New research suggests climate lawyers need to catch up to climate science to improve their chances of success in court. But it depends on a new branch of climate science that has its limitations, too. 

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Air pollution may trigger arthritis flares

Allergy & Respiratory Republic | July 2021

Environmental air pollution may trigger disease flares in patients with long-standing rheumatoid arthritis.

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Microplastics in soils

COSMOS Magazine | March 2021

Microplastics are a hidden source of soil carbon, and not in a good way.

 
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Anxiety-Inducing Satellite Data Shows Blue Whales Trying to Dodge Boats in Patagonia

Science Alert | Feb 2021

The area is a summer haven for the rare whales.

Image supplied: Sean Williamson

Sean Williamson

Arrested Development

Hakai Magazine | Aug 2020

A low-tech solution offers an effective way to keep sea turtles safe.

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Migration, it’s in their genes

eLife Sciences | March 2020

Tracing the evolutionary history of the European blackcap using high-throughput sequencing reveals divergent migration in this small songbird evolved some 30,000 years ago.

Jess Hadden

Jess Hadden via Australian Institute of Marine Science

For World’s Biggest Shark, Ship Strikes an Increasing Problem

Hakai Magazine | Jan 2020

Increasing numbers of whale sharks are showing up with scars and wounds caused by encounters with ships.

John Hembraa/Hunter Intrepid Landcare

John Hembraa/Hunter Intrepid Landcare

A shared path to conserving our country

Australian Geographic | July 2017

“This is a beautiful privilege to welcome you to my Country, and I’ll do it in my language,” Uncle Paul Callaghan says warmly, his back to the ocean, hands wide and feet grounded in sand.

Image supplied: Clean Coast Collective

Clean Coast Collective

Abandoned ghost nets are exacting a toll on our marine life and more

SBS Science | Nov 2016

Here's what abandoned fishing equipment is doing to our north-eastern waters.