News

Scientists have found an unexpected ally in the fight against climate change: microorganisms. These microscopic organisms, which are invisible to the naked eye, are doing a lot more to defend our ...
By looking at the microbial communities that live on corals, our research uncovered a crucial role that fishes play in protecting coral reefs. We also discovered that these fishes together with clean ...
As the world celebrates World Skin Health Day, let us know how climate change is a driving factor for many skin conditions.
The animals we best know as fish food help to store millions of tons of carbon in the Southern Ocean around Antarctica.
Tuna migration patterns in the Pacific are changing. And the stakes are high, not just for the economies and livelihoods of ...
Experiments in mice show that some gut bacteria can absorb toxic PFAS chemicals, allowing animals to expel them through feces.
Microbes—from deep in the ocean to the slime inside your AC—might play a key role in our fight against climate change.
Scientists discovered three new species of sea spiders that live near the ocean floor and feast on bacteria that convert ...
Clouds play an important role in regulating the climate. Bright ones at low altitudes generally reflect solar energy away, ...
E. coli or enterococci, which indicate fecal matter contaminating water, were detected at swim spots in New York state, ...
Europe isn’t just at risk of the direct effects of climate change, it is also exposed to the indirect effects of infectious ...
A study by researchers at the University of Pennsylvania found composting and feeding food waste to animals would cut carbon ...