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  1. Home
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  5. Page 2
Home»Posts tagged with»carbon dioxide (Page 2)

Rising Tundra Temperatures Lead to Changes in Microbial Communities

By nsf on Jul 17, 2019   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Rising Tundra Temperatures Lead to Changes in Microbial Communities

  Image-Researchers studied changes in soil microbes in tundra near Denali National Park in Alaska. Credit: Ted Schuur Rising temperatures in the tundra of northern latitudes could affect microbial communities in ways likely to increase their production of the greenhouse gases methane and carbon dioxide, a new study of experimentally warmed Alaskan soil suggests. The […]

How Mosquitoes Smell Human Sweat(and new ways to stop them)

By Carly Britton | Cell Press on Mar 30, 2019   Featured, Science/Education  

How Mosquitoes Smell Human Sweat(and new ways to stop them)

  Female mosquitoes are known to rely on an array of sensory information to find people to bite, picking up on carbon dioxide, body odor, heat, moisture, and visual cues. Now researchers reporting in the journal Current Biology on March 28 have discovered how mosquitoes pick up on acidic volatiles found in human sweat. The key is […]

Study Links Climate Policy, Carbon Emissions from Permafrost

By Sonnary Campbell | UAF on Mar 27, 2018   Featured, The Arctic and Alaska Science  

Study Links Climate Policy, Carbon Emissions from Permafrost

Controlling greenhouse gas emissions in the coming decades could substantially reduce the consequences of carbon releases from thawing permafrost during the next 300 years, according to a new paper published this week in the Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences. Conversely, climate policy that results in little or no effort to control greenhouse gases like carbon […]

Did Plants Cause one of Earth’s Great Extinctions?

By Ned Rozell | Geophysical Institute on Mar 5, 2018   Science/Education  

Did Plants Cause one of Earth’s Great Extinctions?

Several times in the distant past, our home planet has been cleansed of its residents, with the exception of a few plucky survivors. Perhaps the best known and most spectacular extinction was that of the dinosaurs, caused when a meteorite six miles in diameter crashed into Earth about 65 million years ago. There was another […]

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