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Showing releases 126-150 out of 252. << < 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 > >>

Public Release: 17-Oct-2012
 Nature
LSU research team shows negative impact of nutrients on coastal ecosystems
LSU's John Fleeger, professor emeritus in LSU's Department of Biological Sciences, is part of a multidisciplinary national research group that recently discovered the impact of nutrient enrichment on salt marsh ecosystems is marsh loss and that such loss is seen much faster than previously thought.
Contact: Ashley Berthelot
aberth4@lsu.edu
225-578-3870
Louisiana State University
Public Release: 17-Oct-2012
 PLOS ONE
Dolphins can remain alert for up to 15 days at a time with no sign of fatigue
Dolphins sleep with only one half of their brains at a time, and according to new research published Oct. 17 in the open access journal PLOS ONE, this trait allows them to stay constantly alert for at least 15 days in a row.
Contact: Jyoti Madhusoodanan
jmadhusoodanan@plos.org
415-568-4545 x187
Public Library of Science
Public Release: 16-Oct-2012
Shark social networking
University of Delaware researchers are using an underwater robot to find and follow sand tiger sharks that they previously tagged with transmitters. The innovative project is part of a multi-year partnership with Delaware State University to better understand the behavior and migration patterns of the sharks in real time.
Contact: Andrea Boyle Tippett
aboyle@udel.edu
302-831-1421
University of Delaware
Public Release: 16-Oct-2012
1 by land and 1 by sea
NASA's Operation IceBridge got the 2012 Antarctic campaign off to a productive start with a land ice survey of Thwaites Glacier and a sea ice flight over parts of the Bellingshausen Sea.

NASA
Contact: George Hale
george.r.hale@nasa.gov
301-614-5853
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
Public Release: 16-Oct-2012
 Nature Geoscience
Ice sheet retreat controlled by the landscape
Ice-sheet retreat can halt temporarily during long phases of climate warming, according to scientists.

Natural Environment Research Council, United Kingdom
Contact: Carl Stiansen
c.r.stiansen@durham.ac.uk
44-019-133-46077
Durham University
Public Release: 15-Oct-2012
U-M, other universities launch Great Lakes protection project
The University of Michigan and 20 other US and Canadian universities will join forces to propose a set of long-term research and policy priorities to help protect and restore the Great Lakes and to train the next generation of scientists, attorneys, planners and policy specialists who will study them.

University of Michigan, Michigan State University, Wayne State University, State University of New York at Buffalo, Guelph University
Contact: Jim Erickson
ericksn@umich.edu
734-647-1842
University of Michigan
Public Release: 14-Oct-2012
 Nature Climate Change
Too much of a good thing can be bad for corals
New study by Univ. of Miami Researchers Ross Cunning and Andrew Bake in Nature Climate Change reveals that having too many algal symbionts makes corals bleach more severely in response to warming.

Pew Fellows, National Science Foundation, University of Miami Fellowship, National Science Foundation Grad Research Fellowship
Contact: Barbra Gonzalez, UM Rosenstiel School
barbgo@rsmas.miami.edu
305-984-7107
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science
Public Release: 12-Oct-2012
 Scientific Reports
Scientists uncover diversion of Gulf Stream path in late 2011
The Gulf Stream made an unusual move well north of its normal path in late October and early November 2011, causing warmer-than-usual ocean temperatures along the New England continental shelf, according to physical oceanographers at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.

National Science Foundation, CINAR, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Contact: WHOI Media Relations
media@whoi.edu
508-289-3340
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Public Release: 11-Oct-2012
 Journal of Geophysical Research
Documented decrease in frequency of Hawaii's northeast trade winds
Scientists at University of Hawaii at Manoa have observed a decrease in the frequency of northeast trade winds and an increase in eastern trade winds over the past nearly four decades, according to a recent study published in the Journal of Geophysical Research.

Joint Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research, NOAA
Contact: Marcie Grabowski
mworkman@hawaii.edu
808-956-3151
University of Hawaii ‑ SOEST
Public Release: 11-Oct-2012
 Oryx
Fisheries benefit from 400-year-old tradition
A new study by the Wildlife Conservation Society and James Cook University says that coral reefs in Aceh, Indonesia are benefiting from a decidedly low-tech, traditional management system that dates back to the 17th century.
Contact: Stephen Sautner
ssautner@wcs.org
718-220-3682
Wildlife Conservation Society
Public Release: 11-Oct-2012
 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Arctic and Southern Oceans appear to determine the composition of microbial populations
Differing contributions of freshwater from glaciers and streams to the Arctic and Southern oceans appear to be responsible for the fact that the majority of microbial communities that thrive near the surface at the Poles share few common members, according to an international team of researchers, some of whom were supported by the National Science Foundation.

National Science Foundation
Contact: Peter West
pwest@nsf.gov
703-292-7530
National Science Foundation
Public Release: 11-Oct-2012
 BioScience
Techniques used to infer pathways of protein evolution found unreliable
Biologists have published thousands of papers that used statistical techniques to infer the likely evolutionary paths that led to the present-day forms of proteins. But careful experimental studies of the properties of reconstructed ancestral forms of visual pigments and variants created by mutation suggest that core simplifying assumptions used in the statistical approaches are unreliable and make the approaches unable to identify the actual paths.

National Institutes of Health, Emory University
Contact: Tim Beardsley
tbeardsley@aibs.org
703-674-2500 x326
American Institute of Biological Sciences
Public Release: 10-Oct-2012
CU-Boulder wins $1.4 million NSF award for climate change, water sustainability study
The University of Colorado at Boulder has been awarded $1.4 million for a new study on how changes in land use, forest management and climate may affect trans-basin water diversions in Colorado and other semi-arid regions in the western United States.

National Science Foundation
Contact: Noah Molotch
noah.molotch@colorado.edu
303-492-6151
University of Colorado at Boulder
Public Release: 10-Oct-2012
 Scientific Reports
Study shows small fish can play a big role in coastal carbon cycle
Research shows that small forage fish like anchovies can transport carbon into the deep sea through their fecal pellets -- where it contributes nothing to current global warming.

National Science Foundation
Contact: David Malmquist
davem@vims.edu
804-684-7011
Virginia Institute of Marine Science
Public Release: 10-Oct-2012
Return to Bremerhaven
Polarstern is expected back from the Central Arctic expedition "IceArc" in Bremerhaven on 8 October 2012 after a good two months. 54 scientists and technicians from twelve different countries conducted research on the retreat of the sea ice and the consequences for the Arctic Ocean and its ecosystems over a period of two months in the High North.
Contact: Dr Folke Mehrtens
medien@awi.de
49-047-148-312-007
Helmholtz Association of German Research Centres
Public Release: 10-Oct-2012
 Science of the Total Environment
Halving food losses would feed an additional billion people
More efficient use of the food production chain and a decrease in the amount of food losses will dramatically help maintaining the planet's natural resources and improve people's lives. Researchers in Aalto University, Finland, have proved a valid estimation, for the first time, for how many people could be fed with reducing food losses. An additional one billion people can be fed, if the food losses could be halved.

Maa- ja vesitekniikan tuki ry, IWT Flanders and NWO, Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research
Contact: Matti Kummu
matti.kummu@aalto.fi
358-505-858-679
Aalto University
Public Release: 10-Oct-2012
 Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics
Glaciers cracking in the presence of carbon dioxide
New research, published today, Oct. 11, in IOP Publishing's Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics, has shown that CO2 molecules may be having a more direct impact on the ice that covers our planet.
Contact: Michael Bishop
michael.bishop@iop.org
01-179-301-032
Institute of Physics
Public Release: 10-Oct-2012
 PLOS ONE
New fossils suggest ancient origins of modern-day deep-sea animals
Fossils discovered in North Atlantic Ocean reveal ancestry of sea urchins and related species.
Contact: Jyoti Madhusoodanan
jmadhusoodanan@plos.org
415-568-4545 x187
Public Library of Science
Public Release: 9-Oct-2012
 Journal of Phycology
Looks like turtle weed, but it's not
Newly described species points to richer marine biodiversity in Guam waters than previously understood.

Research Foundation-Flanders, US Fish & Wildlife Service, NOAA/Coral Reef Conservation Program
Contact: Olympia Terral
olympia.uog@gmail.com
University of Guam
Public Release: 9-Oct-2012
North American Freshwater Mussels
A new book by US Forest Service scientist Wendell Haag provides the first comprehensive view of the ecology and conservation of the approximately 300 species of North American freshwater mussels.
Contact: Wendell Haag
whaag@fs.fed.us
662-234-2744 x245
USDA Forest Service ‑ Southern Research Station
Public Release: 9-Oct-2012
 Animal Behaviour
Swimming with hormones: Researchers unravel ancient urges that drive the social decisions of fish
Researchers have discovered that a form of oxytocin -- the hormone responsible for making humans fall in love -- has a similar effect on fish, suggesting it is a key regulator of social behavior that has evolved and endured since ancient times.

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
Contact: Michelle Donovan
donovam@mcmaster.ca
905-525-9140
McMaster University
Public Release: 9-Oct-2012
 Global Change Biology
Florida Tech researchers diagnose coral disease
Muller and van Woesik mapped the clustering of three coral
diseases in the Caribbean and concluded that they are stress-related rather than contagious.
Contact: Robert van Woesik
rvw@fit.edu
321-674-7475
Florida Institute of Technology
Public Release: 8-Oct-2012

Meeting of the International Association of Sedimentologists
Eberli recognized with inaugural Johannes Walther Medal for outstanding efforts in sedimentology
University of Miami Marine Geology & Geophysics Professor Gregor Peter Eberli recognized with inaugural Johannes Walther Medal for outstanding efforts by the International Association of Sedimentologists.

International Association of Sedimentologists
Contact: Barbra Gonzalez
barbgo@rsmas.miami.edu
305-421-4704
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science
Public Release: 8-Oct-2012
Illustrated guides provide first ever view of zooplankton crucial to Arabian Sea's food web
Two new illustrated guides provide first-ever compilation of zooplankton or "insects of the sea." crucial to the Arabian Sea's food web.
Contact: Barbra Gonzalez
barbgo@rsmas.miami.edu
305-421-4704
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine & Atmospheric Science
Public Release: 8-Oct-2012
 Biological Invasions
River Thames invaded with foreign species
The second longest river in the UK, the River Thames, contains 96 non-native species, making it one of the most highly invaded freshwater systems in the world.

UK Environment Agency
Contact: Bridget Dempsey
b.dempsey@qmul.ac.uk
44-020-788-27927
Queen Mary, University of London

Showing releases 126-150 out of 252. << < 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 > >>

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