Satellites offer new view of Chesapeake Bay’s marine heat waves
Peer-Reviewed Publication
Updates every hour. Last Updated: 29-Jul-2025 01:11 ET (29-Jul-2025 05:11 GMT/UTC)
Tropical cyclones increased infant mortality by an average of 11% across seven low- and middle-income countries between 2002 and 2021. The risk of death was highest during the first year of life after a damaging tropical cyclone — even if it is below hurricane strength. Storm impacts on prenatal care and child growth, an indicator of early-life nutrition, did not account for the rise in infant deaths. The findings underscore the need for improved disaster response and child health protections in cyclone-prone low- and middle-income regions.
As kelp forests decline in the warming coastal waters of the Gulf of Maine, turf algae – dense mats of red algae replacing kelp in many regions – may chemically interfere with kelp recovery, a new study reports. This complicates efforts to restore these crucial marine ecosystems. Kelp forests are ecologically and economically vital marine ecosystems that support diverse life forms and functions. However, despite their widely recognized importance, kelp forests worldwide are threatened with collapse due to climate change and/or overfishing. In many regions where kelp forests have disappeared, they have been replaced by dense, low-lying mats of chemically rich, filamentous red seaweeds, also known as turf algae. This shift has been linked to declines in biodiversity and major disruptions in coastal ecosystem dynamics. Some research suggests that turf algae may actively hinder the recovery of kelp through allopathy – a common biological phenomenon by which one organism produces biochemicals that influence the growth, survival, development, and reproduction of other surrounding organisms. Understanding whether turf algae chemically inhibit kelp recovery is essential to managing and restoring these rapidly changing marine environments.
Shane Farrell and colleagues investigated whether allopathic turf algae suppress the recovery of kelp forests in the warming waters of the Gulf of Maine. Farrell et al. discovered that while kelp forests have persisted in the cooler waters of northeastern Maine, those in the warmer southwest have collapsed and failed to recover, with turf algae now dominating these reefs. By comparing the chemical composition of water and seaweed samples from kelp- and turf-dominated reefs, the authors identified distinct chemical signatures produced by turf algae. Laboratory experiments show that these turf-derived compounds inhibit the early growth stages of kelp. The findings suggest that turf algae alter the chemical ecology of the environment in ways that actively prevent kelp from re-establishing. “Future resilience strategies for marine ecosystems should integrate chemical ecology into climate change models,” write Colette Feehan and Karen Filbee-Dexter in a related Perspective. “By illuminating these hidden processes, we can better develop a fuller picture of how climate change is reshaping ocean ecosystems – and how we might better protect them.”
New research published earlier this month in AIDS and Behavior highlights links between extreme weather events, such as drought and flooding, and increased HIV vulnerabilities among sex workers and sexually diverse men in Nairobi, Kenya.
A modeling study conducted by MIT researchers shows that global warming will make it harder to reduce ground-level ozone, a respiratory irritant that is a key component of smog, by cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
A new study led by the University of Cologne involving 25 researchers from across Europe has discovered how climate change more than 12,000 years ago affected prehistoric human populations. The research has uncovered significant changes in population size and density during key periods at the end of the last Ice Age, specifically during the Late Palaeolithic, between 14,000 and 11,600 years ago. The data on the Iberian Peninsula has been summarised by researchers from the University of the Algarve (Portugal) and the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU). Alvaro Arrizabalaga of the Consolidated Research Group in Prehistory is in fact the co-author of this study.