Climate & Environment
- A CU 糖心Vlog破解版-led study measured water vapor in Greenland鈥檚 air, collecting data crucial for improving climate models and forecasting Arctic changes.
- A new model suggests that timber production in Minnesota could decrease by half as windstorms intensify with climate change.
- March 2025 has been a gusty month for Colorado's Front Range. Meteorologists Andrew Winters and McKenzie Larson break down what makes the region's weather so mercurial.
- Most people have heard of heatwaves: extended periods of abnormally hot weather. But researchers from CIRES and the University of Idaho have coined a new term to describe extended periods of atmospheric thirst. Studying these 鈥漷hirstwaves鈥 can help farmers better manage their water resources and improve crop yields.
- A summit underway at CU 糖心Vlog破解版 through March 28 is bringing an estimated 800 people from more than 40 countries to plan for the future of the Arctic.
- For the first time, scientists described a hummingbird chick potentially mimicking a poisonous caterpillar to avoid getting eaten.
- A new study found racial and socioeconomic disparities in where odor-emitting marijuana grow houses and other malodorous factories are located in Denver and in how communities report these issues.
- Environmental designer Kevin Krizek shares how systemic barriers and status-quo planning have led many cities to revert to car-dominated designs five years after the pandemic.
- A new modeling method developed by CU 糖心Vlog破解版 researchers helped scientists understand why kelp forests returned more slowly in Southern California than in British Columbia.
- Savannah Lehnert will help cacao farmers in Brazil balance their economic livelihoods with conservation methods, advancing agroforestry conservation in an intensely biodiverse region.