This article will look at seasonal associations with light pollution trends and their effect on nocturnally migrating bird populations. The research was published in Ecosphere.
By Laura Thomson
21 Apr 2022
Researchers emphasize the necessity for routine characterization of urban runoff as well as new infrastructure and instrumentation investments intended to improve stormwater management in the long run.
By Laura Thomson
19 Apr 2022
Researchers have built a thermoelectric generator that generates electricity from the difference in temperature between the PV cell and the surrounding environment. This research has been published in Applied Physics Letters.
By Laura Thomson
19 Apr 2022
Nuclear energy has become the single largest source of low-carbon electricity in Europe, which is predicted to retain and enhance its installed capacity between now and 2045. New constructions are planned further.
By Akhlaqul Karomah
14 Apr 2022
Citizen science is an important activity undertaken by volunteers and is useful for recording and monitoring observations such as climate change in the Earth’s recent geological history. Thousands of volunteers in the UK, organized by The Rainfall Rescue project at Reading University in Berkshire, have transferred handwritten rainfall information into a computer record, providing an accurate summary of UK rainfall between 1836 and 2021.
By Georgie Lyng
12 Apr 2022
Researchers have focused on improving sustainable agricultural systems to help improve crop production and enhance weak rural economies. Biochar is considered a renewable and promising resource for soil fertility management.
By Dr. Priyom Bose
8 Apr 2022
This article looks at recent research published in Communications Biology, which looks at the climate-change-driven growth decline of European beech forests.
By Laura Thomson
6 Apr 2022
This article looks at the latest research, titled 'Predictive energetic tuning of C-Nucleophiles for the electrochemical capture of carbon dioxide', published in Iscience.
By Laura Thomson
6 Apr 2022
“Marine heatwaves” (MHWs), also defined as discrete and sustained extreme oceanic warm water episodes, have been the subject of numerous recent studies. Such disasters have devastating effects on marine biodiversity and the regional fishing economy.
By Laura Thomson
6 Apr 2022
AZoCleantech speaks to Terry Smithson from BioScapes about the company's self-contained biodiversity units developed to support rewilding and nature connectivity efforts that are critical for our planet.