The microbes were found in the Amazonian peatlands of Peru and could be valuable for sequestering carbon in the damp soils.
Complex organisms, thousands of times smaller than a grain of sand, can shape massive ecosystems and influence the fate of Earth's climate, according to a new study.
Scientists discovered microbes in Amazon peatlands that control carbon storage. If peatlands stay stable, they store carbon.
Here's a look at how weekly regional gas prices changed in Rocky Mountain region last week compared with the week prior.
Microbes in Peru’s peatlands regulate carbon cycle and influence climate Amazonian microbes could either mitigate or exacerbate climate change Environmental changes threaten balance of these crucial e
The study highlights the urgent need to safeguard global tropical wetlands from human impact. Complex organisms, thousands of times smaller than a grain of sand, play a critical role in shaping massive ecosystems and influencing Earth's climate,
Alexis Damancio Silva can’t forget the hardship in his town of Puerto Narino in far southern Colombia last year when extreme drought nearly dried up the Amazon River. Pink dolphins and fish died. Crops dried up.
Complex organisms, thousands of times smaller than a grain of sand, can shape massive ecosystems and influence the fate of Earth's climate, according to a new study.
While floating solar—the emerging practice of putting solar panels on bodies of water—is promising in its efficiency and its potential to spare agricultural and conservation lands, a new experiment finds environmental trade-offs.
Aug. 2, 2024 — Scientists confirmed that much of ozone's increase in the upper troposphere is likely due to humans. A team detected a clear signal of human ... New Study Disputes Hunga Tonga ...
With legislation such as the EU's Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) now in force, customers and resellers alike are expecting more detailed carbon emissions reporting across all three Scopes from suppliers and vendors, according to Canalys.
The Frozen Ground Under Threat Permafrost is like Earth's ancient freezer, stretching over vast regions, mainly near the North and South Poles. It holds soil, rocks, and sub-zero water, remaining frozen for two years or more.