June 21, 2019
Get your tentacles ready—Cephalopod Week is back! Plus, microbes are everywhere and have close ties to the climate. So, why are they often absent from discussion about climate change?
Get your tentacles ready—Cephalopod Week is back! Plus, microbes are everywhere and have close ties to the climate. So, why are they often absent from discussion about climate change?
6:38
Blame the jet stream and climate change. Plus: More stories in this week’s News Roundup.
7:08
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo rattles a climate change conversation with the Arctic Council—meanwhile, an early spring is snarling life in Alaska.
33:39
Climate change is predicted to have a major effect on water systems, and several cities around the world are adapting to be more resilient.
5:19
A project aims to use the artificial sea of Biosphere 2 as a testing ground for bringing back coral reefs affected by climate change.
The bristlecone pine tree can live up to 5,000 years. Will these ancients continue to survive under climate change?
Students across the world join together in the Youth Climate Strike to protest government inaction against climate change Plus, primatologist Frans de Waal catalogues the vast spectrum of emotional behaviors in animals.
7:01
Extreme conditions during climate change could cause the disappearance of stratocumulus clouds—for good.
16:44
The worst flood in California history was once thought to be incredibly rare. But new data—and climate change—are changing the equations.
3:52
Common reeds are invading New England marshlands—but could this “stubborn bully of a plant” help marshes weather climate change?