10 news posts from August 2015

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Sierra Club ranks UW one of the greenest universities in the U.S.

Sierra Club Magazine Cover

The University of Washington was recently named one of the country’s greenest universities by the Sierra Club. Sierra magazine, the group’s official publication, put UW at No. 8 in its 2015 “Cool Schools” rankings—marking the sixth time in nine years UW has been included in the top 10. The publication ranked more than 150 schools based on an extensive survey covering campus sustainability practices, including the availability of organic, local foods, waste systems that divert trash from landfills, transportation options that keep students and staff out of cars, and more. 

Read more at UW Sustainability »

CO2 emissions change with size of streams and rivers

Sampling from one of the Wyoming study sites.

Freshwater streams and rivers actually release carbon dioxide, but the source of those emissions has been unclear to scientists for years. Now, researchers have shown that the greenhouse gas appears in streams by way of two difference sources—either as a direct pipeline for groundwater and carbon-rich soils, or from aquatic organisms releasing the gas through respiration and natural decay. David Butman, professor of environmental and forest sciences and civil and environmental engineering, is part of the team that recently found that CO2’s origins—land or life—depend largely on the size of the stream or river. 

Read more at UW Today »

Atmospheric Sciences’ Cecilia Bitz to be inducted into WA State Academy of Sciences

Old Growth Forest

In recognition of her outstanding record of scientific achievement, Cecilia M. Bitz from the College’s Department of Atmospheric Sciences will be inducted into the Washington State Academy of Sciences this fall. A physicist who studies the role that Arctic sea ice plays in shaping the climate, Bitz is interested in both our planet’s climate history and its future. Bitz and 11 other inductees from across the University of Washington will be honored for their “willingness to work on behalf of the academy” to bring top-quality scientific methods to research issues pertaining to the state of Washington. 

Read more at UW Today »

UW oceanographers explore recently erupted deep-sea volcano

White, filamentous bacteria thrive in the warm fluids seeping from pockets in the 3-month-old lava flow. White “snowblowers” drift through the water. Orange bacterial mats cover vast areas of the still cooling lava flow.

This spring, seafloor seismometers connected to shore by a new Internet cable showed that the 3,600-foot-tall underwater Axial Volcano started shaking April 24, 2015 and shook continuously for several days. University of Washington oceanographers visited the deep-ocean volcano in late July and parts of the seafloor were still warm, giving the team a glimpse into the changes that happened around the the mile-deep volcano 300 miles off the Oregon coast. 

Read more at UW Today »

New fish genus and species named by College scientists for its red, fingerlike fins

Red coloration is seen on the fin tips.

After nearly 35 years, a color-changing fish known for its red “fingers” has a proper name. Scientists from the College of the Environment’s School of Aquatic & Fisheries Sciences announced the name of a new genus and species of frogfish, small, stocky creatures found in tropical and subtropical oceans. It was first seen and collected in Australia in 1980 by a University of Washington graduate student, but the sole specimen disappeared soon after, leaving researchers no option but to shelve the discovery. 

Read more at UW Today »