A region of West Antarctica is behaving differently from most of the continent’s ice: A large patch of ice there is thickening, unlike other parts of West Antarctica that are losing ice. Whether this thickening trend will continue affects the overall amount that melting or collapsing glaciers could raise the level of the world’s oceans. A study led by the University of Washington has discovered a new clue to this region’s behavior: A volcano under the ice sheet has left an almost 6,000-year record of the glacier’s motion.
Read more at UW Today »Kerry Naish named inaugural director of Marine Biology
In recent years, faculty, staff, and students from across the College of the Environment have played a vital role in discussing, shaping, and ultimately creating a new Marine Biology major. This exciting new offering from UW Environment will launch during the autumn quarter of 2018. “I’m impressed that the framers of this major could simultaneously create something that is stand-alone, and something that can — and will — be used as a pathway to discover over majors, including Oceanography, Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, and perhaps event Biology and Psychology,” Lisa Graumlich, dean of the College of the Environment, said.
Read more »Climate change projected to boost insect activity and crop loss, researchers say
Just a 2-degree Celsius rise in surface temperatures will push the total losses of rice, corn and wheat to approximately 213 million tons each year.
Read more at UW Today »Policy pivot: A new emphasis on restoration to protect Puget Sound
In a growing region, protecting Puget Sound is about more than recovering certain species of threatened and endangered animals with marine protected areas. It’s also about protecting the livelihoods and diverse cultures of the people who live there and balancing their needs with the needs of the natural world. A team of University of Washington researchers and their collaborators tackled this quandary in a study spanning years and miles, across Puget Sound’s rural towns and urban centers.
Read more at UW Today »California plain shows surprising winners and losers from prolonged drought
By studying this natural laboratory for many years, researchers found that drought actually helped ecological underdogs by stressing the dominant species.
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