Like clockwork, June gloom is upon us. What exactly causes the “light gray days” of early summer, and how does it lead to some of the driest conditions in the nation? ATMO‘s Cliff Mass discusses.
Read more »New research in Bering Sea highlights systemic ecosystem changes with sea ice shifts - NOAA
Bering Sea marine mammals, birds, and fish are shifting where they eat, bear their young, and make their homes in response to changes in sea ice extent and duration. The details of these findings are now published in a special edition of the journal Deep Sea Research II, as a partnership between the NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory (PMEL), NOAA Alaska Fisheries Science Center (AFSC), the Joint Institute for the Study of the Atmosphere and Ocean (JISAO), and several other academic and federal partners.
Read more »Salmon farming's worst enemy? - Seattle Times
“The virus lady”, she’s known as. Alexandra Morton stunned U.S. scientists last fall with trace evidence found in wild salmon of a virus that killed millions of farmed fish in Chile. That was just the beginning. Read more about Morton here; SAFS‘ Tom Quinn and Ray Hilborn are quoted.
Read more »Long-lost photos document sensitivity of Greenland's glaciers - LiveScience
Leveraging a set of photographs that had been tucked away for decades, researchers show the sensitivity of Greenland’s glaciers as they responded to the warm and cool periods of the 20th century. The Polar Science Center‘s Benjamin Smith is quoted. Read more here.
Read more »Eat your hake and have it too -- Op Ed in NYT
SAFS‘ Ray Hilborn published an op ed in the New York Times about what it means for a fishery to be sustainable. Read it here!
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