Hacer predicciones sobre la variabilidad del clima a menudo significa voltear al pasado para encontrar tendencias. Ahora los investigadores “paleo-climáticos” de la Universidad de Missouri (UM) han encontrado pistas en el lecho de una roca expuesta junto a una autopista de Alabama, que podría ayudar a pronosticar la variabilidad del clima. En su estudio, los investigadores verificaron evidencia de que el dióxido de carbono se redujo significativamente al final del Período Ordovícico, hace 450 millones de años, precediendo a una edad de hielo y una extinción masiva. Estos resultados ayudarán a los climatólogos a predecir mejor los futuros cambios ambientales.

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El ecoturismo, en el que los viajeros visitan entornos naturales, con la intención de apoyar los esfuerzos de conservación de financiación o impulsar las economías locales, se ha convertido cada vez más popular en los últimos años. En muchos casos se trata de una observación minuciosa de o interacción con la vida silvestre, por ejemplo cuando los turistas nadan con los animales marinos.

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Scientists have projected that the onset of spring plant growth will shift by a median of three weeks earlier over the next century, as a result of rising global temperatures.

The results, published today (Wednesday 14th October), in the journal Environmental Research Letters, have long term implications for the growing season of plants and the relationship between plants and the animals that depend upon them.

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Although researchers have known since 1999 that traces of the Ebola virus could remain in semen for months, two papers published in The New England Journal of Medicine today offer more detail about the frightening possibility that survivors of an infection could rekindle outbreaks. One study focuses on nearly 100 men in Sierra Leone who survived the dreaded viral illness, whereas the second one documents a clear case of sexual transmission of Ebola virus.

In the Sierra Leone study, researchers found Ebola viral RNA in semen samples from almost half the 93 men they tested.  The likelihood of finding viral RNA declined as time from disease onset increased: All nine men who were tested 2 to 3 months after they fell ill had evidence of Ebola RNA in their semen, but the researchers  found it in only 26 of 40 men whose infections had started 4 to 6 months earlier and in 11 of 43 men whose infections had started 7 to 9 months earlier. The result from one Ebola patient tested 10 months after disease onset was indeterminate.

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New research by biologists at the University of York shows that plant and insect diversity is more loosely linked than scientists previously believed. Insects and flowering plants are two of the most diverse groups of organism on the planet. For a long time the richness of these two lineages has been regarded as linked, with plant-feeding insect groups considered unusually species rich compared with their nearest relatives. In a new analysis, based on the most complete tree of insect relationships to date, researchers at the University have shown that there is not a simple relationship between insect diet and diversity.

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The history of wildfires over the past 2,000 years in a northern Colorado mountain range indicates that large fires will continue to increase as a result of a warming climate, according to a new study led by a University of Wyoming doctoral student.

“What our research shows is that even modest regional warming trends, like we are currently experiencing, can cause exceptionally large areas in the Rockies to be burned by wildfires,” says John Calder, a Ph.D. candidate in UW’s Program in Ecology and the Department of Geology and Geophysics.

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