Maximizing cereal crop yields in sub-Saharan Africa would still fail to meet the region’s skyrocketing grain demand by 2050, according to a new study from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Wageningen University and multiple African institutions.
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Scientists devise new method to give 'most robust' estimate of Maasai Mara lion numbers
Scientists based at Oxford University have created a new method for counting lions that they say is the most robust yet devised.
Using the Maasai Mara National Reserve and surrounding conservancies in Kenya as a case study, they estimate there to be 420 lions over the age of one in this key territory. At almost 17 lions per 100 square kilometres, that represents one of the highest densities anywhere in Africa.
How noise pollution impacts marine ecology
Marine ecologists have shown how noise pollution is changing the behaviour of marine animals - and how its elimination will significantly help build their resilience. Laura Briggs reports.
Building up a library of sound from marine creatures including cod, whelks and sea slugs is important to helping build resilience in species affected by noise pollution, according to Exeter University's Associate Professor in Marine Biology and Global Change Dr Steve Simpson.
Human noise factors including busy shipping lanes, wind farms and water tourism can all impact on the calls of various species - including cod which relies on sound for finding a mate with their "song".
Warming global temperatures may not affect carbon stored deep in northern peatlands, study says
Deep stores of carbon in northern peatlands may be safe from rising temperatures, according to a team of researchers from several U.S.-based institutions.
And that is good news for now, the researchers said.
Florida State University research scientist Rachel Wilson and University of Oregon graduate student Anya Hopple are the first authors on a new study published today in Nature Communications. The study details experiments suggesting that carbon stored in peat—a highly organic material found in marsh or damp regions—may not succumb to the Earth's warming as easily as scientists thought.
Surge in methane emissions threatens efforts to slow climate change
Global concentrations of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas and cause of climate change, are now growing faster in the atmosphere than at any other time in the past two decades.
That is the message of a team of international scientists in an editorial published 12 December in the journal Environmental Research Letters. The group reports that methane concentrations in the air began to surge around 2007 and grew precipitously in 2014 and 2015.
El hielo marino alcanzó mÃnimos récord en noviembre
Las temperaturas inusualmente altas y el cálido océano han llevado a una extensión récord del hielo marino en el Ártico en noviembre, según científicos del Centro Nacional de Datos de Nieve y Hielo (NSIDC) de la Universidad de Colorado Boulder. En el Hemisferio Sur, la extensión del hielo marino antártico también alcanzó un mínimo récord para el mes, causado por temperaturas moderadamente cálidas y un cambio rápido en los vientos circumpolares.