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#environmentalchanges — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #environmentalchanges, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Rebuilding Gaza must begin with the environment

    Energy systems also intersect with environmental sustainability. In crisis settings, reliance on diesel generators and improvised fuel sources…
    #Environment #crisis #environmentalchallenges #Environmentalchanges #Gaza #GazaStrip
    europesays.com/2780019/

  2. 【💡Editor's Choice】
    Volatilization-related ammonia and fossil fuel nitrogen oxides emission sources are the major contributors to #AtmosphericNitrogenDeposition in the Mengshan area according to the #Mosses record.

    #EnvironmentalChanges | #StableNitrogenIsotope | #Biomonitoring

    doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtaf039

  3. Native Knowledge: What Ecologists Are Learning from Indigenous People

    From Alaska to Australia, scientists are turning to the knowledge of traditional people for a deeper understanding of the natural world. What they are learning is helping them discover more about everything from melting Arctic ice, to protecting fish stocks, to controlling wildfires.

    By Jim Robbins • April 26, 2018

    Excerpt: "The #Skolt #Sami people of #Finland, for example, participated in a study that was published in the journal Science last year, which adopted indicators of #EnvironmentalChanges based on #TEK. The Sami have seen and documented a decline in salmon in the #NäätämöRiver, for instance. Now, based on their knowledge, they are adapting – reducing the number of seine nets they use to catch fish, restoring spawning sites, and also taking more pike, which prey on young salmon, as part of their catch. The project is part of a co-management process between the Sami and the government of Finland.

    "The project has also gathered information from the Sami about insects, which are temperature dependent and provide an important indicator of a changing Arctic. The Sami have witnessed dramatic changes in the range of insects that are making their way north. The scarbaeid beetle, for example, was documented by Sami people as the invader arrived in the forests of Finland and Norway, far north of its customary range. It has also become part of the Sami oral history.

    "It’s not only in the Arctic. Around the world there are efforts to make use of traditional wisdom to gain a better and deeper understanding of the planet – and there is sometimes a lot at stake."

    Read more:
    e360.yale.edu/features/native-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Science #TraditionalKnowledge #Biodiversity #ForestGardeners #Australia #IndigenousPeoples #IndigenousKnowledge #TraditionalEcologicalKnowledge #TEK

  4. Native Knowledge: What Ecologists Are Learning from Indigenous People

    From Alaska to Australia, scientists are turning to the knowledge of traditional people for a deeper understanding of the natural world. What they are learning is helping them discover more about everything from melting Arctic ice, to protecting fish stocks, to controlling wildfires.

    By Jim Robbins • April 26, 2018

    Excerpt: "The #Skolt #Sami people of #Finland, for example, participated in a study that was published in the journal Science last year, which adopted indicators of #EnvironmentalChanges based on #TEK. The Sami have seen and documented a decline in salmon in the #NäätämöRiver, for instance. Now, based on their knowledge, they are adapting – reducing the number of seine nets they use to catch fish, restoring spawning sites, and also taking more pike, which prey on young salmon, as part of their catch. The project is part of a co-management process between the Sami and the government of Finland.

    "The project has also gathered information from the Sami about insects, which are temperature dependent and provide an important indicator of a changing Arctic. The Sami have witnessed dramatic changes in the range of insects that are making their way north. The scarbaeid beetle, for example, was documented by Sami people as the invader arrived in the forests of Finland and Norway, far north of its customary range. It has also become part of the Sami oral history.

    "It’s not only in the Arctic. Around the world there are efforts to make use of traditional wisdom to gain a better and deeper understanding of the planet – and there is sometimes a lot at stake."

    Read more:
    e360.yale.edu/features/native-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Science #TraditionalKnowledge #Biodiversity #ForestGardeners #Australia #IndigenousPeoples #IndigenousKnowledge #TraditionalEcologicalKnowledge #TEK

  5. Native Knowledge: What Ecologists Are Learning from Indigenous People

    From Alaska to Australia, scientists are turning to the knowledge of traditional people for a deeper understanding of the natural world. What they are learning is helping them discover more about everything from melting Arctic ice, to protecting fish stocks, to controlling wildfires.

    By Jim Robbins • April 26, 2018

    Excerpt: "The #Skolt #Sami people of #Finland, for example, participated in a study that was published in the journal Science last year, which adopted indicators of #EnvironmentalChanges based on #TEK. The Sami have seen and documented a decline in salmon in the #NäätämöRiver, for instance. Now, based on their knowledge, they are adapting – reducing the number of seine nets they use to catch fish, restoring spawning sites, and also taking more pike, which prey on young salmon, as part of their catch. The project is part of a co-management process between the Sami and the government of Finland.

    "The project has also gathered information from the Sami about insects, which are temperature dependent and provide an important indicator of a changing Arctic. The Sami have witnessed dramatic changes in the range of insects that are making their way north. The scarbaeid beetle, for example, was documented by Sami people as the invader arrived in the forests of Finland and Norway, far north of its customary range. It has also become part of the Sami oral history.

    "It’s not only in the Arctic. Around the world there are efforts to make use of traditional wisdom to gain a better and deeper understanding of the planet – and there is sometimes a lot at stake."

    Read more:
    e360.yale.edu/features/native-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Science #TraditionalKnowledge #Biodiversity #ForestGardeners #Australia #IndigenousPeoples #IndigenousKnowledge #TraditionalEcologicalKnowledge #TEK

  6. Native Knowledge: What Ecologists Are Learning from Indigenous People

    From Alaska to Australia, scientists are turning to the knowledge of traditional people for a deeper understanding of the natural world. What they are learning is helping them discover more about everything from melting Arctic ice, to protecting fish stocks, to controlling wildfires.

    By Jim Robbins • April 26, 2018

    Excerpt: "The #Skolt #Sami people of #Finland, for example, participated in a study that was published in the journal Science last year, which adopted indicators of #EnvironmentalChanges based on #TEK. The Sami have seen and documented a decline in salmon in the #NäätämöRiver, for instance. Now, based on their knowledge, they are adapting – reducing the number of seine nets they use to catch fish, restoring spawning sites, and also taking more pike, which prey on young salmon, as part of their catch. The project is part of a co-management process between the Sami and the government of Finland.

    "The project has also gathered information from the Sami about insects, which are temperature dependent and provide an important indicator of a changing Arctic. The Sami have witnessed dramatic changes in the range of insects that are making their way north. The scarbaeid beetle, for example, was documented by Sami people as the invader arrived in the forests of Finland and Norway, far north of its customary range. It has also become part of the Sami oral history.

    "It’s not only in the Arctic. Around the world there are efforts to make use of traditional wisdom to gain a better and deeper understanding of the planet – and there is sometimes a lot at stake."

    Read more:
    e360.yale.edu/features/native-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Science #TraditionalKnowledge #Biodiversity #ForestGardeners #Australia #IndigenousPeoples #IndigenousKnowledge #TraditionalEcologicalKnowledge #TEK

  7. Native Knowledge: What Ecologists Are Learning from Indigenous People

    From Alaska to Australia, scientists are turning to the knowledge of traditional people for a deeper understanding of the natural world. What they are learning is helping them discover more about everything from melting Arctic ice, to protecting fish stocks, to controlling wildfires.

    By Jim Robbins • April 26, 2018

    Excerpt: "The #Skolt #Sami people of #Finland, for example, participated in a study that was published in the journal Science last year, which adopted indicators of #EnvironmentalChanges based on #TEK. The Sami have seen and documented a decline in salmon in the #NäätämöRiver, for instance. Now, based on their knowledge, they are adapting – reducing the number of seine nets they use to catch fish, restoring spawning sites, and also taking more pike, which prey on young salmon, as part of their catch. The project is part of a co-management process between the Sami and the government of Finland.

    "The project has also gathered information from the Sami about insects, which are temperature dependent and provide an important indicator of a changing Arctic. The Sami have witnessed dramatic changes in the range of insects that are making their way north. The scarbaeid beetle, for example, was documented by Sami people as the invader arrived in the forests of Finland and Norway, far north of its customary range. It has also become part of the Sami oral history.

    "It’s not only in the Arctic. Around the world there are efforts to make use of traditional wisdom to gain a better and deeper understanding of the planet – and there is sometimes a lot at stake."

    Read more:
    e360.yale.edu/features/native-

    #SolarPunkSunday #Science #TraditionalKnowledge #Biodiversity #ForestGardeners #Australia #IndigenousPeoples #IndigenousKnowledge #TraditionalEcologicalKnowledge #TEK

  8. #Trees absorb the #greenhousegas #CO2 and release oxygen, thus contributing to a better #environment. Yet, isolated street trees are more susceptible to disease than those in #forests, which are embedded in complex #forestecosystems with a #treespecies #diversity.
    In light of #globalwarming and #anthropogenic #environmentalchanges, R. C. Gatti et al. (2022) estimated the number of tree #speciesonEarth.
    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Ref
    doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2115329119

    #Photos
    ©S F. Wirth

  9. #Trees absorb the #greenhousegas #CO2 and release oxygen, thus contributing to a better #environment. Yet, isolated street trees are more susceptible to disease than those in #forests, which are embedded in complex #forestecosystems with a #treespecies #diversity.
    In light of #globalwarming and #anthropogenic #environmentalchanges, R. C. Gatti et al. (2022) estimated the number of tree #speciesonEarth.
    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Ref
    doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2115329119

    #Photos
    ©S F. Wirth

  10. #Trees absorb the #greenhousegas #CO2 and release oxygen, thus contributing to a better #environment. Yet, isolated street trees are more susceptible to disease than those in #forests, which are embedded in complex #forestecosystems with a #treespecies #diversity.
    In light of #globalwarming and #anthropogenic #environmentalchanges, R. C. Gatti et al. (2022) estimated the number of tree #speciesonEarth.
    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Ref
    doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2115329119

    #Photos
    ©S F. Wirth

  11. #Trees absorb the #greenhousegas #CO2 and release oxygen, thus contributing to a better #environment. Yet, isolated street trees are more susceptible to disease than those in #forests, which are embedded in complex #forestecosystems with a #treespecies #diversity.
    In light of #globalwarming and #anthropogenic #environmentalchanges, R. C. Gatti et al. (2022) estimated the number of tree #speciesonEarth.
    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Ref
    doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2115329119

    #Photos
    ©S F. Wirth

  12. #Trees absorb the #greenhousegas #CO2 and release oxygen, thus contributing to a better #environment. Yet, isolated street trees are more susceptible to disease than those in #forests, which are embedded in complex #forestecosystems with a #treespecies #diversity.
    In light of #globalwarming and #anthropogenic #environmentalchanges, R. C. Gatti et al. (2022) estimated the number of tree #speciesonEarth.
    © #StefanFWirth #Berlin 2025

    Ref
    doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2115329119

    #Photos
    ©S F. Wirth

  13. ✳️ #Mosses record historical variations of #AtmosphericNitrogenDeposition in a mountain area of northern China

    Results:
    1️⃣ 2012~2018: moss nitrogen(N) contents ⬆️, moss N isotope values ⬇️;
    2️⃣ 2012~2022: total N deposition fluxes ⬆️.

    Main sources:
    1️⃣ volatilization-related ammonia
    2️⃣ fossil fuel N oxides emission

    #EnvironmentalChanges | #StableNitrogenIsotope | #Biomonitoring

    doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtaf039

  14. #Jellyfish are taking over the #oceans due to #ClimateChange

    Written by Inaara Thawer
    on Nov 1, 2022

    "Climate change and human activity have impacts that ripple through all ecosystems. Their negative effects can lead to population imbalances across these various #ecosystems. While populations of many species are declining because they are unable to survive the rapid #EnvironmentalChanges, this is often not the case for venomous aquatic life like #SeaUrchins and jellyfish. In fact, these populations are increasing across the globe, with damaging effects on other living #AquaticOrganisms and human activity."

    View slideshow here:
    inhabitat.com/jellyfish-are-ta

    #GlobalWarming #WarmingOceans
    #ChangingOceans #OceansAreLife #OceanTemperatures #ClimateCrisis

  15. #Jellyfish are taking over the #oceans due to #ClimateChange

    Written by Inaara Thawer
    on Nov 1, 2022

    "Climate change and human activity have impacts that ripple through all ecosystems. Their negative effects can lead to population imbalances across these various #ecosystems. While populations of many species are declining because they are unable to survive the rapid #EnvironmentalChanges, this is often not the case for venomous aquatic life like #SeaUrchins and jellyfish. In fact, these populations are increasing across the globe, with damaging effects on other living #AquaticOrganisms and human activity."

    View slideshow here:
    inhabitat.com/jellyfish-are-ta

    #GlobalWarming #WarmingOceans
    #ChangingOceans #OceansAreLife #OceanTemperatures #ClimateCrisis

  16. #Jellyfish are taking over the #oceans due to #ClimateChange

    Written by Inaara Thawer
    on Nov 1, 2022

    "Climate change and human activity have impacts that ripple through all ecosystems. Their negative effects can lead to population imbalances across these various #ecosystems. While populations of many species are declining because they are unable to survive the rapid #EnvironmentalChanges, this is often not the case for venomous aquatic life like #SeaUrchins and jellyfish. In fact, these populations are increasing across the globe, with damaging effects on other living #AquaticOrganisms and human activity."

    View slideshow here:
    inhabitat.com/jellyfish-are-ta

    #GlobalWarming #WarmingOceans
    #ChangingOceans #OceansAreLife #OceanTemperatures #ClimateCrisis

  17. #Jellyfish are taking over the #oceans due to #ClimateChange

    Written by Inaara Thawer
    on Nov 1, 2022

    "Climate change and human activity have impacts that ripple through all ecosystems. Their negative effects can lead to population imbalances across these various #ecosystems. While populations of many species are declining because they are unable to survive the rapid #EnvironmentalChanges, this is often not the case for venomous aquatic life like #SeaUrchins and jellyfish. In fact, these populations are increasing across the globe, with damaging effects on other living #AquaticOrganisms and human activity."

    View slideshow here:
    inhabitat.com/jellyfish-are-ta

    #GlobalWarming #WarmingOceans
    #ChangingOceans #OceansAreLife #OceanTemperatures #ClimateCrisis

  18. #Jellyfish are taking over the #oceans due to #ClimateChange

    Written by Inaara Thawer
    on Nov 1, 2022

    "Climate change and human activity have impacts that ripple through all ecosystems. Their negative effects can lead to population imbalances across these various #ecosystems. While populations of many species are declining because they are unable to survive the rapid #EnvironmentalChanges, this is often not the case for venomous aquatic life like #SeaUrchins and jellyfish. In fact, these populations are increasing across the globe, with damaging effects on other living #AquaticOrganisms and human activity."

    View slideshow here:
    inhabitat.com/jellyfish-are-ta

    #GlobalWarming #WarmingOceans
    #ChangingOceans #OceansAreLife #OceanTemperatures #ClimateCrisis

  19. The variation and plasticity of #LeafMorphology play a pivotal role in the response to #EnvironmentalChanges for plant individuals. Rong Tang et al. investigated #IntraspecificVariation in leaf morphology of three widespread woody species along #ClimaticGradients.
    1️⃣ Leaf morphology is influenced by #Climate.
    2️⃣ The variation trend of leaves #RelativeWidth during leaf enlargement is influenced by climate.
    Details: doi.org/10.1093/jpe/rtae091

  20. More than 100 million people in the United States on Friday were living under hazardous heat conditions where the temperatures reached at least 37 degrees Ce...
    Newark residents experience 'heat island' as heatwave continues
  21. More than 100 million people in the United States on Friday were living under hazardous heat conditions where the temperatures reached at least 37 degrees Ce...
    Newark residents experience 'heat island' as heatwave continues
  22. More than 100 million people in the United States on Friday were living under hazardous heat conditions where the temperatures reached at least 37 degrees Ce...
    Newark residents experience 'heat island' as heatwave continues
  23. More than 100 million people in the United States on Friday were living under hazardous heat conditions where the temperatures reached at least 37 degrees Ce...
    Newark residents experience 'heat island' as heatwave continues
  24. More than 100 million people in the United States on Friday were living under hazardous heat conditions where the temperatures reached at least 37 degrees Ce...
    Newark residents experience 'heat island' as heatwave continues
  25. "Cities under #ClimateThreat: #Venice#Philadelphia" (the Institute for Smart and Healthy Cities at Thomas Jefferson University and the Università Iuav di Venezia) shows large physical models from Venice and Philadelphia showcasing speculative #urban #redevelopment projects and predicted #EnvironmentalChanges to the year 2050. Emergent digital techniques indicate the interrelationship between #climate, #urbanization, #PopulationHealth, and other indicators."
    jefferson.edu/institute-for-sm

  26. "Cities under #ClimateThreat: #Venice#Philadelphia" (the Institute for Smart and Healthy Cities at Thomas Jefferson University and the Università Iuav di Venezia) shows large physical models from Venice and Philadelphia showcasing speculative #urban #redevelopment projects and predicted #EnvironmentalChanges to the year 2050. Emergent digital techniques indicate the interrelationship between #climate, #urbanization, #PopulationHealth, and other indicators."
    jefferson.edu/institute-for-sm

  27. "Cities under #ClimateThreat: #Venice#Philadelphia" (the Institute for Smart and Healthy Cities at Thomas Jefferson University and the Università Iuav di Venezia) shows large physical models from Venice and Philadelphia showcasing speculative #urban #redevelopment projects and predicted #EnvironmentalChanges to the year 2050. Emergent digital techniques indicate the interrelationship between #climate, #urbanization, #PopulationHealth, and other indicators."
    jefferson.edu/institute-for-sm