On Feb. 9, the biological sciences department invited Dr. Katherine L. Kraschel ’06, an alumna of Mount Holyoke College and the current executive director of the Solomon Center for Health Law and Policy and lecturer in law at Yale Law School, to give a talk on “Regulating the Promises and Perils of Innovation in Reproductive Technologies.” Through this talk, the audience was given the opportunity to learn and ask questions about Kraschel’s research on reproductive technologies.
Weekly Climate News
Feb. 11, 2021
A flash flood in Uttarakhand, India, has left 31 people dead and 175 missing. The natural disaster has been linked to global warming in the Himalayas.
Developing countries usually see increases in air pollution as population and economies grow. A new study has found that Nigeria is expanding and becoming less polluted.
A research study has found that climate change has produced longer pollen seasons in the United States along with more pollen found in the air.
Peat in Ireland has been found to help to absorb greenhouse gases and aid in mitigating climate change.
Read about the environmental and climate change links to the farmers’ protests in India centered around agricultural reform.
Research continues on the link between climate change and COVID-19. Read this article on the most recent findings.
British scientists have discovered a way to recapture atmospheric carbon and turn it into jet fuel.
Due to climate change, a heatwave including temperatures reaching 100 F in Siberia has led to wildfires and an increase in the melting of sea ice.
Trees Are Becoming Less Efficient at Climate Change Mitigation
At the end of 2020, the U.K government approved planting trees in over 100 acres of a northern England peat bog. Peat bogs, areas where plants have been decaying over thousands of years into soil that traps their carbon, can store twice as much carbon dioxide as forests. When the trees were planted in northern England, they effectively dried out the soil, causing carbon to be released from the bogs and ending the project before it was ever finished.
‘Nature Under Siege’: Insect Populations Declining Due To Climate Change
In 2020, biologists Daniel Janzen and Winnie Hallwachs decided to extend their annual six-month stay in Costa Rica for ecological research due to COVID-19 restrictions. With extra time on their hands, they reflected on the declining insect population caused by the “heterogeneous blanket” of climate change. While their primary field of research is not climate change, the toll it takes on ecosystems was hard to ignore. The biologists noticed that rising temperatures led to disturbances in the insect population, affecting food webs from the bottom up.
Weekly Climate News
Feb. 4, 2021
New Zealand climate advisers are encouraging steep cuts in carbon emissions to align with the 1.5 C global warming limit.
Exxon Mobil, one of the world's largest international oil and gas companies, invested $3 billion in carbon capture.
General Motors announced a phase-out of petroleum-powered cars and trucks, promising to sell only zero-emission vehicles by 2035. The company has also set goals for carbon neutrality by 2040.
Due to long-standing environmental injustices, Chicago’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout plan put polluted communities last, which left poorer communities of color among the last to receive the vaccine.
U.S. President Joe Biden signed an executive order that strongly encourages the federal government to exclusively purchase zero-emission vehicles.
A U.S. research institution that studies the impact of climate change in the Arctic has announced that it will be significantly enhancing efforts to connect the science it funds with the communities that live in the region.
Greenland’s glacier retreat is accelerating as a result of warming seas in response to climate change.
Human pollution has been found deep in the world’s oceans. Read about it here.
Snow Storms on the East Coast Reveal Climate Change Link To Colder Winters
Climate Change Will Shift Tropical Rain Belt
The tropical rain belt, also known as the Intertropical Convergence Zone, contains equatorial areas considered the warmest in the world. The belt is a meeting point for trade winds from the planet’s Northern and Southern hemispheres, which bring in humidity and precipitation. The rain belt oscillates annually from the Northern Hemisphere to the Southern Hemisphere tropics in movement with the sun.