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Showing posts with label environmental impact. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environmental impact. Show all posts

Monday, July 26, 2021

New Research Finds Time Spent Among Trees Might Help Kids' Brains Grow And Develop [Science Alert, July 2021]

Title:
New Research Finds Time Spent Among Trees Might Help Kids' Brains Grow And Develop

Author:
Carly Cassella

Published:
Science Alert, 24 July 2021

From the article:
A long-term study among 3,568 students in London, between the ages of 9 and 15, has found those kids who spent more time near woodlands showed improved cognitive performance and mental health in adolescence.

Friday, April 2, 2021

Giant desert solar farms might have unintended climate consequences [GreenBiz, 2021]

Title:
Giant desert solar farms might have unintended climate consequences
 
Authors:
Zhengyao Lu
Researcher in Physical Geography, Lund University
&
Benjamin Smith
Director of Research Hawkesbusy Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University

Published:
GreenBiz, 25 March 2021

From the article:
Researchers imagine it might be possible to transform the world’s largest desert, the Sahara, into a giant solar farm, capable of meeting four times the world’s current energy demand. Blueprints have been drawn up for projects in Tunisia and Morocco that would supply electricity for millions of households in Europe.

Thursday, February 11, 2021

BOOK DISCUSSION: Biological Invasions in South Africa (an encyclopaedic volume)

Title:
Invasion science in South Africa: The definitive collection 
 
Author: 
Philip E. Hulme 
Bio-Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, Lincoln, New Zealand 
 
Published: 
South African Journal of Science, Volume 117, Number 1 / 2, 29 January 2021 
 
From the article: 
Biological invasions by alien pests, weeds and pathogens are a global phenomenon, with increasing impacts on the environment, economy and human health. Traditionally, the poster children of the impacts of biological invasions have been oceanic islands such as Hawai’i and New Zealand, with continental areas being viewed as less prone to the ravages of invasive alien species. Yet this perspective is rapidly changing as continental areas begin to address the threat of biological invasions. For over a decade, the DSI-NRF Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology (CIB) in South Africa has played a leading role in this changing perspective through outstanding research to reduce the rates and biodiversity impacts of biological invasions by furthering scientific understanding and predictive capability. Now, the major advances in current understanding of biological invasions delivered by the many researchers affiliated to the CIB have been captured in an encyclopaedic volume entitled Biological Invasions in South Africa.