Environment
How to Bury Carbon? Let Plants Do the Dirty Work
Carbon sequestration could slow or reverse human emissions—and nothing is better at sequestration than a green plant.
Making Climate Change Policy More Blue
A new push for attention to coastal communities, marine conservation, and ocean infrastructure
How Neutral Theory Altered Ideas About Biodiversity
The simple insight that most changes are random had a profound effect on genetics, evolution and ecology.
The Hidden Fruits of the Deep
Vast meadows sprawl far beyond the old boundaries drawn for seagrasses. They may provide a unique refuge for biodiversity.
New Fish Data Reveal How Evolutionary Bursts Create Species
In three bursts of adaptive change, one species of cichlid fish in Lake Tanganyika gave rise to hundreds.
Getting To The Bottom Of It All
Undersea explorer Victor Vescovo has piloted submersibles to the deepest depth of each of the world’s oceans, a feat shared by no one else on earth.
To Save the Ocean We Need Less Talk, More Action
After helping the world’s largest pension fund divest from fossil fuels, Nina Jensen tackles the ocean’s problems.
Coral Griefs: Finding Hope Amidst Loss
Marine biologists have a front-row seat to catastrophic environmental change. There are lessons in how they cope.
Imitation Is the Sincerest Form of Environmentalism
To stop destroying nature, developers are mimicking it.
The Greening of Antarctica
Few have witnessed the impact of global warming more closely than this scientist.








