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Rising temperatures are weakening the ability of wetlands to curb methane emissions, according to new research.
Warming temperatures can ramp up the activity of methane-producing bacteria in wetland soils, adding to methane emissions.
The states that border the Mississippi River have lost at least half of the wetlands they once had, including Wisconsin.
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Saving Wetlands With Floating Islands: A Wild New Approach to Climate ResilienceImagine a world where lush green islands float serenely across shimmering wetland waters, each one buzzing with life and hope ...
An example of how nature and agriculture can coexist to benefit crop production, water quality and habitat preservation was ...
In Cedar Rapids, the state department of agriculture plans to invest $177,625 as part of a planned $500,000 project by the ...
Many wetlands are disappearing, but Louisiana’s “accidental” Wax Lake Delta is growing—and informing coastal restoration ...
Rising temperatures could tip the scale in an underground battle that has raged for millennia. In the soils of Earth's ...
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Beavers and the Building of Wetland EcosystemsImagine a creature so powerful, yet so unassuming, that its daily routines can transform barren landscapes into thriving, ...
In wetland soils, two types of microbes are locked in competition. Some microbes produce methane, a greenhouse gas up to 45 times stronger than CO 2 . But other microbes consume that methane ...
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