Stories

Researchers Discontinue Annual Lobster Season Forecast After Complaints From Industry

May 4, 2017

A Portland-based research institute is dropping its yearly forecast of when lobster landings in Maine will begin their annual surge.

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Trump Orders Review Of National Monuments, Including The First In The Atlantic Ocean

May 4, 2017

President Donald Trump this week ordered a review of the U.S. Antiquities Act. The move could impact the Atlantic Ocean’s first-ever marine national monument, created last fall.

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Mimicking Mother Nature, UVM Scientists ‘Nudge’ Forests Toward Old Growth Conditions

May 4, 2017

In the northeast U.S., there is less than 1 percent of old growth forest left. A new University of Vermont study finds that harvesting trees in a way that mimics old growth forests not only restores critical habitat, but also stores a surprising amount of carbon.

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From Millions To Dozens: Tough Times For River Herring In Connecticut River

April 18, 2017

Millions of river herring used to return to New England’s fresh waterways to spawn, but at some collection spots today, populations have dropped into the dozens.

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Former EPA Head Says China Wins Under Trump’s Executive Order On Climate

April 10, 2017

The former administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under President Barack Obama was in Connecticut on Friday. Gina McCarthy spoke to students and climate activists at Wesleyan University and was critical of the policies of President Donald Trump.

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Supermarket Chain Transforms Old Onion Rings (And Other Expired Goodies) Into Electricity

March 29, 2017

Each year billions of pounds of food go to waste. That means billions of dollars, too. The Environmental Protection Agency says more food reaches landfills and incinerators than any other one material in our trash. And for supermarkets, that leftover food equates to lost dollars.

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Young New England Stars On Display At U.S. Ski Championships

March 28, 2017

After a dismal, nearly snowless winter last year, New England’s ski resorts are winding up a much better season. And some of its young ​athletes are having ​a pretty good​ run too.

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Does Climate Change Mean I Can Start My Seedlings Early?

March 22, 2017

Those early hints of spring can call to a gardener like a siren song. Yet the urge to get one’s seeds into dirt can be dangerous: most seedlings won’t survive a single frost. To help with that, gardeners use 30-year averages that predict when the last frost will probably occur. The thing is, in New England, climate change has temperatures rising relatively quickly.

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Along Highways, Wildlife Appears To Be Breaking Evolutionary Speed Limits

March 22, 2017

When you think of evolution, you might picture the classic textbook illustration “March of Progress” by Rudolph Zallinger. It shows how, over 25 million years, our human ancestors slowly transform from hunched apes into modern homo sapiens. But now, thanks in part to roads and highways, lots of evolution happens much quicker than that.

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Is Spring Getting Longer in New Hampshire?

March 20, 2017

Monday is the vernal equinox: that’s the beginning of spring, according to astronomers. For ecologists, spring isn’t just a matter of the earth’s rotation around the sun.  It has to do with events like melting snow, and the tree canopy.  According to new research from the University of New Hampshire, that ecological spring, also known as the “vernal window,” may be getting longer.

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