
nature
Millions Of Monarch Butterflies Killed On Texas Highways
Nov 5, 2019 • 4 min. readMonarch numbers have declined about 82% over the last 23 years, and road mortality can significantly contribute to their dwindling numbers.
Texas A&M students will plant more than 700 trees in the Bryan-College Station area as one of the largest student-run environmental service projects in the country.
John Nielsen-Gammon, Texas A&M Regents Professor and Texas State Climatologist, says September 2019 broke the record for warmest average temperatures that was set in September 1911.
Planting in the fall will give your wildflowers time to germinate and gain a good root system before going dormant during the winter.
Texas A&M Geography’s Wendy Jepson co-authored new research quantifying experiences of household water insecurity in an equivalent way across low- and middle-income countries.
Are There Climate Change Clues In Texas Hill Country Cave Stalagmites?
Oct 2, 2019 • 3 min. readA Texas A&M geography researcher and students are studying calcite in Texas caves to evaluate Southern Great Plains climatology.
Humankind Did Not Live With A High-Carbon Dioxide Atmosphere Until 1965
Sep 25, 2019 • 4 min. readA study co-authored by a Texas A&M researcher determined that Earth’s carbon dioxide atmospheric concentrations averaged 230 parts per million for 2.5 million years; today’s levels are about 410 parts per million.
A Texas A&M anthropology professor is part of a team that examined how humans have changed everything about our planet.
Category 5 storms don’t often occur in the Atlantic, but there has been a worldwide growth in the small number that do reach extreme intensities.
Texas A&M Team Finds New Ways For Coral Reef Ecosystems To Grow
Aug 29, 2019 • 5 min. readResearchers examined particulate organic matter and how it affects declining coral reefs in Hawaii.