Climate, Environment, Conservation & Agriculture

Climate, Environment, Conservation & Agriculture
Record Heat and the Human Fingerprint
Europe is currently experiencing a record-shattering heatwave, with temperatures exceeding 35°C for over 100 million people. Scientists have determined this event would be virtually impossible without human-caused climate change, which has led to significant infrastructure failures, such as major power outages in France. This aligns with a broader global trend: human-caused warming reached 1.37°C in 2025, and the Earth's energy imbalance—the rate at which it accumulates heat—has doubled in recent decades.
The Arrival of a Major El Niño
NASA satellite observations have confirmed that El Niño conditions are officially underway in the tropical Pacific. Current forecasts suggest a potentially very strong event that may exacerbate global temperature extremes and disrupt rainfall patterns. To maintain monitoring accuracy as baseline ocean temperatures rise, scientists have introduced a new "Relative Niño Index."
Cryosphere and Ecosystems in Crisis
Several critical tipping points have been reached regarding the world's ice and frozen ground:
Glacial Loss: Swiss glaciers have exhausted their protective snow reserves, leaving them vulnerable to accelerated summer melting and threatening the extinction of specialized species that rely on these habitats.
Permafrost Feedbacks: Artificial permafrost labs in the Arctic are helping researchers simulate how thawing ground releases feedbacks that could further accelerate global warming.
Temperate Extinctions: New data indicates that climate-driven local extinctions are becoming particularly severe in temperate regions, impacting thousands of plant and animal species.
Scientific Breakthroughs and Mitigation Risks
Research is uncovering new solutions alongside potential risks:
Agricultural Innovation: Scientists are exploring the use of CRISPR and genetic technologies to restore micronutrient density in staple crops threatened by climate stress. Furthermore, a new method for measuring DNA-bound phosphorus in soil may improve sustainable farming and fertility.
Carbon Removal Risks: Researchers warn that enhancing seawater alkalinity for carbon removal could backfire if implemented too aggressively, potentially triggering chemical reactions that undermine sequestration efforts.
Monitoring Gaps: Vital climate records are at risk due to the planned removal of major ocean observatories and reduced support for global monitoring networks.
Social and Policy Challenges
Experts emphasize the need for more inclusive and coordinated climate action:
Inclusivity: Adaptation strategies must better include the 1.3 billion disabled people worldwide and prioritize the lived experiences of First Nations communities, who are disproportionately affected by extreme heat.
Policy Alignment: Analysts warn that fragmented environmental policies—where climate and nature goals are not aligned—risk costly failures and could inadvertently harm the very ecosystems they aim to protect. .
Weather, El Niño, and Climate Forecasting
The Sun's Outbursts May Briefly Weaken Rain and Snow Events Across North America
Article link | Rebecca Irelan / University of New Hampshire | Phys.org | June 28, 2026
Researchers report evidence that solar outbursts may briefly weaken some rain and snow events across North America, adding a possible space-weather link to short-term weather behavior.
El Niño Is Underway, Satellite Observations Show
Article link | NASA | Phys.org | June 21, 2026
NASA satellite observations show that El Niño conditions are developing, with sea-surface-height patterns indicating changes in the tropical Pacific.
Super El Niños May Lose Their Punch in a Warming World
Article link | Sayan Tribedi | Phys.org | June 16, 2026
Climate-model research suggests that future extreme El Niño events may have different atmospheric impacts as the planet warms, making their effects less distinct from ordinary El Niño events in some regions.
New Relative Niño Index Introduces More Robust Way to Measure El Niño Strength
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
A new Relative Niño index aims to provide a more climate-robust measure of El Niño strength as warming changes ocean-temperature baselines.
A Very Strong El Niño Is Approaching. Here's What We Can Expect
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Explainer on forecasts suggesting a strong El Niño may develop, with discussion of how El Niño affects global weather, heat, rainfall, and climate extremes.
Are We Really Headed for a 'Super' El Niño? What the Science Says
Article link | Alexandra Witze | Nature | May 14, 2026
Nature interviews climate researchers about whether a coming El Niño could become especially intense and how scientists would know.
Extreme Heat and Human Impacts
Europe's Extreme Heat Would Be Impossible Without Climate Change, Scientists Say
Article link | Phys.org / Associated Press | Phys.org | June 26, 2026
Article reports on rapid-attribution research finding that Europe's late-June heat wave would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change.
Extreme Heat Is Harming Remote First Nations Communities. It's Time We Listen to Them
Article link | Manoj Bhatta, Gloria Baliva and Supriya Mathew / The Conversation | Phys.org | June 25, 2026
Article explains how extreme heat is affecting remote First Nations communities and argues that climate adaptation must listen to local knowledge and lived experience.
Heat Stress Exposure Climbed From 16% to 22% Worldwide Over 50 Years
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 22, 2026
Article reports that global exposure to dangerous heat stress has risen sharply over the past half-century, driven by climate change and population growth.
Major Power Outage in France as Europe Wilts Under Heat
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Article reports on infrastructure stress during Europe's heat wave, including a major power outage in France as extreme temperatures strained communities and energy systems.
Heat Wave Bakes 100 Million Europeans at Over 35C
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Article reports that more than 100 million Europeans were forecast to face temperatures above 35C during a severe heat wave linked by scientists to human-driven climate change.
Europe's Record Heatwave: Does the Continent Have a New Climate?
Article link | Edward Chen | Nature | June 2026
Nature asks climate researchers whether recent extreme European summer heat is becoming part of a new climate pattern for cities such as London, Paris, and Berlin.
Europe Heat Wave Shattering Temperature Records
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
The World Meteorological Organization said Europe's heat wave was breaking temperature records and producing major health impacts across the continent.
Heat Dome over Europe Scorches UK, France, Spain
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Climate and weather article about a European heat dome producing extreme temperatures across the UK, France, and Spain.
Glaciers, Permafrost, and Polar Science
Thawing Ground, Future Questions: Decoding Arctic Climate in a Lab
Article link | Jamie Oberdick / Pennsylvania State University | Phys.org | June 27, 2026
Researchers use artificial permafrost in a lab to study how thawing Arctic ground behaves, helping scientists understand climate feedbacks tied to frozen soil and warming.
Swiss Glaciers Have Exhausted Their Snow Reserves
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 26, 2026
Climate article reports that Swiss glaciers have already lost their protective snow reserves, increasing the risk of severe summer melt.
When Glaciers Vanish, So Does the Hidden Life They Support
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 16, 2026
Article explains that glacier-dependent species face major habitat losses as warming melts ice, with some specialist organisms at risk of local extinction.
Extreme Weather Is Making Antarctic Research Harder, but New Technology Is Providing Some Answers
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Article on how worsening Antarctic extreme weather is complicating field research while newer technologies may help researchers collect needed climate data.
Evidence for Endemism and Local Adaptation in Antarctic Soil Bacteria
Article link | Noah Fierer et al. | bioRxiv | May 6, 2026
Preprint investigating whether Antarctic soil bacteria are endemic to the continent and whether they show evidence of local adaptation.
Oceans, Coasts, and Marine Ecosystems
Coastal and Estuarine Carbon Removal Technique May Backfire When Pushed Too Far
Article link | Hannah Bird | Phys.org | June 27, 2026
Scientists studying seawater alkalinity enhancement find that adding too much alkalinity can trigger reactions that undermine carbon-removal efforts in coastal and estuarine environments.
Atlantic and Pacific May Follow Different Rules on Long-Term Ocean Temperature Change
Article link | Florida State University / Phys.org | June 17, 2026
Researchers found that long-term Atlantic temperature changes are more closely tied to human-caused emissions, while Pacific changes appear more strongly shaped by natural internal variability.
Satellite Data Reveal Southern Ocean Vertical Currents Diving 3,000 Feet Below Surface
Article link | Paul Arnold | Phys.org | June 9, 2026
Ocean-science article reports that satellite data can reveal deep vertical currents in the Southern Ocean that move heat, carbon, nutrients, and gases.
Atlantic 'Cold Blob' Caused by Weakening Ocean Current System That's Likely Nearing a Tipping Point
Article link | Robert Egan | Phys.org | June 7, 2026
Climate article reporting that the North Atlantic cold blob may be linked to a weakening ocean current system and could signal movement toward a major tipping point.
Two Decades of Data Show That Climate Change Is Transforming Biscayne Bay
Article link | Diana Udel / University of Miami / Phys.org | June 1, 2026
Article on research showing that Biscayne Bay has become warmer, saltier, and more acidic over two decades, with implications for coastal ecosystems and South Florida communities.
Ocean Warming Above 1.5°C Triggered Year-Round Marine Heat Waves
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Article reports that ocean warming above 1.5°C can trigger persistent marine heat-wave conditions, raising risks for coral reefs, fisheries, and ocean ecosystems.
NASA Satellites Reveal Major Ocean Nutrient Stress
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Ocean-science article on satellite evidence of nutrient stress in marine systems, with implications for ocean productivity, food webs, and climate-linked ecosystem change.
The Network Watching the World's Oceans Is Under Pressure-Just When It's Needed Most
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Article about global ocean-monitoring systems and the growing strain on the networks needed to track climate, marine ecosystems, and ocean change.
Study Reveals How Offshore Structures Can Help-or Hinder-Marine Ecosystems
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Marine-ecology article examining when offshore infrastructure supports habitat formation and when it disrupts ecosystems.
Expedition to Hess Rise in the Northwest Pacific Begins
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Ocean-science article about an expedition to Hess Rise, a remote Northwest Pacific undersea plateau with geological and biological research interest.
Sharks, Rays, and MPAs: A Global Assessment of Marine Protected Area Coverage
Article link | David Shiffman shared preprint | bioRxiv | May 7, 2026
Preprint discussed as finding that only a small share of threatened sharks have even minimal range coverage inside marine protected areas.
Climate Indicators and Earth Systems
Earth's Energy Imbalance Has Doubled - Here's Why That Matters
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 11, 2026
Climate article explains that Earth's energy imbalance has doubled in recent decades, meaning the planet is storing more heat and driving future warming.
Global Warming Hit 1.37°C in 2025, With Earth Accumulating Heat at Record Rate
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 10, 2026
Article summarizes updated climate indicators showing human-caused warming reached 1.37°C in 2025 and could pass 1.5°C within several years.
The Fifth National Climate Assessment: Report Shows Change Is Here, but There Is Hope
Article link | Adrienne Day / Columbia University | Phys.org | June 9, 2026
Article summarizes the Fifth National Climate Assessment, emphasizing severe U.S. climate impacts alongside available tools for cutting emissions and adapting.
Aerosols May Warm or Cool the Climate Depending on Timing, New Study Finds
Article link | Hebrew University of Jerusalem / Phys.org | June 8, 2026
Researchers found that aerosol-cloud interactions can produce different climate effects over short and long time scales, helping explain uncertainty in climate projections.
Plants Boost Carbon Uptake Through Water Efficiency, Not Just Photosynthesis
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Climate and plant-science article reporting that water-use efficiency and canopy expansion may be key factors in how plants absorb carbon in a warming world.
Warming enhances soil carbon accumulation
Article link | Pablo García-Palacios | Bluesky profile snippet | Article: Nature
Nature article on warming and soil carbon accumulation.
Climate Policy, Governance, and Public Trust
Three Ways Climate Action Can Be More Inclusive for 1.3 Billion Disabled People
Article link | Carina Fearnley and Rhiannon Hawkins / The Conversation | Phys.org | June 26, 2026
Article argues that climate action must better include disabled people through accessible planning, inclusive warning systems, and participation in climate-policy decisions.
Climate Compensation Isn't Always Enough for Landowners
Article link | Aarhus University / Phys.org | June 15, 2026
Research article explores why compensation alone may not convince landowners to restore low-lying soils as wetlands, emphasizing trust, identity, and local context.
Solar Geoengineering Could Shield Up to 75% of Oceans from Warming, Study Suggests
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 12, 2026
Climate-intervention article reports that stratospheric aerosol injection could reduce warming across much of the ocean, while raising governance and ecological concerns.
Fragmented Environmental Policies Risk Costly Failures, Experts Warn
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 10, 2026
Article warns that climate and nature policies can work at cross-purposes when they are not coordinated, wasting money and sometimes harming ecosystems.
Policy Recommendations in Climate-Related Research Often 'An Afterthought,' Analysis Finds
Article link | University of Cambridge / Phys.org | June 9, 2026
Analysis of climate-mitigation papers finds that policy recommendations are often missing, vague, or disconnected from study results, weakening science-to-policy impact.
'The Real Scoreline' Reveals the Nations Facing Climate Penalties
Article link | University of Reading / Phys.org | June 8, 2026
Climate scientists created a scoreboard comparing countries using indicators such as emissions, fossil-fuel dependence, heat stress, warming projections, and net-zero commitments.
Event With Links to Oil Industry Teaches Judges "Healthy Skepticism" of Climate Science
Article link | Michael E. Mann / ProPublica | ProPublica | May 2026
Investigation into an event connected to fossil-fuel interests that presented climate-science skepticism to judges.
Climate Disinformation Narrative Platformed by Trump
Article link | Michael E. Mann | Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists | 2026
Climate scientist Michael Mann points to a Bulletin article discussing fossil-fuel-backed climate disinformation narratives.
Agriculture, Soil, and Food Security
Why Climate Change Could Make Staple Crops Less Nutritious - and How CRISPR May Help
Article link | Ghent University / Phys.org | June 25, 2026
Article explains how climate stress can reduce micronutrient density in staple crops and explores how CRISPR and other genetic technologies might improve nutrition.
Scientists Uncover Hidden Phosphorus Reservoir Vital for Soil Fertility
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 17, 2026
Researchers developed a simpler way to measure DNA-bound phosphorus in soils, improving understanding of nutrient cycling and sustainable agricultural management.
Global Rice Production Nearly Doubled Over 50 Years Despite Climate Change
Article link | University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign / Phys.org | June 10, 2026
Agricultural-climate study finds that rice production nearly doubled over five decades, largely because management changes offset some climate-related losses.
Why Restoring Soil Health Is a Win-Win for Farmers and the Environment
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Agriculture and environmental-science article explaining how soil-health restoration can improve farm productivity while supporting climate and ecological goals.
Global challenges in food security and resilient protein sources
Article link | Biochemical Society | Bluesky | Jan. 30, 2026 | Article: Biochemist / DOI
Article about improving legumes such as chickpeas for nutrition and sustainability.
Biodiversity, Wildlife, and Ecosystem Protection
Climate Change Is Now Causing More Local Extinction in Temperate Regions
Article link | University of Arizona / Phys.org | June 18, 2026
Researchers comparing more than 5,100 plant and animal species found that climate-driven local extinctions are now especially severe in temperate regions.
New Warning System Forecasts Wildlife Heat Risk Up to Nine Months Ahead
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 9, 2026
Article describes a forecasting system that uses climate prediction tools to anticipate heat risks for wildlife months in advance.
Smarter Land Use Could Unlock Biodiversity, Climate and Economic Gains
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Environmental-science article on how optimized land-use planning could support biodiversity protection, climate goals, and economic benefits at the same time.
India Gained 2.1 Million Hectares of Dry Woodland in a Decade, Major Study Finds
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Environmental article on a major study finding dry woodland expansion in India, adding nuance to discussions of forest change, restoration, and land management.
New Maps Show Where European Landscapes Can Advance Climate and Biodiversity Goals Together
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Environmental-science article mapping places in Europe where land management could support both climate mitigation and biodiversity protection.
Mille Lacs Walleye Return to the Same Spawning Hotspots, Highlighting Critical Need for Habitat Protection
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Ecology article showing that Mille Lacs walleye repeatedly use the same spawning areas, strengthening the case for targeted habitat protection.
Gentoo Penguins Cope with Climate Change Heat Waves by Breeding Earlier
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Climate-biology article reporting that gentoo penguins may respond to warming and heat waves by shifting their breeding earlier.
Remote Fieldwork and Museum Collections Reveal Hidden Pit Viper Diversity in High Asia
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Biodiversity article showing how field research and museum specimens can uncover previously hidden pit viper diversity in High Asia.
Climate Change Spurs Weight Gain in Owl Monkeys
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 2026
Biology article on how changing climate conditions may affect owl monkey body weight and ecology.
Ecological network rewiring
Article link | Benjamin Wildermuth | Bluesky profile snippet | Article: Nature Reviews Biodiversity
Nature Reviews Biodiversity article published online May 7, 2026, on ecological network rewiring.
Biogeographical patterns of the genus Plectostoma
Article link | Ng Ting Hui | Bluesky profile snippet | Article: Zoological Journal / DOI
Shared research on freshwater molluscs and biogeography.
Pollution, Air Quality, and Environmental Health
Burned-Home Soils Showed Uneven Lead, Arsenic Contamination After Los Angeles Wildfires
Article link | Duke University | Phys.org | June 27, 2026
Soil and ash samples from homes burned in the Eaton and Palisades wildfires showed uneven contamination by lead, arsenic, and other harmful elements, highlighting risks after urban wildfires.
Southeast Asia's Changing Landscape Is Fueling a Deadly Air Crisis That Costs Billions
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 25, 2026
Article on land-use change, air pollution, public-health impacts, and economic costs in Southeast Asia.
Energy, Transportation, and Practical Technology
How Wasted Infrared Light Could Boost Solar Panels and Night-Vision Tech
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | May 2026
Article about converting unused infrared light into useful energy or signals for solar and imaging technologies.
A Human on a Bicycle Is Among the Most Efficient Forms of Travel in the World
Article link | Urban Truth Collective / Scientific American | Scientific American | Apr. 26, 2026
Popular science article explaining why cycling is an extremely efficient form of human movement and transportation.
Positive Science and Public Benefit
The News Is Not All Bad: Five Inspiring Science Stories to Lift Your Mood
Article link | Rachel Fieldhouse | Nature | 2026
Roundup of positive science developments, including species recovery, cancer-preventing vaccines, and renewable-energy progress.
Climate Monitoring, Data Gaps, and Science Infrastructure
Scientists Lose Critical Climate Record as Ocean Observatory Is Set for Removal
Article link | Phys.org | Phys.org | June 2026
Article on the planned removal of ocean-observing instruments, raising concern that scientists could lose long-running climate records just as ocean monitoring becomes more important.