-
South Florida’s drainage canals are overwhelmed by king tides, and sea rise could only worsen the issue.
-
Goodell spoke at the University of Florida about his new book, "The Heat Will Kill You First: Life and Death on a Scorched Planet."
-
A Q&A with Tony Cho, a Miami real estate developer who formed the Future of Cities to fund sustainable real estate projects.
-
Florida International University’s Martina Potlach, whose studies marry landscape design and ecology, gave ideas on how to reconceptualize how shorelines work if humans are to live in coastal South Florida as storms intensify and the sea moves in.
-
A Q&A with Jennifer Collins, a professor in the School of Geosciences at the University of South Florida.
-
Florida is expected to take five water bodies near Sarasota off its nutrient-polluted list after multiple upgrades to wastewater treatment plants and stormwater infrastructure, said one expert during a panel on red tide.
-
Born from fire, Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary is now slowly drying out and a solution is proving elusiveCorkscrew Swamp Sanctuary is slowly drying up due to development and flood control projects that have been redirecting the water flow that is the lifeblood of Audubon Florida's popular environmental attraction in the Western Everglades east of Naples.
-
Drainage has exposed the fertile soils of the Everglades Agricultural Area, a region responsible for much of the nation’s sugar cane.
-
A Q&A with Jason Evans, associate professor of environmental science and studies at Stetson University.
-
A Q&A with Leslee F. Keys, retired assistant professor and director of historic preservation at Flagler College.
-
One in four people, or 1.9 billion, experienced a five-day heat wave, at minimum, influenced by carbon pollution.
-
Florida scientists are determining how cattle grazing impacts plants, green house gas emissions, and carbon stored in the soil, using collars and cell towers.