By Jada Vasser Detroit resident Timothy Paule Jackson’s fascination with bees began in 2016 when he discovered the benefits of using honey to combat the common cold. He began researching the components in honey that provide medicinal benefits for the immune system. Soon, he and his partner, Nicole Lindsay, enrolled in beekeeping classes. They launched […]

The post Detroit is the place to bee! How Detroit Hives is helping Detroit fight climate change through pollination  first appeared on Great Lakes Echo.

Original Article

Great Lakes Echo

Great Lakes Echo

http://greatlakesecho.org/2024/08/15/detroit-is-the-place-to-bee-how-detroit-hives-is-helping-detroit-fight-climate-change-through-pollination/

Jada Vasser

Energy News Roundup: New household rebates are on their way (and some are already here)

Homeowners and property owners, listen up: sweeping new home energy rebate programs have launched in a couple of states and are in the works in most of the rest. A pair of multibillion dollar federal initiatives, funded by the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, offers thousands of dollars in savings for whole-house efficiency improvements and appliance upgrades.

Read Now at Great Lakes Now.

Original Article

Great Lakes Now

Great Lakes Now

https://www.greatlakesnow.org/2024/08/energy-news-roundup-new-household-rebates-are-on-their-way-and-some-are-already-here/

Nicole Pollack, Great Lakes Now

Editor: In the public interest and in accordance with Federal Aviation Administration regulations, the USGS is announcing this low-level airborne project. Your assistance in informing the local communities is appreciated.

Original Article

Midcontinent Region

Midcontinent Region

https://www.usgs.gov/news/state-news-release/media-alert-low-level-fixed-wing-helicopter-flights-image-geology-over?utm_source=comms&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=news

lrussell@usgs.gov

American white pelicans at their nesting colony on Cat Island in Green Bay. Image credit: Marie Zhuikov, Wisconsin Sea Grant

On a sunny morning in mid-June, the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay’s research vessel, Phoenix, headed out onto the bay. Aboard were Sea Grant researchers Emily Tyner and Bill Sallak and a small mound of recording equipment. The boat was piloted by Chris Houghton, assistant professor and fish ecologist, who was assisted by first mate, undergraduate student Jacob Hoffman.

Emily Tyner aboard the Phoenix, UW-Green Bay’s research boat. Image credit: Marie Zhuikov, Wisconsin Sea Grant

The bay outing’s purpose was to collect the natural noises of the estuary, particularly bird sounds. It was only supposed to last for three hours but like in the theme song for the “Gilligan’s Island” television show, a mishap was involved.

Tyner and Sallak’s project is associated with the development of a national estuarine research reserve on the bay. The National Estuarine Research Reserve System is a network of 30 coastal sites that protect and study estuaries. In the Great Lakes, estuaries are areas where rivers empty into the lakes. The mission of the reserves is to practice and promote estuary stewardship via innovative research and education projects through a system of protected areas. It’s a partnership program between the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and coastal states.

Tyner, director of freshwater strategy at UW-Green Bay, is the state lead on the designation of a new National Estuarine Research Reserve for the Bay of Green Bay. It will be the third reserve on the Great Lakes after Old Woman Creek in Ohio on Lake Erie and the Lake Superior Reserve in Superior, Wisconsin. Sallak is an associate professor of music and was sound recorder for the trip.

Their target was the Cat Island Chain, restored barrier islands in the bay that have created new habitat for migrating and nesting shorebirds. Then, if time allowed, they would visit several other sites.

Bill Sallak with sound recording equipment. Image credit: Marie Zhuikov, Wisconsin Sea Grant

Sallak described how the idea for this project evolved. “Part of our original conception was more of a hard science, bioacoustics angle. But then, we went out on a boat trip and we went, ‘That sounds cool, that sounds cool. All these things sound really fantastic.’ And so, we decided to lean more towards a more humanistic angle, which is also going to work better if we get to the point where there’s a visitor’s center, because we can take these recordings and put them into a room with a surround sound speaker set up, and you can hear the bay in different locations, different seasons.”

In their proposal, Tyner and Sallak stressed the importance of bringing the sounds of the Green Bay estuary to the community. Tyner elaborated, “Right there is a restaurant that’s one of the only places on the lower bay where you can go and have a beer and have a burger and be sitting out on the water. And there’s almost no other places to kind of enjoy the bay. There’s the amusement park, but then there’s no pier or boardwalk for access. There’s no swimmable beaches. Some of that’s for water quality reasons. To get onto the bay, you need to have a boat, an expensive boat, probably. Maybe you can do a bit of kayaking from shore, but a trail system, we don’t really have that.

“For a long time, communities had closed themselves off from around the bay because of smells and harmful algal blooms and industrial uses. But now Green Bay and other communities are reopening and turning their front doors back. Especially with the Fox River cleanup, which was a $1.5 billion effort. And so, with that kind of trying to encourage the city and communities to turn their front doors this way, we also want to reconnect people. This is one step in getting us there,” Tyner said.

Chris Houghton. Image credit: Marie Zhukov, Wisconsin Sea Grant

In sort of a happy accident, UW-Green Bay recently received funding for a new sound auditorium. Plans are for it to be completed this fall, and this Green Bay audio project will be the first to be featured.

Sallak explained. “Now the audio production program at the Resch Institute for Music is going to have probably the best facilities in higher education in the state. We were able to find about 1,600 square feet in the studio arts building and some underused space in the Wiedner Center. We’re putting in four new recording studios, one of which is an Atmos room. So, it’s equipped with a 14-speaker surround sound setup.”

He said it will be the same surround sound audio system that’s used in movie theaters. They’ll have the capacity to make surround sound recordings and present them in an acoustically refined space. When the Atmos room is finished, the Green Bay sounds project will be the first presentation featured in it. The sound files will also be available on a webpage.

The first of five stops on the boat tour was off the gull colony at Cat Island. Amid raucous gull calls, Sallak set up the recording equipment on the boat. He tagged the sound file with the date, time and location. After capturing several minutes of sound, he turned off the equipment as the Phoenix made its way to the pelican colony at the other end of Cat Island. The pelicans were very quiet, so there wasn’t much to record, but dozens of the prehistoric birds flying overhead made for some inspiring photos.

Pelicans wheel in the sky over Cat Island. Image credit: Marie Zhukov, Wisconsin Sea Grant

Their third stop was Longtail Point Lighthouse, a crumbling structure on a long sandy point. After Sallak recorded the sounds for several minutes, the unexpected happened.

“We’re beached,” Houghton said as the bottom of the boat came to rest on the sandy bottom.

“Uh oh,” Tyner said.

“Shouldn’t be a problem.” Houghton laughed, “Famous last words.”

Sallak chimed in, “We’re not going to run out of granola bars? Figure out who we have to eat first?”

Long Tail Point Lighthouse. Image credit: Marie Zhukov, Wisconsin Sea Grant

Houghton and Hoffman jumped over the side of the boat and tried to free it from the bottom. After some finagling, they were able to push it into deeper water.

The Zippin Pippin rollercoaster, Bay Beach Amusement Park. Image credit: Marie Zhukov, Wisconsin Sea Grant

Audio captured, the team moved onto the next stop, which had the ominous name of Dead Horse Bay. As they recorded, a bald eagle sat in a tree, watching as songbirds chirped and twittered. A plane flew overhead, and someone fired up a chain saw on shore. Sallak said he would keep those human sounds in the show. “We’re not apart from everything that’s going on. I’m more interested in collecting what’s literally here than trying to erase.”

Their fifth and final stop was full of human sounds offshore of Bay Beach Amusement Park. One of the most noticeable features there is the Zippin Pippin — a rollercoaster. The team watched as the coaster cars made their slow way up to the top of the ride and then plummeted, eliciting screams from the riders. Sallak said he has plans to go into the courtyard in the middle of the ride and get a recording for this project later.

With audio captured, the team motored back to the marina. They agreed there’s nothing like spending a morning on the water, even if it involved getting beached.

To hear a podcast episode of this story, complete with sounds, visit this Wisconsin Water News page.

A navigation beacon in Green Bay. Image credit: Marie Zhuikov, Wisconsin Sea Grant

 

The post Using Sound to Connect People to Green Bay first appeared on Wisconsin Sea Grant.

Original Article

News Releases | Wisconsin Sea Grant

News Releases | Wisconsin Sea Grant

https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/news/using-sound-to-connect-people-to-green-bay/

Marie Zhuikov

The Great Lakes Microbial Water Quality Assessment, sponsored by the International Joint Commission, found that decades-old testing methods that measure microbial and chemical threats in Great Lakes waters are inadequate and advances in newer methods are critically needed. Read the full story by Circle of Blue.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240814-pollutant-testing-study

James Polidori

Multiple officials in Macomb County, Michigan, are calling on the Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy to hold off on renewing Oakland County’s groundwater discharge permit until the county commits to addressing sewage discharges into the Red Run Drain, which flows for 130 miles through both counties. Read the full story by the Michigan Advance.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240814-permit-dispute

James Polidori

A sizable fish kill of freshwater drum, also known as sheepshead, has happened on portions of Lake Erie near Erie, Pennsylvania. It appeared that some of the distressed fish were doing a side stroke and were unable to right themselves due to issues with their swim bladders which can be caused by changes in water pressure associated with recent weather pattern. Read the full story by Erie Times-News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240814-fish-kill

James Polidori

New York Governor Kathy Hochul signed an agreement allowing the Thousand Islands Land Trust to acquire nearly 1,000 acres in Jefferson County through a mix of conservation easements and land purchases to filter potential pollutants from entering the St. Lawrence River and Lake Ontario. Read the full story by WWNY-TV – Carthage, NY.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240814-land-acquisition

James Polidori

The National Park Service is moving forward with a $32 million project to relocate the docks at both North and South Manitou Islands in Lake Michigan. The agency is seeking permits to relocate the structures after years of access problems caused by sediment shoaling, which has fueled conflict between the park and a ferry operator based in Leland, Michigan, which has canceled service to North Manitou this year. Read the full story by MLive.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240814-dock-relocation

James Polidori

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources (DNR) reports good fall fishing due to successful spring and summer fish stocking. The DNR stocked a total of 9,118,112 fish that weighed nearly 321 tons and consisted of 10 different species and one hybrid. Read the full story by the News Advocate.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240814-fish-stocking

James Polidori

On July 28, a fisherman caught a 10.4 pound Atlantic salmon in Lake Erie that is believed to have been stocked hundreds of miles away in Lake Huron. Then on August 4, people believe they saw an alligator swimming off the shore of Erie, Pennsylvania. These sightings have prompted residents to wonder what else has been hiding in Lake Erie. Read the full story by Erie Times-News.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240814-alligator-sighting

James Polidori

Ottawa County Parks is guiding tours through Michigan dunes at Rosy Mound, a classic Great Lakes dune system including high wooded dunes, foredunes, beach and a dune blowout. Participants can join the Dune Discovery Hike on Tuesday, August 20 to unearth secrets of how these dunes formed and the unique plant species that can only be found here. Read the full story by MLive.

Original Article

Great Lakes Commission

Great Lakes Commission

https://www.glc.org/dailynews/20240814-dune-tour

James Polidori

Wisconsin voters wisely reject amending state constitution

On Tuesday, August 13, Wisconsin voters rejected two ballot questions in the statewide primary election that would amend the state constitution to allow more partisan interference in channeling funds to communities by giving outsized power to the state legislature.  

River Alliance of Wisconsin came out against these measures and pointed to examples of how partisan divides have slowed help to communities with contaminated drinking water, such as restrictions on our state’s well compensation program and legislative derailment of releasing approved funds to address PFAS pollution.

“Wisconsinites need clean water now. But in the last year, voters watched how partisan bickering prevented meaningful aid from reaching communities facing PFAS pollution in their drinking water,” said Executive Director Allison Werner. “Their strong rejection of amending our state constitution sent a message that partisan divides cannot get in the way of sending urgent state and federal funds when environmental disasters or our fundamental rights to clean drinking water are at stake.” 

 

This message is made possible by generous donors who believe people have the power to protect and restore water. Support our work with your contribution today.

The post Wisconsin voters wisely reject amending state constitution appeared first on River Alliance of WI.

Original Article

Blog - River Alliance of WI

Blog - River Alliance of WI

https://wisconsinrivers.org/voters-reject-ajr6/

Allison Werner

Patchy dense fog, with visibilities of less than 1/4 mile, will create locally hazardous driving conditions for the morning commute across parts of Door, Kewaunee, Manitowoc and southeast Brown counties. The foggy conditions should improve by around 9 am. When driving in fog, slow down, use your low beam headlights and keep a safe distance from other vehicles.

Original Article

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

Current watches, warnings, and advisories for Brown County (WIC009) WI

https://api.weather.gov/alerts/urn:oid:2.49.0.1.840.0.9c52bedb221f76d6555de13f9396d8f066d6b38c.001.1.cap

NWS

By Ellen Chadwick, Freshwater Collaborative summer research student

This summer, 35 undergraduate students from across the country conducted research with Freshwater@UW, the University of Wisconsin’s cross-site, cross-discipline research opportunities program. Freshwater@UW is supported by the Freshwater Collaborative, Wisconsin Sea Grant, Water@UW–Madison, the Water Resources Institute and the University of Wisconsin–Madison Graduate School. In the final weeks of the program, students reflected on what they learned. We’ll share several of their stories over the coming months. Here’s Ellen Chadwick, an undergraduate sophomore in biology and environmental studies from Kenyon College, Ohio, who worked with Michael Holly at UW–Green Bay.

Ellen Chadwick. Submitted photo.

My love and appreciation for wetlands has grown over the past few years, deepening significantly this summer. After learning about their amazing powers of capturing carbon, filtering nutrients and toxins out of water and buffering coastlines from storms, I learned to appreciate an ecosystem that I had never given much thought to before. Not to mention, they are teeming with life and provide habitat for many incredible animals. 

Because of all of this, I was eager to participate in my current research project about phosphorus removal in constructed wetlands. The overall project was highly applied and interdisciplinary, with chemists, biologists and engineers working together in a vibrant lab. And that’s only a small part of it. In the field, we worked with government researchers. Beyond that, this project involved farmers, city planners and really anyone with an interest in clean water. I studied five native wetland plants, testing if any are especially good at removing phosphorus and could be used in constructed wetlands.

As much as I enjoyed the research aspect of this summer, my favorite part was that this project is so applied. I always looked forward to days where I visited places with restored wetlands, whether that be the constructed wetland at our field site, a stormwater retention pond or a full restoration project site. I was always surprised by the richness of biodiversity in these “artificial” wetlands and how easily life will return to an area once the habitat is there.

The first time I visited a field site, I was shocked by the abundance of tiny tadpoles darting through the water. I was also unaware of the bustling community of macroinvertebrates living in the water, invisible to my own eyes but fascinating to watch under a microscope. All of these creatures represented a thriving aquatic community that played a crucial role in nutrient cycling and ecosystem balance. 

A spring peeper sits on Chadwick’s finger. Submitted photo.

Visiting the Oneida Nation prairie restoration site was definitely the highlight of my summer and affirmed my interest in environmental conservation and restoration. The land was just breathtaking, filled with incredible biodiversity. There were leopard frogs hopping around, toads waddling clumsily, and even baby spring peepers that would sit right on my finger! Dragonflies and damselflies darted around elegantly, catching glints of sunlight on their iridescent wings.

As we walked, the project manager, Tony Kuchma, told us about the immense effort to restore 3,000 acres of prairie from farmland, working tirelessly with native seed mixes and prescribed burns. Joe Torres, an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation, added how Indigenous values, such as reciprocity and responsibility, informed the restoration project alongside science. 

This summer experience has deepened my passion for environmental conservation and sustainability. It reaffirmed my belief in the power of scientific research to inform and guide sustainable practices, as well as the importance of considering many viewpoints when addressing sustainability. I have developed a greater appreciation for fieldwork and the resilience of natural systems and, of course, a deeper fondness for wetlands. 

The post Summer student research experience enhances appreciation for wetlands – resend first appeared on Wisconsin Sea Grant.

Original Article

Blog | Wisconsin Sea Grant

Blog | Wisconsin Sea Grant

https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/blog/summer-student-research-experience-enhances-appreciation-for-wetlands-resend/

Wisconsin Sea Grant

By Ellen Chadwick, Freshwater Collaborative summer research student

This summer, 35 undergraduate students from across the country conducted research with Freshwater@UW, the University of Wisconsin’s cross-site, cross-discipline research opportunities program. Freshwater@UW is supported by the Freshwater Collaborative, Wisconsin Sea Grant, Water@UW–Madison, the Water Resources Institute and the University of Wisconsin–Madison Graduate School. In the final weeks of the program, students reflected on what they learned. We’ll share several of their stories over the coming months. Here’s Ellen Chadwick, an undergraduate sophomore in biology and environmental studies from Kenyon College, Ohio, who worked with Michael Holly at UW–Green Bay.

Ellen Chadwick. Submitted photo.

My love and appreciation for wetlands has grown over the past few years, deepening significantly this summer. After learning about their amazing powers of capturing carbon, filtering nutrients and toxins out of water and buffering coastlines from storms, I learned to appreciate an ecosystem that I had never given much thought to before. Not to mention, they are teeming with life and provide habitat for many incredible animals. 

Because of all of this, I was eager to participate in my current research project about phosphorus removal in constructed wetlands. The overall project was highly applied and interdisciplinary, with chemists, biologists and engineers working together in a vibrant lab. And that’s only a small part of it. In the field, we worked with government researchers. Beyond that, this project involved farmers, city planners and really anyone with an interest in clean water. I studied five native wetland plants, testing if any are especially good at removing phosphorus and could be used in constructed wetlands.

As much as I enjoyed the research aspect of this summer, my favorite part was that this project is so applied. I always looked forward to days where I visited places with restored wetlands, whether that be the constructed wetland at our field site, a stormwater retention pond or a full restoration project site. I was always surprised by the richness of biodiversity in these “artificial” wetlands and how easily life will return to an area once the habitat is there.

The first time I visited a field site, I was shocked by the abundance of tiny tadpoles darting through the water. I was also unaware of the bustling community of macroinvertebrates living in the water, invisible to my own eyes but fascinating to watch under a microscope. All of these creatures represented a thriving aquatic community that played a crucial role in nutrient cycling and ecosystem balance. 

A spring peeper sits on Chadwick’s finger. Submitted photo.

Visiting the Oneida Nation prairie restoration site was definitely the highlight of my summer and affirmed my interest in environmental conservation and restoration. The land was just breathtaking, filled with incredible biodiversity. There were leopard frogs hopping around, toads waddling clumsily, and even baby spring peepers that would sit right on my finger! Dragonflies and damselflies darted around elegantly, catching glints of sunlight on their iridescent wings.

As we walked, the project manager, Tony Kuchma, told us about the immense effort to restore 3,000 acres of prairie from farmland, working tirelessly with native seed mixes and prescribed burns. Joe Torres, an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation, added how Indigenous values, such as reciprocity and responsibility, informed the restoration project alongside science. 

This summer experience has deepened my passion for environmental conservation and sustainability. It reaffirmed my belief in the power of scientific research to inform and guide sustainable practices, as well as the importance of considering many viewpoints when addressing sustainability. I have developed a greater appreciation for fieldwork and the resilience of natural systems and, of course, a deeper fondness for wetlands. 

The post Summer student research experience enhances appreciation for wetlands – resend first appeared on Wisconsin Sea Grant.

Original Article

Blog | Wisconsin Sea Grant

Blog | Wisconsin Sea Grant

https://www.seagrant.wisc.edu/blog/summer-student-research-experience-enhances-appreciation-for-wetlands-resend/

Wisconsin Sea Grant

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin

According to the Annual 2023 Global Climate Report, 2023 was the warmest year since global atmospheric temperature records began in 1850. A new analysis led by NCEI scientists shows that global mean sea surface temperatures also set a record high in 2023.

Original Article

NCEI News Feed

NCEI News Feed

https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/news/super-marine-heatwaves-new-term-growing-concern

lukas.noguchin