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Ramaswami receives AAEES Science Award for pioneering models for sustainable, equitable cities

April 7, 2022 ・ Morgan Kelly

Anu Ramaswami, the Sanjay Swani ’87 Professor of India Studies and professor of civil and environmental engineering and the High Meadows Environmental Institute, has received the 2022 AAEES Science Award from the American Academy of Environmental Engineers and Scientists. Ramaswami,…

Allison Carruth maps imaginative new blueprints for the future of the planet

March 21, 2022 ・ Jeff Labrecque

Northwest of Denver, there’s a stretch of U.S. Highway 40 called Rabbit Ears Pass that cuts through the Rocky Mountains. It’s named for the prominent Leporidae-shaped igneous rock formations that stand prominently atop a nearby peak, and the volcanic geology of…

Study reveals how inland and coastal waterways influence climate

March 16, 2022

“Streams to the river, river to the sea.” If only it were that simple. Most global carbon-budgeting efforts assume a linear flow of water from the land to the sea, which ignores the complex interplay between streams, rivers, lakes, groundwater,…

World’s thinnest roots are ‘underground weapons’ in ecological competition

February 14, 2022 ・ Liz Fuller-Wright

Most of us only think about the easily visible parts of plants — stems, flowers, leaves — but in a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Princeton ecologists Lars Hedin and Mingzhen Lu show that the hidden root…

Simon Levin receives BBVA Frontiers of Knowledge Award in Ecology and Conservation Biology

February 7, 2022 ・ Morgan Kelly

Simon Levin, Princeton’s James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, has been awarded the BBVA Foundation Frontiers of Knowledge Award for ecology and conservation biology. Levin, who is director of the Center for BioComplexity based in…

Future hurricanes likely to pose much greater flood risk to U.S. East and Gulf coasts

February 3, 2022 ・ Adam Hadhazy

Extreme flooding events spawned by hurricanes are likely to become far more frequent along the Eastern and Southern U.S. coastlines because of a combination of sea-level rise and storm intensification. The findings, contained in new research from Princeton University, show…

Birds’ dazzling iridescence tied to nanoscale tweak of feather structure

December 21, 2021 ・ Morgan Kelly

The iridescent shimmer that makes birds such as peacocks and hummingbirds so striking is rooted in a natural nanostructure so complex that people are only just beginning to replicate it technologically. The secret to how birds produce these brilliant colors…

With DNA toolkit, Rob Pringle is learning how to rebuild broken ecosystems

December 13, 2021 ・ Jeff Labrecque

In the beginning, Rob Pringle didn’t have a choice. His grandparents were passionate naturalists who loved exploring the outdoors with him and his younger sister, and his parents’ idea of vacations when he was growing up in Ann Arbor, Michigan,…

Like a natural system, democracy faces collapse as polarization leads to loss of diversity

December 6, 2021 ・ Morgan Kelly

Much like an overexploited ecosystem, the increasingly polarized political landscape in the United States — and much of the world — is experiencing a catastrophic loss of diversity that threatens the resilience not only of democracy, but also of society, according…