UCSC in the News

October

  • October 07, 2024 - Tech and Science Post

    Ending jet lag: Scientists discover secret to regulating our body clock

    “Our findings pinpoint to three specific sites on CK1δ’s tail where phosphate groups can attach, and these sites are crucial for controlling the protein’s activity. When these spots get tagged with a phosphate group, CK1δ becomes less active, which means it doesn’t influence our circadian rhythms as effectively," said Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator Carrie Partch, a professor of chemistry at the University of California, Santa Cruz and corresponding author of the study. "Using high-resolution analysis, we were able to pinpoint the exact sites involved—and that’s really exciting.”

  • October 05, 2024 - Popular Science

    Are you my baby? The clever ways that brood parasites trick other birds

    “There’s always something new — it’s like, ‘Oh, man, this group of birds went down a slightly different pathway,’” says behavioral ecologist Bruce Lyon of the University of California, Santa Cruz, who studies the black-headed duck, the sole obligate parasitic duck species.

  • October 03, 2024 - Oceanographic

    Exploring California's enchanting kelp forests

    According to the a study from the University of California, Santa Cruz, led by adjunct professor of ecology and evolutionary biology Tim Tinker, satellite imagery has shown a dramatic reduction in kelp forest coverage, plummeting by over 95% in certain areas of the state. In Northern California, only isolated patches of healthy bull kelp remain. The decimated areas have been overtaken by what scientists refer to as "urchin barrens," where purple sea urchins dominate rocky reefs that were once vibrant with kelp and other algae.

  • October 02, 2024 - National Geographic

    Europa is an icy ocean world—and NASA is finally going to explore it

    Hubble images from around a decade ago hinted that such plumes could be erupting. But “all the detections have been at the detection limits,” says planetary scientist Francis Nimmo of the University of California, Santa Cruz. “If [the plumes] exist, then they're pretty intermittent, and they may not actually be there at all.”

  • October 02, 2024 - Mongabay

    Across reforestation organizations, best practices claims abound, but details are scarce

    Mongabay covered prior research by Environmental Studies Professor Karen Holl on the practices of tree-planting organizations and shared news about a new phase of the research, starting this month, in which the team plans to investigate links between reported practices and reforestation outcomes.
  • October 02, 2024 - Science

    To slow global warming, could methane be stripped from the air

    Science interviewed Environmental Studies Professor Sikina Jinnah about a new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine that recommends a two-phase approach for studying the need and potential for methane removal technology in the United States. Jinnah was a member of a special committee formed by the organization to help develop a research agenda on methane removal. 

September

  • September 25, 2024 - NPR

    How can we bring extinct species back from the dead?

    “It's the icon of how awful we can be,” says Beth Shapiro, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz. “They went extinct within just a few decades of people first appearing on Mauritius, which is the only place that dodos ever lived.” Shapiro is also a MacArthur Fellow, which scientists commonly refer to as the “Genius Award.”
  • September 26, 2024 - CNA

    Explainer: What sparked Sudan’s civil war and humanitarian crisis

    Politics Professor Mark Fathi Massoud gave a 15-minute interview about the ongoing conflict in Sudan, including the history that led to the current civil war.
  • September 26, 2024 - Los Angeles Times

    Opinion: Imperial County residents deserve to benefit from a potential lithium boom

    Environmental Studies and Sociology Professor Chris Benner, who is the faculty director for the Institute for Social Transformation, co-wrote an opinion article about the need for local communities to benefit from lithium extraction in the Salton Sea region. More detailed coverage is available in The Conversation.
  • September 25, 2024 - The New York Times

    Silicon Valley Renegades Pollute the Sky to Save the Planet

    Environmental Studies Professor Sikina Jinnah explained the harms of unregulated and uninformed solar geoengineering efforts, like the group Make Sunsets. “They are a couple of tech bros who have no expertise in doing what they’re claiming to do,” she said. “They’re not scientists and they’re making claims about cooling credits that nobody has validated.”
  • September 17, 2024 - Financial Express

    Deficits, debt and India’s growth prospects

    Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh wrote an opinion article for Financial Express about the fiscal architecture necessary to managing public debt and deficits in India. 
  • September 17, 2024 - Space.com

    A 'primordial' black hole may zoom through our solar system every decade

    "The black holes we consider in our work are at least 10 billion times lighter than the sun, and are barely larger in size than a hydrogen atom," said study co-author Sarah Geller, a theoretical physicist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Additional coverage in the Earth.com, Futurism, GizmodoLos Angeles Times, Newsweek, and Popular Mechanics.

  • September 18, 2024 - The 19th

    Trump’s claims about Haitians draw from a centuries-long narrative. These women explain why.

    Haitian-American anthropologist Gina Athena Ulysse, a professor of Humanities at the University of California, Santa Cruz, was quoted in detail in a news story by The 19th about former president Donald Trump's debunked comments about Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio. Ulysse said that she's tired of defending her personhood and identity. Following the 2010 Haiti earthquake, Ulysse wrote a book called “Why Haiti Needs New Narratives: A Post-Quake Chronicle” because she found the dehumanizing remarks about Haitians then disturbing.
  • September 13, 2024 - WIRED

    The Bird Flu Outbreak Takes a Mysterious Turn

    “Regardless of the source, it’s concerning, because it suggests that there’s a lot of the virus out there,” says David Boyd, a virologist at UC Santa Cruz who studies influenza. “This indicates that there is widespread transmission among animal sources.”

  • September 10, 2024 - The Scientist

    A Neural Circuit That Helps Flies Stay on Course

    “These behaviors that they're looking at, goal-directed steering, are universal to animals that navigate,” said Daniel Turner-Evans, a neuroscientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not involved in the studies. “It's just beautiful to see how these behaviors unfold across these different layers and different neurons in the brain, and how you can create these really nice conceptual and quantitative models that really match the anatomy and the biology.”
  • September 08, 2024 - Forbes

    Oxygen-Poor Rocky Planets May Offer Shortcut To Microbial Life

    Simple life emerged on earth within the first billion years of its habitable window, according to UC Santa Cruz astrophysicist Piero Madau. But finding life in the habitable zones of solar type stars will ultimately require statistical analyses of the population of habitable systems, in-depth studies of the climates of individual planets, and searches for chemical biomarkers, Madau writes.

  • September 08, 2024 - New York Post

    How AI is helping scientists finally predict earthquakes

    Researchers at the UC Berkeley and UC Santa Cruz, including Professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences Emily Brodsky, are developing a new model, dubbed RECAST— short for “Recurrent Earthquake foreCAST” — that provides deep learning for earthquake forecasting.
  • September 07, 2024 - CNN

    Landslides are destroying multimillion-dollar homes in California, and they’re getting worse

    Rancho Palos Verdes sits on top of a volcanic ash bed, laid down about 10 to 15 million years ago, that slopes down to the Pacific shoreline. “It has weathered to a type of clay mineral that can expand and get slippery when it gets wet,” said Gary Griggs, distinguished professor of earth and planetary sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

  • September 02, 2024 - Grist

    As ‘doomsday’ glacier melts, can an artificial barrier save it?

    There are other glacier-protecting strategies that avoid the need for curtains or other barriers. Slawek Tulaczyk, a glaciologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has proposed stabilizing the two imperiled glaciers by draining the meltwaters that currently seep to their base, lubricating the pinning points and accelerating the glaciers’ seaward flow. By drilling holes through the glaciers and inserting pumps, engineers could dry up the lubricant and bring that flow to a halt. The extracted water could then be sprayed across the glacier surface, where it would freeze, helping to rebuild the glacier.

  • September 11, 2024 - Science Magazine

    Famed Polynesian island did not succumb to ‘ecological suicide,’ new evidence reveals

    Anthropology Professor Lars Fehren-Schmitz, an anthropological geneticist, commented on a new first-of-its-kind study of the genomes of ancient Rapanui, which demonstrates that Rapa Nui, or "Easter Island," did not experience a population crash caused by overexploitation of natural resources. The new results “deliver solid data that the ‘ecocide’ hypothesis is not supported,” said Fehren-Schmitz.
  • September 10, 2024 - KQED

    Kamala Harris Embraced Reparations 5 Years Ago. Her SF Pastor Says Criticism Is Unjust

    Nolan Higdon, a lecturer of history and media studies at UC Santa Cruz, said the strategy of cherry-picking quotes to spread hate is antithetical to democracy. He added that Republicans over the last 50 years have used race-baiting to scare white people into voting for their candidates. “To amplify fear, division and hate, that’s something that all too often politicians do, and it may be good in the short term for their party or election, but it’s really bad in the long term for the country,” Higdon said.

  • September 10, 2024 - KQED

    Fire-Weary Lake County Again Faces a Tough Recovery and Questions Over Rebuilding

    UC Santa Cruz professor Miriam Greenberg, who studies the interconnections between lack of affordable housing and climate catastrophes like fires, cautioned the city and its residents to think about whether rebuilding in Clearlake is a good idea. “It’s a question that should be asked sensitively because a fire may have already displaced them from an affordable housing community,” she said. “We haven’t had these conversations about fire-prone areas, but it’s beginning to happen.”

  • September 09, 2024 - Mongabay

    Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation at 60: A look back and forward

    Colombian ecologist Natalia Ocampo-Peñuela, an assistant professor of environmental studies at UC Santa Cruz, discussed the impact of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation. “When you bring conservation in—because conservation is a crisis discipline that deals with imperfect and incomplete data sets—there’s a tension,” she said. “But I’ve seen that tension dissolve at ATBC over the years as basic science is being used to ask conservation questions that could never be asked before.”

  • September 09, 2024 - CalMatters

    Hate crimes rise against Indian Americans in California, deepening a divide between Hindus and Sikhs

    Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh, co-author of The Other One Percent: Indians in America, spoke with CalMatters about how issues from India are spilling over into hate crimes against Indian Americans. “The citizens themselves are in some sense all victims of this phenomenon, whether Sikh, Muslim or Hindu or any other religious tradition," he said. "Democracy allows us to work through differences in nonviolent and equalizing ways, but we’re seeing a lot of disruption.”
  • September 04, 2024 - Quartz

    Banks seem to be falling totally flat on climate commitments

    Quartz covered a new working paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research by Economics Professor Galina Hale and her collaborators, which found that, while "all banks have reduced their loan-emission exposures over the last 8 years" banks that made public sustainability commitments didn't perform any better in these efforts than those that didn't.

  • September 16, 2024 - Lookout Santa Cruz

    Santa Cruz Symphony launches new season feeling the momentum of last season’s successes

    Former astrophysics professor Martin Gaskell spends his free time writing and playing music. One of his works has been selected as part of the opening concert for the Santa Cruz Symphony. 
  • September 12, 2024 - Lookout Santa Cruz

    Santa Cruz plays a key role in Eugene Rodriguez’s road to Mexican American musical tradition

    UC Santa Cruz Alumni Eugene Rodriguez has become widely influential in Mexican American music, especially around the Bay. Along with founding the Los Cenzontles Mexican Art Center in San Pablo, Rodriguez recently released a book, "Bird of Four Hundred Voices." This Saturday Rodriguez will be at Bookshop Santa Cruz to discuss his new book.
  • September 10, 2024 - New York Times

    The Origin Story of Astro Bot’s Likable Little Guy

    Professor of Computational Media Katherine Isbister spoke to the New York Times about what makes a cute video game character.
  • September 11, 2024 - New York Times

    Europeans Used Cocaine Much Earlier Than Previously Thought, Study Finds

    University of California, Santa Cruz Associate Professor of History Benjamin Breen was quoted in detail in a New York Times story about Europeans using cocaine as early as the 17th century, much earlier than previously thought.
  • September 05, 2024 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz researchers awarded National Science Foundation funding

    The Santa Cruz Sentinel reported on UC Santa Cruz Assistant Professor of Applied Mathematics Ashesh Chattopadhyay and Distinguished Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics J. Xavier Prochaska new NSF funded projects to leverage AI and geophysics to address climate change.
  • September 08, 2024 - Yahoo News

    Awe and trepidation as AI comes for smartphones

    Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Engineering Leilani Gilpin comments on some of the potential issues with AI on smartphones.

August

  • August 29, 2024 - National Geographic

    What would the world look like without mosquitoes?

    Winifred Frick, a bat biologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, says most bats are actually generalist predators, meaning they eat whatever they can catch—mosquito, beetle, or otherwise.

  • August 07, 2024 - Fast Company

    Fake meat's false promise

    Fast Company published an excerpt from Professor Julie Guthman's new book The Problem with Solutions: Why Silicon Valley Can’t Hack the Future of Food. The article takes a critical look at efforts to develop alternative protein sources. 
  • August 30, 2024 - Financial Express

    The politics of pensions and savings

    Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh wrote an opinion article for Financial Express recommending that government policy in India should take a comprehensive look at the institutional landscape for pensions and savings. 
  • August 29, 2024 - Forbes

    You Might Have Perfect Pitch And Not Even Know It, Study Suggests

    “What this shows is that a surprisingly large portion of the population has a type of automatic, hidden ‘perfect pitch’ ability,” said Matt Evans, a Ph.D. student at UC Santa Cruz who led the study, alongside Psychology Profesor Nicolas Davidenko. Forbes also featured this study in their daily news quiz.

  • August 27, 2024 - The New York Times

    With Dams Removed, Salmon Will Have the Run of a Western River

    Environmental Studies Ph.D. student Brook Thompson, who grew up on the Yurok reservation, explained the importance of restoring salmon in the Klamath River to historical levels. “My grandpa said that there were so many salmon when he was younger that you could walk across their backs to the other side,” Thompson said. “It’s just so hard to express to people who are so used to fishing for sport or fun that salmon is really everything for us. The health of the river is literally our health.” Additional coverage in the Los Angeles Times.
  • August 27, 2024 - Ed Source

    Let’s ensure ‘Recess for All’ law really does apply to all

    Rebecca London, a professor of sociology and faculty director of Campus + Community at the University of California, Santa Cruz, co-wrote this opinion piece that highlights healthier learning environments California students can expect this fall thanks to the landmark Senate Bill 291. Known as "Recess for All," the bill requires elementary schools to provide students with at least 30 minutes of daily recess, while also prohibiting withholding recess as punishment.
  • August 27, 2024 - The Mercury News

    ‘Brutal’ trade-offs keep some South Bay farmworkers laboring in dangerous heat

    Global and Community Health Program co-director Matt Sparke, who is currently studying the impacts of climate change on farmworker health, spoke with The Mercury News about the risks of rising temperatures and the barriers and incentives that keep workers from taking advantage of state-mandated heat protections. 
    “The trade-offs are brutal, and the risks are compounding on so many levels,” Sparke said. 
  • August 22, 2024 - The Economist

    America’s recession signals are flashing red. Don’t believe them

    An early-warning system for recessions would be worth trillions of dollars. Governments could dole out stimulus at just the right time; investors could turn a nice profit. Unfortunately, the process for calling a recession is too slow to be useful. America’s arbiter, the National Bureau of Economic Research, can take months to decide. Other countries simply look at gdp data, which emerge with a lag. A new paper by Pascal Michaillat of the University of California, Santa Cruz, adds a second indicator: changes in the job-openings rate.

  • August 28, 2024 - Billboard

    UC Santa Cruz’s Quarry Amphitheater gears up for first concert since extensive renovation

    Billboard teases the upcoming return to concerts this fall at the Quarry Amphitheater. The amphitheater officially reopens as a music venue on October 12 with Kevin Morby. This reopening comes after years of being closed due to COVID-19 and rennovations.
  • August 22, 2024 - KTVU

    UC Santa Cruz begins DNA study to save endangered brown bears

    It's a race against time to save one of the nation's most iconic animals: the brown bear. As their numbers continue to plummet nationwide, UC Santa Cruz is stepping in with groundbreaking research to unlock the secrets hidden in their DNA by creating a 23andMe concept for bears. Joanna Kelley, an ecology and evolutionary biology professor at UC Santa Cruz and the project's lead investigator, discussed the project.

    Additional coverage by KING5 news.

  • August 20, 2024 - Entertainment Weekly

    Alicia Silverstone worries fans after eating potentially poisonous fruit

    Rachel Meyer, an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at UC Santa Cruz, was able to confirm the identity of the plant to Entertainment Weekly as Solanum pseudocapsicum. She noted that the plant "is mildly poisonous but a couple of fruits won't hurt—worst is it could make you vomit."
  • August 18, 2024 - KUOW

    San Juans’ sea stars start long crawl back from near-extinction

    “Such a large number were impacted over such a large area that captive rearing probably isn’t realistic for restoring populations,” said Bellingham-based researcher Melissa Miner with University of California, Santa Cruz. “Raising them to sub-adult size takes a lot of time and resources.” Additional coverage in Canadian Geographic.

  • August 14, 2024 - Science

    Will regulators OK controversial effort to supercharge ocean’s ability to absorb carbon?

    Given the controversy surrounding geoengineering experiments, it’s important for scientists to do public outreach before experiments happen, Environmental Studies Professor Sikina Jinnah told Science. Although scientists might be inclined to stay in the lab and focus on the technical questions, they need to engage with the public, she says. “Until scientists take this seriously, we’re going to continue being in a holding pattern.”
  • August 15, 2024 - Popular Science

    You can (probably) sing better than you think

    Popular Science covered research by cognitive science Ph.D. Candidate Matt Evans and Psychology Professor Nicholas Davidenko that shows a surprisingly large portion of the population has a type of automatic, hidden 'perfect pitch' ability. Additional coverage in EarthCosmos, and Yahoo News.
  • August 12, 2024 - Business Insider

    There's a 40% chance the US economy is already in a recession, according to a new indicator

    Business Insider covered a new paper coauthored by Associate Professor of Economics Pascal Michaillat that presents a new recession indicator method that uses data on both the unemployment rate and the vacancy rate for jobs.
  • August 12, 2024 - The Verge

    A controversial experiment to artificially cool Earth was canceled — what we know about why

    Environmental Studies Professor Sikina Jinnah, who co-chaired the advisory committee for Harvard University's SCoPEX solar geoengineering experiment, talked to The Verge about some of the lessons learned from that process. “One of the core messages that comes out of this is that public engagement is necessary even when you don’t think that the impact of the experiment is going to be felt in a real way, in a concrete way, in real time," she said. "This issue has such a long tail, and it has such deeper meaning for so many people.” 

  • August 13, 2024 - CNN

    Fact check: Trump made at least 20 false claims in his conversation with Elon Musk

    Gary Griggs, a University of California, Santa Cruz professor of earth and planetary sciences who studies sea-level rise, said last year that Trump’s similar claims “can only be described as totally out of touch with reality” and that Trump “has no idea what he is talking about.”

  • August 12, 2024 - East Bay Times

    A new plan seeks to protect California's coast against a rising ocean. And it doesn't require sea walls.

    “This is the biggest dilemma human civilization has had to face,” said Gary Griggs, a distinguished professor of Earth Sciences at UC Santa Cruz, in an interview earlier this year. “Many of the biggest cities in the world are at sea level. Our options are very few. We have to face it. There is absolutely nothing we can do over the long term to hold back the Pacific Ocean.”

  • August 11, 2024 - Los Angeles Times

    Outbreak of neurotoxin killing unprecedented number of sea lions along California coast

    Raphe Kudela, a professor of ocean science at UC Santa Cruz, said there might also be a connection to heat and runoff from inland rivers. He said in the last few years, really wet winters have contributed to an increase in river runoff — and a resulting dump of nutrients into California’s coastal waters. “So you get a pulse of upwelling, which brought some cool water with even more nutrients to the surface, and then everything warmed up. That’s just absolutely perfect conditions for a bloom like this,” he said.

  • August 07, 2024 - Scientific American

    Moon ‘Spiders’ Suggest Extensive Underground Lunar Caves

    The researchers spotted the first four spiders hiding almost imperceptibly in a photograph from the powerful cameras on NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter: “The spider legs are almost at the edge of resolution,” says the study’s lead author, Mikhail A. Kreslavsky, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

  • August 06, 2024 - SF Gate

    Pack of coyotes surround, kill dog on popular San Francisco beach

    A family group of coyotes have dwelled in the Presidio for decades, and the canines visit and occupy beach habitats year-round, which can be important areas for feeding and denning in the same way green spaces and parks are in a highly developed city like San Francisco, said Frankie Gerraty, a Ph.D. student at UC Santa Cruz who has been studying coyotes hunting harbor seal pups along the California coastline.

    “I love dogs and think that dogs should be allowed on some beaches, but I do think that dog owners need to recognize that their dogs can strongly influence beach ecosystems and wildlife in a variety of direct and indirect ways,” Gerraty said.

  • August 01, 2024 - The Washington Post

    As India ages, a secret shame emerges: Elders abandoned by their children

    Annapurna Devi Pandey, an anthropologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, whose research has taken her to homes for the abandoned in her native India, says respect for elders remains ingrained in society, but some must make a difficult choice between caring for their children or their parents. “The sense of duty,” she says, “becomes kind of an existential issue.”

  • August 01, 2024 - Thrillist

    Up Close and Personal With the Secret Elephant Seals of Año Nuevo State Park

    University of California, Santa Cruz lecturer Patrick Robinson, who has been studying the pinnipeds for over 20 years, and other scientists affix satellite tracking devices on elephant seals to determine how they migrate with such pinpoint precision. “Better understanding how elephant seals migrate will help us learn more about other deep-ocean-dwelling mammals, such as elusive beaked whales that have experienced mass stranding events,” Robinson explains.

July

  • July 30, 2024 - The Hill

    California’s housing crisis could be raising risk of climate disasters, researchers fear

    The Hill covered research being led by Sociology Professor Miriam Greenberg and Associate Professor of Sociology Hillary Angelo, which is testing the theory that lack of affordable housing in California’s urban centers may be fueling increased development in adjacent wildlands—exacerbating the impacts of climate change.
  • July 26, 2024 - Financial Express

    The Budget and the end of ‘reform’

    Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh wrote an opinion article for Financial Express arguing that the complex nature of modern manufacturing makes tariff policy difficult to implement perfectly in India, but minimal attempts at fine-tuning are a good sign.
  • July 22, 2024 - Los Angeles Times

    Could AI robots with lasers make herbicides — and farm workers — obsolete?

    Chris Benner, professor of sociology and environmental studies and director of the Institute for Social Transformation, likened the disruptive potential of new agricultural tools. “We need more efficiencies in agriculture to improve profit margins and be able to pay workers in the field more, but that’s ultimately going to displace some people,” Benner said. “What do we do, in that context, to support people who need new training into other types of jobs? The social challenges are much harder than the technical training challenges.”
  • July 17, 2024 - Sierra

    Prisoners Are Uniquely Vulnerable to Extreme Heat and Flooding

    Several options exist for dealing with climate hazards in California prisons, explains Abby Cunniff, a PhD candidate at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who studies environmental injustice and California prisons. One is to make prisons more durable to climate effects. 

  • July 31, 2024 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz awarded portion of federal coastal resiliency grant

    UC Santa Cruz will receive more than $2 million in federal grant funding from the total $71.1 million recently awarded to the California Marine Sanctuary Foundation to boost the resiliency of coastal communities threatened by sea level rise and extreme weather.

  • July 31, 2024 - San Jose Mercury News

    Peregrine falcons mount a comeback in Yosemite, thanks to rock climbers

    The Santa Cruz Predatory Bird Research Group hired climbers to gather egg shell samples from the nest ledges for testing. Then the group launched a bold plan: take the thin-walled eggs from nests, incubate and hatch them in the safety of a laboratory, and return the young to the nests.

  • July 31, 2024 - The Guardian

    Scientists propose lunar biorepository as ‘backup’ for life on Earth

    “In order for cloning to be an option, one needs cells that are alive,” said Beth Shapiro, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz and chief science officer of the de-extinction company Colossal Biosciences, who was not involved in the lunar biorepository proposal. This means it is not possible to clone a woolly mammoth from DNA fragments, she explained, but de-extinction is possible if tissue samples are collected and stored in a way that ensures the cells stay alive.
  • July 24, 2024 - KneeDeep Times

    Letting the Cliff Crumble

    Which is exactly why fellow UCSC Professor Mike Beck, director of the Center for Coastal Climate Resilience, believes “moving back,” also called planned relocation or managed retreat, also isn’t a viable solution for West Cliff despite the fact it’s another key strategy of the 50-Year Vision. “To me, it’s simply an easy way to kick the can down the road and pretend like it’s actually a strategy.”
  • July 24, 2024 - SF Gate

    What it's like to live in a Calif. tourist attraction being swallowed by the sea

    The flooding along the Capitola coastline is only likely to get worse as climate change progresses, according to Gary Griggs, a professor of Earth and planetary sciences at UC Santa Cruz, who has been working in the area for more than 50 years.

  • July 18, 2024 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    UC Santa Cruz workshop explores brain-inspired computing

    “This workshop is just as much about workforce development as it is about the future of semiconductors,” said assistant professor of physics Aiming Yan. “Being so close to Silicon Valley, we want to help students across the region realize that this is a promising area to pursue a career in.”

  • July 17, 2024 - New Atlas

    Our brains take naps while we're awake – and wake when we're asleep

    A study on brain waves from Distinguished Professor of Biomolecular Engineering David Haussler's lab was featured in New Atlas. Additional coverage in Earth.com.
  • July 16, 2024 - KQED

    Algal Blooms Love Heat Waves. When is Bay Area Swimming Dangerous for Humans and Pets?

    Not every algal bloom is toxic to humans and animals, but the bright green bloom currently floating on the surface of Discovery Bay definitely could be, said Raphael Kudela, a phytoplankton ecologist at UC Santa Cruz. This bloom is caused by cyanobacteria, which Kudela describes as “harmful algae that produces really nasty toxins.”

  • July 16, 2024 - Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Guest Commentary | Unions benefit workers — and employers

    Veronica Hamilton, a graduate student researcher for the Center for Labor and Community, and Teresa Ghilarducci, a researcher collaborating with the center, wrote an opinion article for the Santa Cruz Sentinel about the importance of labor unions. They write that union activity creates a "ripple effect" that ultimately "lifts living standards and promotes dignity in work across the economy."
  • July 11, 2024 - Rest of World

    The Northeast Indian YouTubers challenging cultural stereotypes through mukbang

    Anthropology Professor Dolly Kikon says viral mukbang videos from Northeast India show an intimate relationship between tribal communities, their land, and natural resources. “In these videos, food from the source to the table is being emphasized," she told Rest of World. "There is [an] assertion of indigeneity, there is an element of ecology.  In a few minutes, they [the creators] are bringing the entire landscape in, and telling their own story.” 

  • July 10, 2024 - Canadian Geographic

    Melting away: The fight against Sea Star Wasting Disease

    Carrie Melissa Miner, an Academic Specialist with UC Santa Cruz and researcher at MARINe, says that instances of Sea Star Wasting Disease are difficult to study due to the limited stress responses that sea stars exhibit. “When sea stars are observed with lesions or tissue necrosis, particularly when there are just a handful of individuals, we cannot be sure whether symptoms are a result of disease or from another cause such as injury incurred from a predation attempt that exposed tissue to bacteria/infection,” she says.

  • July 12, 2024 - Scientific American

    How Antarctic Scientists Think about the Future of Our Planet

    Another episode of Scientific American's Science Quickly podcast featured UC Santa Cruz chemical oceanographers Carl Lamborg and Phoebe Lam and doctoral student Marissa Despins. The three discussed how the climate crisis intertwines with their work. Listen to the previous episodes on June 14 and June 28.
  • July 12, 2024 - Washington Post

    Webb space telescope keeps delivering cosmic surprises

    Garth Illingworth, an astronomer at the University of California at Santa Cruz who was among the people who dreamed up the Webb in the late 1980s, said the telescope has assembled a vast amount of data on exoplanets — the worlds that orbit distant stars. That data still needs to be assembled into a coherent picture, he added. “It is a little like an alien walking through an earthly zoo, looking at the vast range of animals and then trying to assemble the relationships and common aspects,” he said.

  • July 15, 2024 - San Francisco Chronicle: Datebook

    In ‘Seeing Through Stone,’ artists imagine a world without prisons

    Highlights from 'Seeing Through Stone,' an exhibition co-created with the Institute of Arts and Science and the San Jose Museum of Art. The UC Santa Cruz sponsored show includes artists from all over the country reflecting on incarceration and prison abolition.
  • July 12, 2024 - The Santa Cruz Sentinel

    Filmmakers of ‘You Will Not Replace Us’ attend screening, discussion in Capitola

    This week, the Santa Cruz Sentinel covered a panel discussion moderated by University of California, Santa Cruz Continuing Lecturer in History and Literature Bruce Thompson, who spoke with the filmmakers of “You Will Not Replace Us,"which confronts the complex relationship between Black and Jewish Americans and the common struggle to fight hate.
  • July 05, 2024 - The Pajaronian

    Going forth for beach cleanup

    UC Santa Cruz chemistry professor Rebecca Braslau, whose team is working on methods to break down post-consumer plastic and turn it into something useful, was collecting trash to get a boots-on-the-ground view of the scope of plastic waste. “We try to raise awareness about single-use plastic items in general, and this is part of that,” she said.

  • July 05, 2024 - East Bay Times

    Fremont blames heat for massive Lake Elizabeth fish die-off

    Mark Carr, a professor of marine ecology at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said the fish are suffocating because they are competing with the lake’s ecosystem over the limited oxygen and losing ... “You can get phytoplankton blooms, algal blooms, at night that the phytoplankton respires, which means it consumes oxygen, so then it too will reduce the oxygen levels in the water – especially in the shallow water that is more vulnerable to the heat.”