Media Coverage

  • Space.com icon

    Space.com

    Our moon may have once been as hellish as Jupiter’s super volcanic moon Io

    “The moon gets sort of confused,” planetary scientist Francis Nimmo, of the University of California, Santa Cruz, told Space.com. “It doesn’t know exactly what orbit it should be adopting, and so it can develop kind of a weird orbit.”

  • Good Times

    Good Times

    Musical Treasures

    A youthful ‘Figaro,’ polyphonic Palestrina and a shot of Espressivo

  • San Francisco Public Press

    San Francisco Public Press

    Data Shows Racial Disparities in Toxic Cleanup Times in SF

    “There are many reasons why these disparities could be, but the fact that they exist means regulatory agencies should take social vulnerability and race into account when prioritizing which sites to clean up first,” said Lindsey Dillon, associate professor of sociology at UC Santa Cruz, who is part of a research group that advises the…

  • Jezebel

    In the Medical System, the Concept of General ‘Safety’ Can Be a Pretext to Harm Pregnant Women

    Existing in a police state where cops are embedded in hospitals or sicced onto people experiencing mental health crises “produces premature death,” says Carlos Martinez, a public health researcher and assistant professor at UC Santa Cruz. 

  • EdSource logo

    EdSource

    Bay Area universities reel from cuts in research funding from National Institutes of Health

    “I think the big concern is, if this goes on too long, then we’re just going to lose a generation of researchers who are going to have to go find other jobs,” UC Santa Cruz biology professor Grant Hartzog said. “I’ve got a 21-year-old son who’s a biochemistry major and has been thinking about whether…

  • Telemundo logo

    Telemundo

    ¿Cómo la falta de trabajadores del campo podría impactar la economía local?

    Associate Professor of Sociology Juan Pedroza discussed the economic impacts of immigration policies that are causing some farmworkers to fear going to work. “La economía está en un estatus frágil y menos trabajadores significa menos cosecha y más riesgo, no solamente para los que están trabajando, sino para todos nosotros que necesitamos las cosechas para…

  • earth.com logo

    Earth.com

    Plastic is harming seabirds even more than we realized

    A new study co-led by researchers at UC Santa Cruz shows that ingested plastic can release hormone-altering chemicals in northern fulmars, a species of seabird that inhabits the North Atlantic and North Pacific.

  • Associated Press AP logo

    AP

    Scientists once thought only humans could bob to music. Ronan the sea lion helped prove them wrong

    Not many animals show a clear ability to identify and move to a beat aside from humans, parrots and some primates. But then there’s Ronan, a bright-eyed sea lion that has scientists rethinking the meaning of music. Ronan has been a resident at UC Santa Cruz’s Long Marine Laboratory, where UC Santa Cruz researchers have…

  • CBS News logo

    CBS News

    Trump administration dismisses nearly 400 scientists working on congressionally mandated national climate report

    Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies Mijin Cha was one of hundreds of expert authors on the National Climate Assessment who were recently dismissed from that work by the Trump Administration. “I’m worried who will do the NCA moving forward and putting something forward that is false,” she said. Additional coverage in the Washington Post and…

  • Financial Express

    Financial Express

    An opportunity to chew on

    Distinguished Professor of Economics Nirvikar Singh wrote an opinion article about how increased iPhone production could prove to be an inflection point for India in manufacturing.

  • Mongabay logo

    Mongabay

    We can’t plant our way out of climate change

    Forests with diverse tree species are more resilient to climate extremes and better at storing carbon, according to recent studies conducted in China and Panama. Karen D. Holl of the University of California, Santa Cruz, notes that the studies merely add “to the list of reasons” for diverse plantings — their importance is undeniable.

  • Lookout Santa Cruz

    Lookout Santa Cruz

    Trump’s escalating attacks on research and education are hurting UC Santa Cruz – the public needs to act now

    The Trump administration’s attack on scientific research will deeply affect UC Santa Cruz, write three eminent UC Santa Cruz professors: Needhi Bhalla, Susan Carpenter, and Carol Greider. Since Donald Trump took office, the campus has lost 10 NIH grants worth $6 million, they write. In the past two weeks, the professors have lost $2.8 million…

Last modified: May 13, 2025