Media Coverage

  • Oceanographic

    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.…

  • National Geographic

    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.”

  • NPR

    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…

  • Mongabay logo

    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.

  • Science

    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…

  • CNA

    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.

  • Los Angeles Times

    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.

  • New York Times

    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.”

  • Financial Express

    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. 

  • Space.com

    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, Gizmodo, Los Angeles Times, Newsweek, and Popular…

  • The 19th

    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…

  • WIRED

    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.”

Last modified: Oct 07, 2024