Media Coverage

  • Los Angeles Times

    Los Angeles Times

    UC applications rise for fall 2024, with gains in diversity and transfer applicants

    UC Santa Cruz emailed about 500,000 potential transfer students last fall to congratulate them on their educational journeys and offer help in course planning, financial aid issues and other support, said Michelle Whittingham, associate vice chancellor of enrollment management. The number of transfer applications overall grew to 12,218 — a 9.6% increase — for fall…

  • The Washington Post

    Washington Post

    Honduran ex-president convicted of helping send tons of cocaine to U.S.

    “How is it possible the U.S. government did not know this stuff was going on?” said Dana Frank, a historian and Honduras expert at the University of California at Santa Cruz. “They chose to look the other way.”

  • Democracy Now

    Democracy Now

    U.S.-Backed Fmr. Honduran Pres. Juan Orlando Hernández on Trial in NY for Drug Trafficking

    Dana Frank, professor emerita of history at UC Santa Cruz, was interviewed by Democracy Now about the trial against former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, who is accused of turning the Central American country into a narco-state. 

  • NPR

    NPR

    Former president of Honduras is on trial, facing charges that he ran a 'narco state'

    University of California, Santa Cruz Research Professor and Professor Emerita of History Dana Frank was quoted in an NPR segment this week about former president of Honduras Juan Orlando Hernández, whose trial begins in New York, as he stands accused of overseeing a "narco state."

  • PBS Newshour

    PBS Newshour

    Landmark report details how human activities can disrupt animal migrations

    When whales migrate from polar waters toward the equator, they help move nutrients to parts of the ocean that typically don’t have a lot to spare, said Daniel Costa, director of the Institute of Marine Sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz. As they travel, whales release urea as waste, a source of nitrogen that’s useful…

  • The Hill

    The Hill

    California’s record rainfall leads to mudslides, sewage spills

    Co-author Pete Raimondi, a marine ecologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, stressed the importance of locating “areas where kelp can persist on its own.” Doing so, he added, could help identify where kelp restoration efforts have the best chance at success. 

  • New York Times

    New York Times

    A Two-Ton Lifeguard That Saved a Young Pup

    Researchers have observed elephant seals for more than 40 years and had never seen a male rescue a pup like this before. “It’s completely out of the ordinary,” said Daniel Costa, an ecologist at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Since this is the first time anyone has seen anything like this from elephant seals,…

  • Scientific American

    Scientific American

    Saturn's 'Death Star' Moon May Hide a Massive, Shockingly Young Ocean

    The finding that Mimas has an ocean is intriguing—but that ocean’s inferred youth is what has sent ripples through the scientific community. “The implications give one pause because they’re very surprising,” says Francis Nimmo, a planetary scientist at the University of California, Santa Cruz, who was not involved with the new study.

  • KTVA

    KTVA

    Underwater forests focus of new study in Alaska

    From fish to crabs, Alaska’s kelp forests are home to a rich diversity of marine life. How these underwater forests are impacted by climate change, which are expected to make the ocean warmer and more acidic, is the focus of of a new study by Lauren Bell from the University of California, Santa Cruz.

  • CBC

    CBC

    Sea otters have a big appetite – and that could help marshes handle climate change

    "They eat a lot. They eat about a quarter to a third of their body weight every single day," explained Tim Tinker, a research ecologist at the University of California at Santa Cruz, and one of the study's Canadian co-authors. "And so whatever they're eating, they're going to have big impacts."

  • CNN

    CNN

    ‘Save the Whales’ was a shining success. Now can humpbacks save us from ourselves?

    CNN followed an international team of whale experts throughout 2023, from Ari Friedlaender’s lab at the University of California at Santa Cruz to humpback breeding grounds off the Pacific coast of Colombia, and their feeding grounds at the bottom of the world. While Friedlaender has been collecting whale data for more than 25 years, his…

  • AP News

    AP News

    Rising seas and frequent storms are battering California's piers, threatening the iconic landmarks

    “We are very much in a changed environment,” said Mike Beck, director of the Center for Coastal Climate Resilience at the University of California, Santa Cruz. “And we’re not going to be able to rebuild back in the same places and in the same ways that we did before. We’re going to have to think…

Last modified: Mar 12, 2024