Media Coverage

  • USA Today

    USA Today

    New effort aims to revamp calculus to keep students in science, technology, engineering fields

    Math professor Martin Weissman is rethinking how his university teaches calculus. Over the summer, the professor from the University of California at Santa Cruz, spent a week at Harvard to learn how to redesign the mathematics for life sciences courses his institution offers. Called Math 11 A and B, these classes, which students take as…

  • Newsweek

    Newsweek

    Here's Which Sea Animals Are Hurt Most by the U.S. Heatwaves

    Heatwaves can have a devastating impact on some marine predators such as sharks but other species can adapt, scientists have discovered. Heather Welch, associate specialist with the Institute of Marine Sciences, noted that, "instead of being a story about winners and losers, this is a story of how variable marine heatwave impacts can be. To understand…

  • Space.com

    SPACE.com

    Star blows giant exoplanet's atmosphere away, leaving massive tail in its wake

    Astronomers have monitored the trailing gas tail of HAT-P-32 b created from helium flowing from its atmosphere with telescopes from Earth. "We have monitored this planet and the host star with long time series spectroscopy, observations made of the star and planet over a couple of nights," research lead author and University of California Santa…

  • AP News

    APNews

    Farms with natural landscape features provide sanctuary for some Costa Rica rainforest birds

    Small farms with natural landscape features such as shade trees, hedgerows and tracts of intact forest provide a refuge for some tropical bird populations, according to an 18-year study in Costa Rica. The findings may seem intuitive, but Natalia Ocampo-Penuela, a University of California, Santa Cruz conservation ecologist not involved in the study, said it’s…

  • BBC

    BBC

    Science In Action – Drowning Coastal Ecosystems

    Ecologist Alexa Fredston has found that bottom-dwelling fish may be more resilient to the effects of marine heatwaves than previously thought. Additional coverage in Le Figaro, Axios, Agence France-Presse, and The Hill.

  • LiveScience

    Live Science

    A black hole 'assassin' ripped a star to shreds and left its guts strewn about the galaxy

    "ASASSN-14li is exciting because one of the hardest things with tidal disruptions is being able to measure the mass of the unlucky star, as we have done here," says Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz, an astrophysicist at University of California, Santa Cruz and co-author of the new work.

  • New York Times

    New York Times

    Waves Along California’s Coast Are Getting Bigger, Study Says

    A 2019 study, led by Borja G. Reguero, a researcher in the Institute of Marine Sciences, found that the rising sea-surface temperatures were influencing global wind patterns and making waves stronger.

  • New York Times

    New York Times

    Isabel Crook, 107, Dies; Her Life in China Spanned a Century of Change

    Mrs. Crook’s most recent book is “Prosperity’s Predicament: Identity, Reform, and Resistance in Rural Wartime China (1940-1941),” which is based on her prewar field notes. One of its editors, Gail Hershatter, a history professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said the book offers a unique look at a rural society that even in…

  • Fast Company

    Fast Company

    The next pandemic could wipe out crops, not people

    Disease-resistant plants can alter airflow in ways that keep plants dry and healthy and create physical barriers that block pathogen movement. Especially if they’re tall, resistant plants can act like fences that diseases have to hop over. “Somebody did a nice experiment taking dead corn stalks and just plopping them in the bean field,” says…

  • Los Angeles Times

    Los Angeles Times

    In the face of sea level rise, can we reimagine California's vanishing coastline?

    This LA Times feature follows Gary Griggs, an oceanographer at UC Santa Cruz, as he explains issues of erosion on California's coasts and the sacrifices that must be made to address them. This feature is an excerpt of an upcoming book, "California Against the Sea: Visions for our Vanishing Coastline."

  • Space.com

    SPACE.com

    Supermassive black hole chews up huge star, spits stellar 'guts' into space

    "Observing the destruction of a massive star by a supermassive black hole is spellbinding because more massive stars are expected to be significantly less common than lower-mass stars," said Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz of the University of California, Santa Cruz, a co-author of the study.

  • Sierra

    Sierra Magazine

    These Animals Are Already Adapting to a Changing Climate

    “Flexibility has been really important for them to overcome prey changes because of climate change,” Ana Valenzuela-Toro, the author of the study and researcher at the University of California, Santa Cruz, said. “I tend to think of California sea lions as the raccoons of the sea.”

Last modified: Oct 03, 2023