Flowers grown floating on polluted waterways can help clean up nutrient runoff and turn a profit
Our promising findings show floating cut-flower farms could be a sustainable option for mitigating water pollution.
Our promising findings show floating cut-flower farms could be a sustainable option for mitigating water pollution.
Results offer a glimmer of hope as climate change impacts coral reefs worldwide.
Overall, the research found that support for local policy actions to protect and restore the bay was extremely high.
PFAS can enter the food chain and accumulate in marine plants and animals, with ecological and human health implications.
A University of Miami graduate student's research shows which Miami-Dade County sites are at risk, proposes strategies to make those ...
By Paul Owens In Florida, decisions about where, when and how communities will grow are guided by comprehensive plans, created ...
By Jon Paul Brooker, Florida Conservation As Florida continues to wisely invest in high-profile environmental initiatives such as the restoration ...
By Joseph Bonasia, Florida Rights of Nature Network Here’s what Floridians need to know about the first lawsuit involving New ...
By the Miami Herald Editorial Board It would be easy for Miami-Dade County commissioners to dismiss environmentalists who are fighting ...
By Paul Sutton, University of Denver While climate change did not create damaging weather and wildfires, it has demonstrably made ...
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