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Posts by Marcelo Ardon

Surface Elevation Trends in Natural and Restored Coastal Forested Wetlands Reveal Vulnerability to Saltwater Intrusion and Sea Level Rise

Coastal forested wetlands are not keeping up with sea level rise:

rdcu.be/eZNjv

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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California turns on water to create new wetlands on the shore of the shrinking Salton Sea California officials sent water flowing to create new wetlands along the shores of the shrinking Salton Sea. The project is intended to control dust and provide habitat for birds.

www.latimes.com/environment/...

10 months ago 7 2 1 1
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Mapping the world's inland surface waters: an upgrade to the Global Lakes and Wetlands Database (GLWD v2) Abstract. In recognition of the importance of inland waters, numerous datasets mapping their extents, types, or changes have been created using sources ranging from historical wetland maps to real-tim...

A fantastic new mapping product for the world's inland waters, a critical driver for studying GHG emissions, biodiversity, and much more.

Mapping the world's inland surface waters: an upgrade to the Global Lakes and Wetlands Database (GLWD v2)

essd.copernicus.org/articles/17/...

10 months ago 13 12 0 1
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World Peatland Day: Protecting a crucial carbon sink Peatlands are one of the world’s biggest carbon sinks. These naturally waterlogged boggy swamps can hold thousands of years’ worth of compressed, partially decomposed vegetation matter — despite…

Peatlands are one of the world’s biggest carbon sinks. Despite covering just 3-4% of Earth’s land surface, they’re thought to store more carbon per area than the world’s forests combined.

In honor of World Peatland Day on June 2 here's three recent Mongabay stories on this critical ecosystem...

10 months ago 34 19 1 1
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‘Half the tree of life’: ecologists’ horror as nature reserves are emptied of insects A new point in history has been reached, entomologists say, as climate-led species’ collapse moves up the food chain even in supposedly protected regions free of pesticides

When warnings of Insectageddon were issued a few years ago, there was widespread denial. Less so now. It's devastating. www.theguardian.com/environment/...

10 months ago 2201 1240 82 143

Agree with the previous comments. You can try three times, and if you don’t succeed you can always submit it to the general programs. And you can turn it into a paper.

10 months ago 1 0 0 0
A graphing showing the number of database records for soil respiration raising over time

A graphing showing the number of database records for soil respiration raising over time

I used the loooong flight home from #EGU25 to finalize and push a new release of the freely-available Soil Respiration Database github.com/bpbond/srdb/ #openscience

11 months ago 32 6 1 0
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Ghost forests are growing as sea levels rise As trees choked by saltwater die along low-lying coasts, marshes may move in — for better or worse, scientists are learning

knowablemagazine.org/content/arti...

11 months ago 2 1 0 0
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Protect NOAA: Our Safety in a Climate-Changed World Depend on It President Trump and Elon Musk want to dismantle the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). That would eliminate free public access to weather forecasts, hurricane tracking, wildfire a...

We’re mobilizing scientists to protect NOAA and we need you too. Get involved:

1 year ago 149 70 1 4
This is a cartogram map of the United States depicting land use by different categories. The map distorts state shapes to represent proportional land usage. Key land use types include cow pasture/range (covering much of the central U.S.), private and federal timberland in the Pacific Northwest, corporate timberland in the Southeast, and urban housing/commercial areas in the Northeast. Other categories include agriculture (livestock feed, wheat exports, ethanol/biodiesel, cotton), protected lands (national parks, federal wilderness, state parks), and infrastructure (railroads, airports, highways). Additional specialized land uses include wildfires, golf courses, Christmas tree farms, and maple syrup production.

This is a cartogram map of the United States depicting land use by different categories. The map distorts state shapes to represent proportional land usage. Key land use types include cow pasture/range (covering much of the central U.S.), private and federal timberland in the Pacific Northwest, corporate timberland in the Southeast, and urban housing/commercial areas in the Northeast. Other categories include agriculture (livestock feed, wheat exports, ethanol/biodiesel, cotton), protected lands (national parks, federal wilderness, state parks), and infrastructure (railroads, airports, highways). Additional specialized land uses include wildfires, golf courses, Christmas tree farms, and maple syrup production.

I think about this map a lot.

www.bloomberg.com/graphics/201...

1 year ago 2730 654 161 136
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NSF state cards - Google Drive

This is amazing 😍😍 @500womensci.bsky.social has made cards for each state on funding for NSF and NIH avail for download bit.ly/NSF_bystate & bit.ly/NIH_bystate if they are helpful for folks

1 year ago 271 176 12 20
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U.S. early-career researchers struggling amid chaos Uncertain funding, government firings, and distressed universities hit vulnerable groups especially hard

Graduating during the pandemic slowed down my process and is part of why I did two postdocs. Now as a first year faculty, all the federal grants are frozen. I love the work I do but this has all of us questioning how much www.science.org/content/arti...

1 year ago 2720 542 69 23
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How Scary Are Ghost Forests? To combat climate change, researchers argue that inundated forests could be turned into marshland carbon sinks.

www.earthisland.org/journal/inde...

1 year ago 5 2 0 0
The office door of my colleague, fired from his job with no notice. His nameplate is covered in black paper.

The office door of my colleague, fired from his job with no notice. His nameplate is covered in black paper.

168 colleagues lost yesterday, 6 in Earth Sciences alone. Today we grieved. And strategized. www.npr.org/2025/02/18/n...

1 year ago 561 120 10 3
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Woody debris breaks down faster in tropical streams with high phosphorus.

Marzolf et al. 2025. On the breakdown of woody ... in Neotropical streams, Costa Rica. Freshwater Science
www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...

@nickmarzolf.bsky.social @ardonlab.bsky.social @alonsoramirez.bsky.social

1 year ago 6 4 1 1
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National Science Foundation Fires 168 Workers as Federal Purge Continues Firings at the NSF included permanent employees who had already completed their one-year probationary period, as well as at-will workers.

"their value to the nation is no longer required” 🤬 www.wired.com/story/nation...

1 year ago 13 11 1 1

So a former postdoc from our department had just started as a PO at NIH and was terminated in the wave of terminations last week. He is in the research triangle and a phenomenal scientist with expertise in stress and glia. If anyone in the RTI is hiring asap please let me know! #neuroskyence

1 year ago 1218 414 21 6
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Ten simple rules for fostering creativity in research labs Research lab groups are hotspots for the education of the next generation of scientists, and making these units work as creatively as possible is essential for solving pressing issues in biology, the ...

Happy to share that my paper on creativity in research labs is out in the "Ten Simply Rules" article series.

Ten simple rules for fostering creativity in research labs

I hope you find it to be useful.

#AcademicSky

journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol...

1 year ago 77 31 4 3
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Professional societies stand together in defense of science & scientists.
“science has led to humanity’s greatest advances, improving people’s lives & the health of our planet … (we’re) committed to supporting, elevating, & fighting for science & those who further it.“
www.unitedsciencealliance.org

1 year ago 241 122 7 17
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World’s largely unprotected peatlands are ticking ‘carbon bomb’, warns study Bogs and swamps are a colossal carbon store but their continued destruction would blow climate change targets

Draining the world's peatlands for farming and mining is releasing so much CO2 that if it was a country, it would be the 4th biggest polluter in the world after China, the US, + India.

And the associated losses in biodiversity are vast.
www.theguardian.com/environment/...

1 year ago 274 129 3 6
LinkedIn This link will take you to a page that’s not on LinkedIn

We are looking for two postdocs for a synthesis project focused on soil carbon dynamics and warming experiments. If you are excited about applying ML and process-based models to synthesize mechanisms of temperature sensitivity of soil respiration, please apply!
lnkd.in/dV2wuGSe
lnkd.in/diZiM9HV

1 year ago 13 10 1 0
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Behind the paper: changing forests on the US East Coast - Latitude We speak to Marcelo Ardón and colleagues about their recent PLOS Climate publication, “Coastal carbon sentinels: A decade of forest change along the eastern shore of the…

New on the Latitude blog: we talk to the @ardonlab.bsky.social about their recent PLOS Climate article, which looks at how climate change and sea level rise are affecting the ecology and carbon balance of forests along the US East Coast

latitude.plos.org/2025/02/behi...

1 year ago 5 4 0 0
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How I've been thinking about all of the rapid horrible changes in the United States I'm not telling you how to think or feel, but maybe letting you know where I'm at might be useful.

I've been seen lots of feckless despair and detachedness among scientists in the US at the moment. How we might live up to this critical moment when things seem the worst.

scienceforeveryone.science/p/how-ive-be... 🧪

1 year ago 101 33 6 3
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Sharing a passion for freshwater science- We spent an evening meeting people from different institutions in NC that work in aquatic ecosystems and talking about freshwater ecosystems

This was part of the "Converge Freshwater Science Series" hosted at #NCSU

@ardonlab.bsky.social @agdelv.bsky.social

1 year ago 11 3 0 1
A graph of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations at the Mauna Loa observatory, Hawaii, from 1958 to 4th February 2025. It shows carbon dioxide levels rising at an accelerating rate over the decades. This is known to be due to emissions of carbon dioxide from human activity, mainly fossil fuel burning but also deforestation. The first CO2 concentration value in March 1958 was 315 parts per million (ppm). The latest daily value is 426 ppm. The graph also shows a seasonal cycle of a few ppm within each year, which is known to be linked to the growing season in the northern hemisphere causing a temporary uptake of carbon in spring and summer and release in autumn. The graph is produced routinely by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego.

A graph of atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations at the Mauna Loa observatory, Hawaii, from 1958 to 4th February 2025. It shows carbon dioxide levels rising at an accelerating rate over the decades. This is known to be due to emissions of carbon dioxide from human activity, mainly fossil fuel burning but also deforestation. The first CO2 concentration value in March 1958 was 315 parts per million (ppm). The latest daily value is 426 ppm. The graph also shows a seasonal cycle of a few ppm within each year, which is known to be linked to the growing season in the northern hemisphere causing a temporary uptake of carbon in spring and summer and release in autumn. The graph is produced routinely by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego.

Although NOAA's page on atmospheric CO2 levels has vanished, you can still get this vital information from Ralph Keeling's team at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego keelingcurve.ucsd.edu

Please follow bsky.app/profile/keel... for updates and share

Don't let science be hidden

1 year ago 1804 949 44 45
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Mortality impacts of the most extreme heat events - Nature Reviews Earth & Environment Extreme heat is increasing in magnitude and frequency, threatening human health. This Review assesses mortality risk associated with extreme heat, revealing that human thermal tolerances (that is, unc...

At least we don't have to read about this on a federal government website:

At 2°C of warming, the area on Earth that is too hot for humans will triple. This is fine. 🔥🧪

1 year ago 902 271 27 4
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I can’t wait for the second round of search terms: climate, sea level, etc. For all you scientists (and you know who you are) who think you won’t be affected because your broader impacts are amazingly still limited to training grad students and chatting to K-12 kids, this won’t stop at one list.

1 year ago 17 8 1 0
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Wetlands are vital for #biodiversity, including as critical habitats for many migratory species.🐦🌍🧪

— @ipbes.bsky.social #LandDegradation Assessment

Yet, many of these #wetlands are now threatened.

Learn how wetlands support biodiversity with Ramsar for #WWD2025:

www.worldwetlandsday.org

1 year ago 344 129 1 7
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Constructed wetlands' carbon capture declines with age, study finds Constructed wetlands do a good job in their early years of capturing carbon in the environment that contributes to climate change—but that ability does diminish with time as the wetlands mature, a new...

Constructed wetlands do a good job in their early years of capturing carbon in the environment that contributes to climate change—but that ability does diminish…
phys.org/news/2025-01...

1 year ago 3 3 0 0
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Study examines how climate change has shaped coastal forests over the last decade

news.ncsu.edu/2025/01/stud...

1 year ago 4 0 0 0