Check out this new UW campus tour video – with special appearance by the R/V Thompson! – UWTV

Check out the new video of UW’s main campus, with a look at the natural beauty and architectural wonders that make the campus a Seattle treasure. Included for all you CoEnv fans…a cameo of our beloved Thomas G. Thompson Research Vessel!
 

CoEnv Science in Motion – featuring Lauren Kuehne/Olden lab

“CoEnv Science in Motion” features community-generated stories from our faculty, staff and students, relating to how they share their science–through such means as blog cross-posts or guest posts, science communication through non-science outlets, and stories about engagement offline as well.

For this installment of SiM, we’re sharing a blog post from the lab of Dr. Julian Olden, a faculty member in the School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences. The original blog post was written by Lauren Kuehne, and can be found here.

Would you like an invasion with your heat wave? Extreme climatic events and species invasions

Extreme weather, like the July 2012 heat wave, may not only increase air-conditioning bills but also the likelihood and success of species invasions.  A new paper co-authored by Dr. Olden in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, shows how these events – droughts, hurricanes, floods, and heat waves – can influence transport, establishment, spread, and impact of non-native species.  Both empirical evidence and invasion theory suggest that these extreme events can 1) increase transport of non-native species, 2) reduce resistance of native communities, and 3) change the balance of competition between native and non-native species.
Extreme and more variable climate events are predicted to become more frequent and intense with ongoing climate change.  Slowing the rate of species introductions around the world will probably require managers to factor in increases in the magnitude and the number of extreme climatic events.


Reframing intractable problems, global ocean N balance, PNW fires & climate change – This week’s CoEnv published research

Each week we share the latest publications coming from the College of the Environment. This week, three new articles co-authored by members of the College of the Environment were added to the Web of Science or published online.

1. TitleDiagnostic reframing of intractable environmental problems: Case of a contested multiparty public land-use conflict (Abstract only; subscription required for full text)

Authors: Asah, Stanley T.1; Bengston, David N.2; Wendt, Keith3; Nelson, Kristen C.4,5

1. Univ Washington, School of Environmental and Forest Sciences
2. US Forest Serv, No Res Stn
3. Minnesota State Dept Nat Resources, Policy Res & Planning Unit
4. Univ Minnesota, Coll Food Agr & Nat Resources Sci, Dept Forest Resources
5. Univ Minnesota, Dept Fisheries Wildlife & Conservat Biol

Journal: JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT

 

2. Title: Global rates of water-column denitrification derived from nitrogen gas measurements (Abstract only; subscription required for full text)

Authors: DeVries, Tim1; Deutsch, Curtis1; Primeau, Francois2; Chang, Bonnie3; Devol, Allan4

1. Univ Calif Los Angeles, Dept Atmospher & Ocean Sci
2. Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Earth Syst Sci
3. Princeton Univ, Dept Geosci
4. Univ Washington, School of Oceanography

Journal: NATURE GEOSCIENCES

 

3. TitleCarbon dynamics of forests in Washington, USA: 21st century projections based on climate-driven changes in fire regimes (Abstract only; subscription required for full text)

AuthorsRaymond, Crystal L.1,2; McKenzie, Donald2

1. Univ Washington, School of Environmental and Forest Sciences
2. US Forest Serv, Pacific Wildland Fire Sci Lab

Journal: ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS

Franklin gets standing ovation at ESA conference – UW News

SEFS professor Jerry Franklin, gave one of the three plenary sessions at the annual meeting of the Ecological Society of America, the world’s largest society of professional ecologists. His keynote address, titled “Forests, fish, owls, volcanoes . . . and people: Reflections on 50 years of accumulated ecological knowledge and its application to policy,” received a standing ovation (including from this blogging ecologist). Read more here!

Poo power – sewage sludge may be ideal biodiesel fuel – Conservation Magazine

A team of researchers has tested the efficiency of using sewage sludge – usually an unwanted side-effect of human settlements – into biodiesel. The result was pretty pooptacular! Read more here.

A warmer, drier winter may be on tap – Chinook Observer

Two years of precipitation-rich winters in the Pacific Northwest (even more than normal) could well be broken if climatic conditions in the equatorial Pacific shift from so-called neutral conditions toward El Niño. Read more about the current predictions, CIG‘s Nate Mantua is quoted.

Wave energy devices put to the test – Earth Techling

Ocean Sentinel (image via Oregon State University)

The Pacific Northwest now has a place for companies and scientists to put new wave power devices through their paces. The Ocean Sentinel began operating off the Oregon coast near Newport last week, a product of the Northwest National Marine Renewable Energy Center, a joint venture with Oregon State University and University of Washington. Read more here!