Beyond the Eye of the Storm: The Impact of Repeated Hurricane Closures on Mental Health
Students face increased mental health risk while dealing with the challenges of a hurricane.
Commentary: What we learn when following a water droplet on its journey beneath Tallahassee
Small, stubborn acts of care compound the same way neglect does, only in the opposite direction.
Regenerative Farming: Fixing Food Systems Through Soil
On a Central Florida farm, ancient practices build resilience in the fields and local food system.
Conservation in contention: Guana River lands on the line
A 600-acre land swap proposal revives old battles between preservation and profit in northeast Florida.
Forecasting improves for toxic red tide, but Southwest Florida still fears economic pain
Florida’s Gulf Coast reels from economic fallout after tough red tide season.
Working against warming to save coral reefs
Upcoming film “Reef Keepers” documentary explores the grief and determination of scientists trying to save Florida's vanishing reefs.
Climate change is fueling a new kind of housing crisis in Florida
Florida is an example of where housing insecurity meets climate instability.
Florida again eyes mangroves as key to coastal resilience in new legislation
Mangroves provide multiple benefits to Florida’s threatened coasts
Earth Advocacy Day activists’ roundup of legislative priorities
A roundup of three bills students fromEarth Advocacy Day on March 6 supported or opposed, with the current status of each bill as of this writing.
Scrubland Farmz Springs Forth
Between farmland and Florida scrub, Sam Singleton grows a sustainable plant oasis.
Climate activists gather for Earth Advocacy Day at the Capitol
Students congregate at the Florida Capitol to advocate for environmental protections during session.
Snow day at Florida State University
Winter flurry turns Tallahassee into a winter wonderland.
New report finds that as sea levels rise, underground saltwater surges inland in South Florida
As sea levels continue to climb, the visible impacts are hard to miss. Beneath the surface lies a quieter, more insidious threat: the steady advance of saltwater into Florida's underground aquifers.
What’s going on with the health of Wakulla Springs?
With questions about water quality, lawsuit forces FDEP to propose rules for Springs protection.
Climate anxiety: It's here and it's personal
“When people don’t feel like their experience is being reflected in the world around them, they feel more distress.”
Finding the Florida Scrub-Jay
An interview with the author of “Florida Scrub-Jay: Field Notes on a Vanishing Bird.”
Recollections of Hurricane Ian
Hurricanes are a familiar and increasing threat to Floridians. One student recalls the day she and her family survived Hurricane Ian.
Limestone reefs and legislation will defend Apalachicola Bay ecosystem
Oyster harvesting makes up the fabric of Apalachicola's culture and the identity of its residents. At its peak, oystermen from the former “oyster capital of the world” supplied 90% of Florida’s wild oysters and 10% of the nation’s. But now, the oyster fishing industry is all but dead.
Abnormal fish event in the Keys leaves scientists scratching heads
Several species of fish in the Florida Keys are exhibiting strange spinning behavior in the same area where a small-scale fish die-off is occurring.
The killer whales of the Gulf of Mexico: What do we know about them?
After another rare killer whale sighting off the coast of Florida in June, Research Fishery Biologist Keith Mullin discusses the prevalence of the animals in the Gulf and why sightings are so rare.
