By Tim Cocks JOHANNESBURG, Jan 29 (Reuters) - A "perfect storm" of climate change and cyclical La Niña weather patterns ...
A warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture, and that’s why last weekend’s winter storm dumped more snow, sleet and freezing ...
Josh Busby is a professor of public affairs at the University of Texas at Austin and former senior climate advisor at the U.S ...
Johannesburg — Human-caused climate change worsened recent torrential rains and floods that devastated parts of southern ...
If you live in the eastern U.S., you are likely among the millions dealing with the aftereffects of the heavy snow, sleet and ...
The intensity of heavy downpours has increased by 40% since pre-industrial times, with some areas receiving more than a ...
“Exceptionally heavy” rainfall that led to deadly flooding across southern Africa in recent weeks was made more intense by a ...
Global warming is no longer a distant forecast but a lived reality, with recent measurements showing the planet already ...
Human-induced climate change made the intense early January heat wave in Australia five times more likely, according to a new analysis by World Weather Attribution.
The work provided a systematic understanding of how nightshade crops, including potatoes and tomatoes, adapt to stressful conditions at the level of entire gene networks, rather than individual genes, ...
The continued global reliance on traditional energy sources, particularly fossil fuels, collided with a powerful La Niña ...
Long-footed potoroos dig up and eat many truffle-like fungi, spreading spores and keeping vital fungi-forest relationships ...