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A new study finds oyster farming, once seen as a carbon source, actually captures more carbon than expected. Through filter feeding and organic carbon release, oysters may ease ocean acidification while providing sustainable food and a brighter future for climate and seas.
(c) Mitili Mitili
(c) Mitili Mitili
  • September 22, 2025

Oysters Remove Carbon from the Ocean

PHYS

A new study finds oyster farming, once seen as a carbon source, actually captures more carbon than expected. Through filter feeding and organic carbon release, oysters may ease ocean acidification while providing sustainable food and a brighter future for climate and seas.

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Off the Goto Islands, Japan has inaugurated its first large floating wind farm with eight turbines. This pioneering project strengthens renewable energy, accelerates the nation’s path to carbon neutrality by 2050, and offers a hopeful model for a greener global future.
Previous Post Japan Launches First Floating Wind Farm
Next Post New Test for Hard-To-Detect HPV-Associated Cancers
A groundbreaking blood test can spot HPV-linked head and neck cancers up to a decade before symptoms emerge. With HPV responsible for around 70% of such cancers and no screening test yet available, this breakthrough offers real hope for earlier treatment and healthier futures.

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Scientists monitoring the ozone layer report that the hole above Antarctica has reduced to its smallest measured size since 2019. Thanks to favourable weather and lower ozone-depleting emissions, the drop could mean a healthier atmosphere and milder ultraviolet exposure for southern latitudes — good news for people and ecosystems alike.
(c) Gatis Marcinkevics

Antarctic ozone hole shrinks to smallest size since 2019

  • December 2, 2025
Two 19-year-old college students from Portugal have created Trovador — a six-legged, AI-enabled robot that can navigate rugged terrain and replant trees in wildfire-scorched hills. It plants up to 200 saplings per hour, achieves 85–90 % survival in trials, and could revive forests where humans and machines can’t reach.
(c) Karsten Winegeart

Young inventors build robot that plants trees on steep burned slopes

  • December 2, 2025
Researchers at the University of Cologne have discovered a powerful antibody — 04_A06 — that neutralizes around 98.5 % of over 300 tested HIV strains. In lab experiments the antibody reduced viral load to undetectable levels — a major step toward broad-spectrum therapies for prevention and treatment worldwide.
(c) Antirudh

A breakthrough in the fight against HIV: new antibody blocks nearly all variants

  • December 2, 2025

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Researchers studying a soil bacterium discovered a powerful antibiotic that can kill drug-resistant bacteria previously deemed untreatable. The compound emerged from re-examining a known drug’s production process and opens new directions in the fight against antimicrobial resistance.
Powerful new antibiotic from soil bacteria targets superbugs
The European Court of Justice ruled that Poland must recognise same-sex marriages legally performed in other EU countries, even if Polish law doesn’t allow them. Refusing violates EU citizens’ rights to free movement and family life.
EU court orders Poland to recognise same-sex marriages from other EU states
The Vatican has handed over 62 sacred Indigenous items — including an Inuit kayak, wampum belts, war clubs, and masks — to the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. The gesture is described as a “concrete sign of dialogue, respect and fraternity” after decades of cultural suppression.
Pope returns Indigenous artifacts to Canada in powerful reconciliation move
From near-collapse to a stunning rebound — this season India welcomed an estimated one million nests of endangered Olive Ridley sea turtle along its coasts. Volunteers, hatcheries and coastal protections combined to give these turtles a fighting chance — and the babies are now crawling into the sea.
Endangered sea turtles return in force: India’s Olive Ridleys see mass nesting surge
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