Skip to content

News

September 19, 2018
Civil and environmental engineering Professor Erin Hestir’s proposal for a unique system of mapping mercury in the waters of the San Francisco Delta has won her and her team of collaborators a $1.7 million grant from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW). The CDFW is dividing up...
August 21, 2018
  UC Merced Professor interviewed in LA times piece on the California Wildfires burning so hot that they are creating their own weather systems.
August 10, 2018
Paleoecology Professor Jessica Blois recently became the campus’s 19th recipient of the National Science Foundation (NSF) Faculty Early Career Development Program (CAREER) award. The NSF describes as the CAREER as its “most prestigious award in support of early-career faculty who have the potential...
July 18, 2018
  Drought, climate change, an aging infrastructure and growing population threaten the water California's San Joaquin Valley uses to supply most of the nation's produce and a large proportion of its livestock and dairy. "Adequate water for food for the nation is a water...
July 16, 2018
Capital Public Radio's environmental reporter Ezra Romero just launched a new series about Yosemite National Park titled YosemiteLand. The first episode of the series features UC Merced Professors Catherine Keske and Jeff Jenkins. Additional UC Merced faculty will...
July 5, 2018
UC Merced researcher Lauren Schiebelhut was recently featured in a New York Times article on the research that she and others are doing here on campus.   NYT Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/18/science/sea-stars-genes.html?rref=collection/sectioncollection/science SF...
July 2, 2018
Soils are carbon sinks, storing more planet-warming carbon than the atmosphere and all animal and plant life combined. But they can also release massive amounts of stored carbon into the atmosphere. Given carbon’s central role in climate change, understanding the forces that govern how soils absorb...
July 2, 2018
Soils are carbon sinks, storing more planet-warming carbon than the atmosphere and all animal and plant life combined. But they can also release massive amounts of stored carbon into the atmosphere. Given carbon’s central role in climate change, understanding the forces that govern how soils absorb...
June 28, 2018
In 2012, Environmental Systems graduate student Lauren Schiebelhut was collecting DNA from ochre sea stars living along the Northern California coast — part of an effort to study genetic diversity in various marine species that serve as indicators of habitat...
June 15, 2018
Click for more from the California Water Commission. With much of the state’s water supply originating in the mountains as precipitation on the forested landscape, the health and management of the upper watersheds are critically important to California’s water quality and water...

Pages