Wetlands Content
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Wetlands Content for UC DavisenSulfur Runoff Amplifies Mercury Concentrations in Florida Everglades
/climate/news/agricultural-use-sulfur-amplifies-mercury-concentrations-florida-everglades
Sulfur from sugarcane crops is flowing into wetlands in the Florida Everglades, creating toxic methylmercury, which accumulates in fish, a UC Davis study finds.May 08, 2025 - 10:26amKatherine E Kerlin/climate/news/agricultural-use-sulfur-amplifies-mercury-concentrations-florida-evergladesSupreme Court to Decide Which Wetlands Receive Federal Protection
/climate/blog/supreme-court-decide-which-wetlands-should-receive-federal-protection
UC Davis Law Professor Albert Lin on how Sackett v. EPA, a U.S. Supreme Court case about wetlands, could alter the government's ability to address water pollution under the Clean Water Act.September 27, 2022 - 11:33amKatherine E Kerlin/climate/blog/supreme-court-decide-which-wetlands-should-receive-federal-protectionPaving the Way for Pathogens
/news/paving-way-pathogens
<p>Higher levels of rainfall and coastal development increase the risk of disease-causing organisms flowing to the ocean, according to a study from the University of California, Davis. The study advances earlier work by tracking the parasite <em>T. gondii </em>to see how human-driven land-use change and rainfall might be impacting pathogen movement from land to sea.</p>August 29, 2016 - 11:31amKatherine E Kerlin/news/paving-way-pathogens