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UKCEH News and Blogs
UKCEH News and Blogs
Within our News & Media Centre you can find our latest news, blogs and press releases, as well as key resources for journalists
đ𪰠Count pollinators for 10 minutes!
đ𪰠Count pollinators for 10 minutes!
Jobs at UKCEH
Jobs at UKCEH
Here you can explore the kind of roles we recruit for, search our latest vacancies, learn more about what it's like to work at UKCEH, and find out about the many benefits of joining our team. Every one of our 600+ staff and 50+ postgraduate students plays a vital role in delivering our ambition to understand the environment and the human impact on it, so that together people and nature can prosper. How we work is just as important as what we achieve. We want UKCEH to be a welcoming, inclusive, engaging and collaborative place to work. We embed our values - excellence, integrity and teamwork - into everything we do. For further information, please visit the UKCEH Website.
Report algal blooms with the Bloomin' Algae app đŚ
Report algal blooms with the Bloomin' Algae app đŚ
Bloominâ Algae is a Citizen Science app for for identifying and reporting the presence of harmful blooms of blue-green algae. The app helps speed up public health warnings and can help teach you how to recognise the risks to you, children and animals.
Counting the Earth podcast
Counting the Earth podcast
Counting the Earth is a regular podcast series from the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology exploring the numbers behind natue
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UK Water Resources Portal đ§ď¸
UK Water Resources Portal đ§ď¸
A web tool for displaying water resources and drought information from the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.
UK Saltmarsh Carbon Database | UKCEH
UK Saltmarsh Carbon Database | UKCEH
Latest UK Hydrological Outlook
Latest UK Hydrological Outlook
Free toolkit for farmers - restoration of grasslands
Free toolkit for farmers - restoration of grasslands
A partnership, led by Plantlife and also involving a range of partners including the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH), has created the first grassland-specific toolkit to support farmers with restoration of these important habitats.
Small-scale saltmarsh restoration methods
Small-scale saltmarsh restoration methods
Evaluating small-scale saltmarsh restoration methods for the potential inclusion into the Saltmarsh Code
Read about chikungunya virus risk increasing in Europe
Read about chikungunya virus risk increasing in Europe
Chikungunya virus poses a greater health threat in Europe than previously thought because it can be spread when air temperatures are as low as 13 degrees Celsius, according to a study led by the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology.
The role of saltmarshes in tackling climate change
The role of saltmarshes in tackling climate change
Saltmarshes play a significant role in mitigating and adapting to climate change. UKCEH research is helping to build the scientific case for recognising these âblue carbonâ habitats in the UKâs Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Inventory.
Download the global water policy brief [PDF]
Download the global water policy brief [PDF]
Assessing the success of a horizon scanning approach in predicting invasive nonânative species arrival - Peyton - Journal of Applied Ecology - Wiley Online Library
Assessing the success of a horizon scanning approach in predicting invasive nonânative species arrival - Peyton - Journal of Applied Ecology - Wiley Online Library
We conclude that horizon scanning provides a rapid, affordable and successful mechanism to predict the arrival of high-risk INNS. We highlight the importance of citizen science, including biological ...
Improving forecasting of devastating sudden droughtsÂ
Improving forecasting of devastating sudden droughtsÂ
Scientists at the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology have made a key finding that could transform forecasting of 'flash' droughts, providing communities with time to take action to mitigate the impacts on food production, the spread of wildfires and human health.
Thoughts from COP30: Scientists must better support fire-hit communities
Thoughts from COP30: Scientists must better support fire-hit communities
Dr Douglas Kelley, a land surface modeller at the UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology who specialises in wildfire science, explains that the thought-provoking discussions at COP30 with local communities affected by fire will result in changes in scientific approach.
The inside flow: insights on a PhD in hydrology | FDRI
The inside flow: insights on a PhD in hydrology | FDRI
Time to act across crises: Lessons from the Nexus Assessment for UNFCCC COP 30 | PLOS Climate
Time to act across crises: Lessons from the Nexus Assessment for UNFCCC COP 30 | PLOS Climate
Discover more about our rice trials
Discover more about our rice trials
Rice is being grown in the UK for the first time. This is part of a wider trial within the AgZero+ project that brings together UKCEH scientists and farmers to grow rice and other food, bioenergy and wildlife friendly crops in the rewetted peatland soils in the Cambridgeshire Fens.
UKCEH science in action with Deborah Meaden
UKCEH science in action with Deborah Meaden
Enter ladybird records on iRecord đ
Enter ladybird records on iRecord đ
Agents for Change Leading environmental science for a sustainable future
Agents for Change Leading environmental science for a sustainable future
Land Cover Maps collection
Land Cover Maps collection
Data from nature
Data from nature
Importance of good hedgerow management - a short video
Importance of good hedgerow management - a short video
Beware Of Aliens - help prevent the spread of invasive species
Beware Of Aliens - help prevent the spread of invasive species
England hedgerow map
England hedgerow map
More effective protected areas needed to halt biodiversity loss
More effective protected areas needed to halt biodiversity loss
Why less polluted air is leading to the browning of rivers
Why less polluted air is leading to the browning of rivers
Centipede atlas provides insights into British species
Centipede atlas provides insights into British species
Half of replanted tropical trees donât survive, new study finds
Half of replanted tropical trees donât survive, new study finds
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