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It can be hard to imagine cows eating seaweed. But that could be one of the solutions to reduce methane emissions from cattle farming.
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Climate change is bleak, it鈥檚 accelerating and it鈥檚 affecting lives around the globe 鈥 but it鈥檚 not too late to prevent the worst, according to a report led by Oregon State University researchers that鈥檚 drawing notice from around the world.
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Oregon State University is constructing a wave energy testing facility off the Oregon Coast. Weather permitting, some of that work will be visible from shore this month.
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A breakthrough identification of distant signals in space is shedding new light on gravitational waves 鈥 one of science鈥檚 biggest mysteries.
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This month鈥檚 top five Pacific Northwest science stories from 鈥淎ll Science. No Fiction.鈥
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Winemakers may soon be able to raise a toast, even after a growing season marked by wildfire smoke.
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The Oregon State University research will focus on Dungeness crab and krill. Both species are threatened by multiple stressors, including ocean acidification, algal blooms, and increasing ocean temperatures caused by climate change.
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OSU scientists aboard the Bell M. Shimada keep an eye out for whales. One scientist hopes to help predict where whales will show up by studying the food they eat.
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One single-celled oceanic organism could provide big answers to questions about climate change.
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The U.S. Department of Energy granted $25 million for testing wave energy technology at a facility under construction near Newport. The site will soon be home to the only grid-connected wave energy testing facility in the country and one of just a few in the world.
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The state still plans to establish the Elliott State Research Forest, but Oregon State University officials say the financial risk of owning the forest is too high for the school.
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New research from the Human-Animal Interaction Lab at Oregon State University shows that cats form attachments to their owners in ways similar to dogs 鈥斺