| Laura Schultz

While climate change is a threat to us all, the effects of our warming planet have a disproportionate impact on communities of color and low income groups.

Policy & Regulation

| Matt Wisniewski

The most promising microbes for making fuels and chemicals from plant material have broad appetites and biosynthetic potential but have not been widely studied in research labs. In three recent studies, scientists report crucial information on how to control genes in unique and promising biosynthetic microbes.

Transportation & Fuels, Biofuels & Bioproducts, Conversion

| Mark E. Griffin

Mikhail Kats has been studying thermal radiation, the phenomenon by which the vast majority of life in the universe is generated, for much of his life. This is his story.

Materials, Nuclear

| Massie S. Ballon, Joint Genome Institute

Despite advances in sequencing technologies and computational methods in the past decade, researchers have uncovered genomes for just a small fraction of Earth’s microbial diversity.

Transportation & Fuels, Plant Genetics & Breeding, Modeling

| La Follette School of Public Affairs

Research by La Follette School Assistant Professor Morgan Edwards and colleagues demonstrates how combining existing subnational climate action with expanded national strategies in the United States will be critical to reach scientifically informed climate goals.

Energy & Society, Environmental Studies, Policy & Regulation

| Mary Magnuson

For farmers struggling against economic forces and doing everything they can to keep afloat, grassland biodiversity may be the last thing they want to worry about.

Environmental Studies, Policy & Regulation, Sustainable Agriculture

| Mary Magnuson

Scientists at the University of Wisconsin–Madison have discovered a way to control the growth of twisting, microscopic spirals of materials just one atom thick.

Materials, Modeling