Margaret Evans
@mekevans.bsky.social
Forest ecologist, plant demographer, dendrochronologist. Assoc. Professor at the University of Arizona, Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research - views are my own. Scientist at the intersection of the climate and biodiversity crises. Mom, dancer, gardener, cook.
Reposted by Margaret Evans
The synergies between domestic policies and global climate ambition are crucial. Acting together by boosting renewable energy and transitioning away from fossil fuels, we can bend the global emissions curve meaningfully and limit the rise in global average temperatures. act.ucsusa.org/4441fF8
Why COP 30 in Brazil Matters for a Thriving Economy and a Safe, Livable Planet
The rest of the world must leave the US behind and pursue ambitious consensus on switching to cheap clean energy.
act.ucsusa.org
November 10, 2025 at 6:32 PM
The synergies between domestic policies and global climate ambition are crucial. Acting together by boosting renewable energy and transitioning away from fossil fuels, we can bend the global emissions curve meaningfully and limit the rise in global average temperatures. act.ucsusa.org/4441fF8
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Don't miss this - just came out. Looks absolutely fantastic and it's open access. Teaching Environmental Justice www.e-elgar.com/shop/gbp/tea...
October 19, 2023 at 6:16 PM
Don't miss this - just came out. Looks absolutely fantastic and it's open access. Teaching Environmental Justice www.e-elgar.com/shop/gbp/tea...
Reposted by Margaret Evans
What would it look like if the world came together to prevent the fossil fuel industry from obstructing science-informed public policy and its implementation? UCS's Kathy Mulvey decided to imagine what a COP free from fossil fuel industry influence would look like. act.ucsusa.org/4hSh9IA
Imagining a COP Free from Fossil Fuel Industry Influence
COP30 will be a pivotal moment in global efforts to limit the worst impacts of climate change and advance a just transition centering workers, communities, and Indigenous Peoples.
act.ucsusa.org
November 10, 2025 at 3:52 PM
What would it look like if the world came together to prevent the fossil fuel industry from obstructing science-informed public policy and its implementation? UCS's Kathy Mulvey decided to imagine what a COP free from fossil fuel industry influence would look like. act.ucsusa.org/4hSh9IA
Reposted by Margaret Evans
To learn more about the Cascadia Partner Forum and its work promoting coordinated transboundary conservation in the face of climate change:
Cascadia Partner Forum
www.cascadiapartnerforum.org
October 30, 2025 at 1:38 AM
To learn more about the Cascadia Partner Forum and its work promoting coordinated transboundary conservation in the face of climate change:
Reposted by Margaret Evans
I'll be heading to @sacnas.bsky.social #NDiSTEM later this week to shamelessly plug my soon-to-open lab (Fall 2026). If any students are interested in studying the plant-insect interactions of the Sonoran Desert, please get in touch!
October 28, 2025 at 9:21 PM
I'll be heading to @sacnas.bsky.social #NDiSTEM later this week to shamelessly plug my soon-to-open lab (Fall 2026). If any students are interested in studying the plant-insect interactions of the Sonoran Desert, please get in touch!
Reposted by Margaret Evans
A federal judge has ruled that the government pause plans to lay off thousands of employees, including at USGS, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service.
eos.org/research-and...
eos.org/research-and...
Judge Stops Shutdown-Related RIFs Indefinitely - Eos
A judge has announced she would rule that the government cannot issue further reduction-in-force (RIF) notices to federal employees because of the government shutdown, nor implement RIFs that had alre...
eos.org
October 28, 2025 at 9:59 PM
A federal judge has ruled that the government pause plans to lay off thousands of employees, including at USGS, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service.
eos.org/research-and...
eos.org/research-and...
I’ve been wondering about this…
Among 2024 voters, his approval is net negative in every state that voted for Kamala Harris, plus seven swing states (AZ, GA, MI, NC, NV, PA, WI) and Texas
October 29, 2025 at 4:36 AM
I’ve been wondering about this…
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Another year, another history-making hot-water-fueled hurricane leaves @johnmoralestv.bsky.social nearly speechless
October 29, 2025 at 1:35 AM
Another year, another history-making hot-water-fueled hurricane leaves @johnmoralestv.bsky.social nearly speechless
I wish I could get past this paywall and read this
A bunch of ordinary people spontaneously organizing and standing up to Trump in a way that *nobody* in a position of power is willing to do.
This is really well done. slate.com/business/202...
October 29, 2025 at 4:23 AM
I wish I could get past this paywall and read this
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Great new paper led by @knowlton.bsky.social with @ttkeller.bsky.social and @rupertseidl.bsky.social (and me!) Still so much to learn from #Yellowstone about #fire, #forests & #climatechange. #NSFfunded #JFSPfunded
🆕 in Ecosphere's "Vegetation Ecology" track: A hot & dry future may shake up Yellowstone forests—think fewer spruce, more fire-tolerant neighbors
📄Simulated postfire tree regeneration suggests reorganization of Greater Yellowstone forests during the 21st century
doi.org/10.1002/ecs2...
📄Simulated postfire tree regeneration suggests reorganization of Greater Yellowstone forests during the 21st century
doi.org/10.1002/ecs2...
October 28, 2025 at 11:19 PM
Great new paper led by @knowlton.bsky.social with @ttkeller.bsky.social and @rupertseidl.bsky.social (and me!) Still so much to learn from #Yellowstone about #fire, #forests & #climatechange. #NSFfunded #JFSPfunded
Reposted by Margaret Evans
In response, blue-state governments are stepping in to fill the void, governors are allocating emergency funds to support food banks, deploying their National Guards to help coordinate donations, and taking other measures to ensure families don’t go hungry.
October 29, 2025 at 3:23 AM
In response, blue-state governments are stepping in to fill the void, governors are allocating emergency funds to support food banks, deploying their National Guards to help coordinate donations, and taking other measures to ensure families don’t go hungry.
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Twenty-five states are suing the Trump administration’s U.S. Department of Agriculture over the looming suspension of SNAP benefits.
October 29, 2025 at 3:23 AM
Twenty-five states are suing the Trump administration’s U.S. Department of Agriculture over the looming suspension of SNAP benefits.
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Following up on Greg Weaver’s Fresnoland article on Teakettle, this podcast mentions “Tribal burn collaboratives,” but there’s another story or two yet to be reported about the Sierra-Sequoia Burn Cooperative’s continuing ties to Teakettle. open.spotify.com/episode/7he5...
@fresnoland.bsky.social
@fresnoland.bsky.social
When the Forest Service Failed the Forest: Inside the Garnet Fire
open.spotify.com
October 19, 2025 at 6:42 PM
Following up on Greg Weaver’s Fresnoland article on Teakettle, this podcast mentions “Tribal burn collaboratives,” but there’s another story or two yet to be reported about the Sierra-Sequoia Burn Cooperative’s continuing ties to Teakettle. open.spotify.com/episode/7he5...
@fresnoland.bsky.social
@fresnoland.bsky.social
Reposted by Margaret Evans
My news to me good news for Oct 13 is that the US is not the whole story, by a LOT #earthOptimism #BeyondTheObituaries e360.yale.edu/features/han...
This Data Scientist Sees Progress in the Climate Change Fight
Countries are falling short on reducing emissions, but British data scientist Hannah Ritchie looks at the numbers and sees the world making real gains on climate change. In an interview, she talks abo...
e360.yale.edu
October 14, 2025 at 12:05 AM
My news to me good news for Oct 13 is that the US is not the whole story, by a LOT #earthOptimism #BeyondTheObituaries e360.yale.edu/features/han...
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Increasing wildfire frequency decreases carbon storage and leads to regeneration failure in Alaskan boreal forests fireecology.springeropen.com/articles/10....
Increasing wildfire frequency decreases carbon storage and leads to regeneration failure in Alaskan boreal forests - Fire Ecology
Background The increasing size, severity, and frequency of wildfires is one of the most rapid ways climate warming could alter the structure and function of high-latitude ecosystems. Historically, boreal forests in western North America had fire return intervals (FRI) of 70–130 years, but shortened FRIs are becoming increasingly common under extreme weather conditions. Here, we quantified pre-fire and post-fire C pools and C losses and assessed post-fire seedling regeneration in long (> 70 years), intermediate (30–70 years), and short (< 30 years) FRIs, and triple (three fires in < 70 years) burns. As boreal forests store a significant portion of the global terrestrial carbon (C) pool, understanding the impacts of shortened FRIs on these ecosystems is critical for predicting the global C balance and feedbacks to climate. Results Using a spatially extensive dataset of 555 plots from 31 separate fires in Interior Alaska, our study demonstrates that shortened FRIs decrease the C storage capacity of boreal forests through loss of legacy C and regeneration failure. Total wildfire C emissions were similar among FRI classes, ranging from 2.5 to 3.5 kg C m−2. However, shortened FRIs lost proportionally more of their pre-fire C pools, resulting in substantially lower post-fire C pools than long FRIs. Shortened FRIs also resulted in the combustion of legacy C, defined as C that escaped combustion in one or more previous fires. We found that post-fire successional trajectories were impacted by FRI, with ~ 65% of short FRIs and triple burns experiencing regeneration failure. Conclusions Our study highlights the structural and functional vulnerability of boreal forests to increasing fire frequency. Shortened FRIs and the combustion of legacy C can shift boreal ecosystems from a net C sink or neutral to a net C source to the atmosphere and increase the risk of transitions to non-forested states. These changes could have profound implications for the boreal C-climate feedback and underscore the need for adaptive management strategies that prioritize the structural and functional resilience of boreal forest ecosystems to expected increases in fire frequency.
fireecology.springeropen.com
October 12, 2025 at 9:50 PM
Increasing wildfire frequency decreases carbon storage and leads to regeneration failure in Alaskan boreal forests fireecology.springeropen.com/articles/10....
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Hmmm…
In an analysis of 1.2 million news stories about scholarly research, men-led papers were found to receive more attention overall and were heavily overrepresented in the top 5% of most covered studies. https://scim.ag/4o7l5a5
When women researchers publish, media attention doesn’t always follow
Men-led papers receive more media coverage than women’s, new study finds
scim.ag
October 9, 2025 at 11:30 PM
Hmmm…
Reposted by Margaret Evans
The call for proposals for the 2025 ForestGEO Research Awards Program is now open! This is a great opportunity for graduate students / early career researchers to get support for research at ForestGEO sites. Please share with researchers who might be interested. Due Dec 10.
Awards Program
The Call for Proposals for 20245 ForestGEO Research Grants is now open! Deadline is 10 December 2025.
forestgeo.si.edu
October 9, 2025 at 10:32 PM
The call for proposals for the 2025 ForestGEO Research Awards Program is now open! This is a great opportunity for graduate students / early career researchers to get support for research at ForestGEO sites. Please share with researchers who might be interested. Due Dec 10.
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Very cool new research from @mekevans.bsky.social and Jamie Yazzie - 'Drought stress detected in tree rings suggests an impending tipping point for forests on the Navajo Nation' www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Drought stress detected in tree rings suggests an impending tipping point for forests on the Navajo Nation
Forests across the southwestern U. S. face escalating challenges from changing climate. The objective of this study, conducted in partnership with the…
www.sciencedirect.com
October 8, 2025 at 10:00 PM
Very cool new research from @mekevans.bsky.social and Jamie Yazzie - 'Drought stress detected in tree rings suggests an impending tipping point for forests on the Navajo Nation' www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Great opportunity!
Join the Laughlin lab and our new NSF funded project! Awesome opportunity to visit forests across the western US and examine the functional basis of demographic responses to drought and wildfire.
Great PhD opportunity with an excellent supervisor:
Quantify traits of tree species across the western US to determine how tree populations and forest communities will respond to drought and fire.
plant-traits.net/lab-openings/
Quantify traits of tree species across the western US to determine how tree populations and forest communities will respond to drought and fire.
plant-traits.net/lab-openings/
October 9, 2025 at 5:03 PM
Great opportunity!
Reposted by Margaret Evans
Pawpaw season is upon us. You may have heard of pawpaws, but many locals still know little about the “tropical” fruit that grows wild in some wooded areas in the DC region.
Pawpaw Season Is Here. Where to Taste DC’s “Tropical” Fruit—and Pick Them. - Washingtonian
The pawpaw, similar to a banana or mango, grows wild in the Washington area.
www.washingtonian.com
September 19, 2025 at 9:34 PM
Pawpaw season is upon us. You may have heard of pawpaws, but many locals still know little about the “tropical” fruit that grows wild in some wooded areas in the DC region.
Reposted by Margaret Evans
National Academies of Science panel finds that: The EPA was right in 2009 (when it found that climate change driven by society’s emissions of greenhouse gases are endangering human health & lives), and that everything we've learned since has only made it more right.
arstechnica.com/science/2025...
arstechnica.com/science/2025...
Despite congressional threat, National Academies releases new climate report
Things have changed since 2009: We’re more certain about the problems.
arstechnica.com
September 19, 2025 at 9:49 PM
National Academies of Science panel finds that: The EPA was right in 2009 (when it found that climate change driven by society’s emissions of greenhouse gases are endangering human health & lives), and that everything we've learned since has only made it more right.
arstechnica.com/science/2025...
arstechnica.com/science/2025...
Despite its 162-year-history of service, congressional Republicans tell federal agencies not to seek the advice of the National Academies. www.science.org/content/arti...
House panels charge U.S. National Academies with producing partisan studies
Pending spending bill urges agencies to find other sources of scientific advice
www.science.org
September 17, 2025 at 5:10 AM
Reposted by Margaret Evans
"The community wanted a food sovereignty lab. But we didn’t know what that was.”
My latest for @highcountrynews.org
My latest for @highcountrynews.org
The Native American Studies department at Cal Poly Humboldt fought an uphill battle to establish the California State University system’s first food sovereignty lab. It was the result of student initiative, community involvement, and a shapeshifting approach to learning.
buff.ly/n29N5IU
buff.ly/n29N5IU
How to build a food sovereignty lab - High Country News
Bureaucracy and budget constraints couldn’t stop CalPoly Humboldt’s Native American Studies Department from founding an Indigenous foods research lab.
www.hcn.org
September 15, 2025 at 11:29 PM
"The community wanted a food sovereignty lab. But we didn’t know what that was.”
My latest for @highcountrynews.org
My latest for @highcountrynews.org
Reposted by Margaret Evans
There really is no one better at this than @ayanaeliza.bsky.social, a climate hero if there ever was one
Kicking off Season 3 (😮) of the WHAT IF WE GET IT RIGHT? podcast with Bill McKibben — on photons, fogies, energy liberation, and what he sees in his crystal ball. ☀️⚡️👴🏻🔮
On Spotify: open.spotify.com/episode/029N...
On Apple: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/w...
On Spotify: open.spotify.com/episode/029N...
On Apple: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/w...
Photons ☀️, Fogies 👴🏼, and Energy Liberation, with Bill McKibben
open.spotify.com
September 13, 2025 at 6:51 PM
There really is no one better at this than @ayanaeliza.bsky.social, a climate hero if there ever was one