It turns out that global marine populations have halved since the 1970s.
It turns out that the Arctic sea ice is the fourth lowest on record since observations from space began. After analyzing satellite data, scientists have found that the 2015 Arctic sea ice minimum was startlingly low.
It turns out that ocean acidification may impact oceans more than expected.
We may be in for massive sea level rises if we continue to burn fossil fuels.
For the first time ever, scientists have shown that phytoplankton in remote ocean regions may contribute to rare airborne particles that trigger ice formation in clouds.
Some rare but predictable storms could pose huge risks in the future. Scientists have found that severe tropical cyclones would hit a number of coastal cities worldwide that are widely seen as unthreatened by these powerful storms.
Increasingly severe disturbances may be weakening the world's temperate forests. Scientists have found the droughts and other threats could be levelling forests.
The West Coast may be in danger of sea level rise. Researchers have found that the uplift rates across the Pacific Coast of the U.S. and northern Mexico have been overestimated by an average of more than 40 percent.
Much of the European continent has also been impacted by severe drought in June and July 2015, one of the worst since the drought and heat wave of summer of 2003.
It turns out that July was a scorcher. Scientists have announced that this July surpassed global average land and ocean temperatures.
Climate change is impacting countries across the globe. Now, though, researchers have stated that our changing world will cause global food shortages.
Chinese cave "graffiti" may tell a 500-year story of climate change.