Ocean wilderness areas key to sustaining fish populations
Wilderness areas shelter many important and threatened species like sharks, groupers, jacks and snappers, which require large spaces to thrive.
Wilderness areas shelter many important and threatened species like sharks, groupers, jacks and snappers, which require large spaces to thrive.
Margo Edwards presented ARL at UH’s research at the European Conservatives and Reformists in the European Parliament conference in Brussels, Belgium.
This editorial by UH Mānoa Associate Dean Chip Fletcher was posted in The Hill on November 17, 2021.
Naima Te Maile and Joe Udell represented UH Mānoa at COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland.
Volunteers helped clear 81 bags of invasive vegetation from Kamānele Park near the UH Mānoa campus.
Two research projects involving UH Mānoa scientists have been endorsed as part of the United Nations Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development program.
The difference between existing and needed environmental funding for the state is approximately $360 million each year.
The UH Community Design Center earned multiple awards presented in October.
In the second session panelists will discuss innovative solutions, rooted in Indigenous knowledge, that can lead to thriving communities in the next century.
Wendy Meguro was named one of 17 recipients named to the American Institute of Architects Next to Lead program.