Research of Our Environment: How University of Connecticut Researchers Are Working to Save the Planet
March 23, 2021
March 23, 2021
STORRS, Connecticut, March 23 (TNSJou) -- The University of Connecticut issued the following news:
About 30 years ago, the waters of the Long Island Sound were looking bleak.
Pollution from the more than nine million people living in the Sound's watershed had reached epic heights. Nitrogen runoff led to chronic seasonal blooms of algae, which led to bacteria consuming so much oxygen that periodically, piles of dead fish turned up on beaches. Swimming was frequently . . .
About 30 years ago, the waters of the Long Island Sound were looking bleak.
Pollution from the more than nine million people living in the Sound's watershed had reached epic heights. Nitrogen runoff led to chronic seasonal blooms of algae, which led to bacteria consuming so much oxygen that periodically, piles of dead fish turned up on beaches. Swimming was frequently . . .
