About Eleanor Eckel

This author has not yet filled in any details.
So far Eleanor Eckel has created 65 blog entries.

Vol 2. Issue 1. March 2024

Vol 2. Issue 1. March 2024 A Whale of an Idea: BRI Launches its Marine Mammal Program By Eleanor Eckel, MELP, Online Communications Manager; Science Policy Coordinator The ocean covers approximately 70 percent of Earth’s surface and is the largest livable space on our planet. Deep below there exists a realm inhabited by a [...]

By |2024-10-03T11:08:41-04:00October 3, 2024|

BRI Celebrates Groundbreaking Ceremony for Office Expansion

BRI is celebrating a milestone in its more than 25-year history—the groundbreaking ceremony that begins the expansion of the Institute’s headquarters. The ceremony will be held on September 5th from 10:45 to 11:30 AM at BRI’s headquarters at 276 Canco Road, Portland. “This groundbreaking ceremony is more than a gesture to mark the addition [...]

By |2024-09-09T09:24:48-04:00September 4, 2024|

Vol 1. Issue 4 Setepmber 2023

Mercury in the Tropics – a Hidden Risk By Sarah Dodgin, Ecological Analyist, BRI Neon green hoods, turquoise bellies, ornate crowns—Neotropical birds come in all shapes, sizes, and colors. Combined with unique patterns, textures, and song, they either blend in or stand out in thick jungles filled with hundreds of other species competing for [...]

By |2024-08-09T12:00:31-04:00August 9, 2024|

Displacement meta-analysis paper published in ScienceDirect

Offshore wind construction impacts marine bird habitats in various ways. Researchers from The Nature Conservancy in New York, Biodiversity Research Institute, and the Biodiversity Consultancy Ltd conducted a meta-analysis to assess the likelihood of detecting attraction or displacement of marine birds by wind energy infrastructure as well as the proportional change in use of [...]

By |2024-07-29T10:58:54-04:00July 29, 2024|

Biodiversity Research Institute Announces Publication of a Special Issue on Mercury in Ecotoxicology

Portland, ME – Biodiversity Research Institute (BRI) announces the publication of a series of multiyear research studies that assessed the global impact of mercury on air, water, fish, and wildlife in a two-part special issue of Ecotoxicology, an international scientific journal devoted to presenting critical research on the effects of toxic chemicals on [...]

By |2024-07-22T09:38:12-04:00July 18, 2024|

BRI announces publication of in-depth scientific paper on mercury concentrations in fish and wildlife on a global scale

BRI announces the publication of the scientific paper Global Mercury Concentrations in Biota: Their Use as a Basis for a Global Biomonitoring Framework in the journal Ecotoxicology. The paper describes for the first time currently available mercury data for fish and wildlife on a global scale. Data from the peer-reviewed literature, compiled in BRI’s Global Biotic [...]

By |2024-10-02T13:14:26-04:00May 20, 2024|

New Paper, A framework for studying the effects of offshore wind energy development on birds and bats in the Eastern United States, has been published in Frontiers

A new paper, A framework for studying the effects of offshore wind energy development on birds and bats in the Eastern United States, has been published in Frontiers. The paper presents a conceptual framework to guide the long-term study of potential effects to birds and bats from offshore wind energy development. This framework includes a [...]

By |2024-05-03T13:06:32-04:00May 3, 2024|

New study shows improved rangeland grazing management leads to substantial sequestration of carbon

CarbonSolve, a leading global developer of rangeland carbon credits, announces the results of a long-term study that presents the first evidence that improved grazing practices implemented at the scale of traditional pastoralist migrations can remove a significant volume of greenhouse gases to soil carbon. This study, conducted by a team of scientists from various [...]

By |2024-02-27T15:09:16-05:00February 27, 2024|

Vol 1. Issue 3. June 2023

Harlequin Ducks in Wyoming: A species of greatest conservation need By Eleanor Eckel, Science Policy Coordinator arlequin Ducks (Histrionicus histrionicus) are a small, brightly colored duck species known for their striking plumage and the dramatic landscapes where they live and breed. The blue, chestnut, and white males, along with the grayish females, breed [...]

By |2023-12-11T13:18:06-05:00December 11, 2023|
Go to Top