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Biology student Taylor Barongan shared her voice on Asian Americans hardships in the STEM field through a commentary article published in July 2023 issue of Cell.
Fish Pono- Save our Reefs, a local public education campaign, aims to raise awareness on replenishing herbivore fish populations for healthy coral reefs.
The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Library has successfully digitized the 鯨魚鑬笑録 (Geigyo ranshōroku) scrolls, rare hand-painted Japanese scrolls depicting the process of whale hunting during Japan’s Edo period.
The University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Library has successfully digitized the 鯨魚鑬笑録 (Geigyo ranshōroku) scrolls, rare hand-painted Japanese scrolls depicting the process of whale hunting during Japan’s Edo period.
Margaret Maaka, Kekailoa Perry and alum Kamuela Kimokeo were invited to present during the 2023 AERA Annual Meeting in Chicago, Illinois on April 13–16.
DLNR) El Niño events have long been perceived as a driver for low rainfall in the winter and spring in Hawaiʻi, creating a six-month wet-season drought. However, the connection between Hawaiʻi winter rainfall and El Niño is not as straightforward as previously thought, according to a recent study by researchers in the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology ( SOEST). Studies in the past decade suggested that there are at least two types of El Niño: the Eastern Pacific and Central Pacific, when the warmest pool of water is located in the eastern or central portions of the ocean basin, respectively. El Niño events usually begin in summer and last for about one year.