(Press-News.org) WOODS HOLE, Mass. -- The Frontiers Planet Prize, the world’s largest science competition to enhance planetary health by fast-tracking innovative research, has announced National Champions from 19 different countries who now advance to the International competition, which will award three winners $1M each to scale up their research.
Suzanne Tank and co-authors from the Arctic Great Rivers Observatory (ArcticGRO), a multinational project founded at the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), were recognized for their publication, “Recent trends in the chemistry of major northern rivers signal widespread Arctic change,” published in Nature Geosciences.
Tank, an associate professor at University of Alberta, was selected as the 2025 National Champion for Canada. She was a postdoctoral scientist at the MBL when she first got involved with ArcticGRO and is currently a principal investigator on the project.
ArcticGRO was conceived in 2002 by Bruce Peterson, R. Max Holmes, and James McClelland while the three were working together at the MBL’s Ecosystems Center. Peterson was the founding director of the project, followed by Holmes, and McClelland is the current director. The project, initially called PARTNERS, has been supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation since its inception and is a component of NSF's Arctic Observing Network.
ArcticGRO’s work involves a large cast of collaborators from the United States, Canada, and Russia, and its ongoing success relies on the strong international partnerships that have been forged and sustained over the past 20 plus years.
“This recognition from Frontiers highlights the value of sustained international collaborations for solving global challenges,” McClelland said. “I am proud of Suzanne and the ArcticGRO team for their vision and long-term commitment to the project.”
Since 2003, ArcticGRO has provided essential data about six large Arctic rivers that originate in Canada, Russia, and the United States (Alaska) and discharge into the Arctic Ocean, transporting huge quantities of water and water-borne materials from the continents to the ocean. Changes in river water flow and chemistry reflect changes occurring on land and lead to changes in the chemistry, biology, and circulation of the receiving ocean waters.
“When measured at their outflow, the chemistry of these large rivers provides a ‘fingerprint’ that integrates a multitude of processes occurring over vast spatial scales,” Tank writes in the project description for Frontiers. “Our multinational team has worked together to measure the chemistry of these six large rivers for over two decades. This long-standing, cross-jurisdictional collaboration has built a time series that has provided critical insight into the functioning of the land-ocean Arctic system, while also amassing a sample archive that enables retrospective analyses as important new questions emerge.”
“MBL Ecosystems Center scientists have been conducting exemplary research in the U.S. Arctic for half a century,” said MBL Director Nipam Patel. “It is gratifying to see the ArcticGRO, one of their initiatives, recognized by the Frontiers Foundation for its sustained contributions to understanding global change in a critical region of the planet.”
The National Champions were selected by 100 independent experts – the Jury of 100 – all renowned sustainability and planetary health leaders. A list of the 2025 National Champions is here.
A direct response to the urgent need for faster global scientific consensus, the Frontiers Planet Prize has already engaged with more than 10,000 researchers, 23 academies of science, and 600 leading universities and research institutions from 62 countries, to bring forward transformational and globally scalable research from around the world, with a focus on enabling healthy lives on a healthy planet.
“Faced with immense threats to people and planet, we need bold, transformative solutions, rooted in evidence and validated by science. Innovative yet scalable solutions are the only way for us to ensure healthy lives on a healthy planet,” said Jean-Claude Burgelman, director of the Frontiers Planet Prize.
—###—
The Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) is dedicated to scientific discovery – exploring fundamental biology, understanding marine biodiversity and the environment, and informing the human condition through research and education. Founded in Woods Hole, Massachusetts in 1888, the MBL is a private, nonprofit institution and an affiliate of the University of Chicago.
END
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a disease that destroys the nerves necessary for movement. About 30,000 people in the United States are affected, and doctors still don’t know what causes it. To lay the groundwork for better tests, Thomas Jefferson University researchers Phillipe Loher, Eric Londin, PhD, and Isidore Rigoutsos, PhD are taking a computational biology approach to see how ALS affects molecules in the blood.
In a study published in Molecular Neurobiology, the team analyzed blood samples from about 300 people with and without ALS. The research focused on small non-coding ...
As the opioid crisis continues, the number of babies born with neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS) – a condition that affects infants whose mothers used opioids during pregnancy – has risen 5-fold over the past 20 years. According to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), there are 20,000 infants a year in the United States born with signs of NOWS. These infants often require extended hospital stays and, in some cases, treatment with medications like morphine to relieve withdrawal symptoms.
A new study from Walter Kraft, MD, an internist and clinical pharmacologist at Thomas Jefferson University, ...
Leadership from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Volkswagen Group of America and Oak Ridge National Laboratory celebrated more than a decade of collaboration and the fifth anniversary of the Volkswagen Innovation Hub Knoxville on April 24. Since 2011, UT and Volkswagen have partnered on strategic research projects that have accelerated the discovery and commercialization of new technology, including battery performance, materials science, power electronics and mobility ...
PHILADELPHIA – Even for patients covered by Medicare, annual out-of-pocket costs for lifesaving cancer treatments taken in pill form have often exceeded $10,000—until recently. Thanks to changes in Medicare Part D introduced by the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) that took effect in 2025, annual out-of-pocket drug costs for all beneficiaries are now capped at $2,000. However, an overlooked voluntary program that’s part of the IRA could be the key to improving affordability for Medicare patients needing expensive oral cancer drugs, according to a new study from researchers ...
Senescent skin cells, often referred to as zombie cells because they have outlived their usefulness without ever quite dying, have existed in the human body as a seeming paradox, causing inflammation and promoting diseases while also helping the immune system to heal wounds.
New findings may explain why: Not all senescent skin cells are the same.
Researchers from Johns Hopkins University have identified three subtypes of senescent skin cells with distinct shapes, biomarkers, and functions—an advance that could equip scientists with the ability to target and kill the harmful types while leaving the helpful ones intact.
The findings were published today ...
University of Cincinnati Cancer Center researchers will present abstracts at the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2025 in Chicago.
Study finds contrasting effects of protein on head and neck cancer
A small protein called IL-9 has been shown to either contribute to or counteract tumor growth depending on the type of cancer, but its role in head and neck cancer has not been studied.
Abstract lead author Sam Nusbaum and her colleagues found IL-9 levels are increased in patients with head and neck cancer compared to healthy controls.
“High ...
BOSTON, April 25, 2025 – Numerous studies conducted by researchers at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute report progress for cancers including head and neck cancer, metastatic breast cancer and lung cancer. The results of these studies, along with dozens of others led by Dana-Farber faculty, will be presented at this year’s American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting held April 25-30, 2025, in Chicago.
The institute’s leading experts and researchers will present findings across a spectrum of diseases, underscoring ...
ABSTRACTS: CT012, CT132, CT265
CHICAGO, APRIL 25, 2025 ― Researchers from The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center will present promising results from clinical trials in three minisymposia abstracts at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2025. Findings include a personalized vaccine combination therapy for colorectal cancer, the use of radiotherapy to avoid the toxicities of systemic treatments for kidney cancer, and engineered exosomes to silence mutant KRAS in pancreatic cancer.
In addition to these trials, forthcoming ...
LOS ANGELES — It’s no secret that our waistlines often expand in middle-age, but the problem isn’t strictly cosmetic. Belly fat accelerates aging and slows down metabolism, increasing our risk for developing diabetes, heart problems and other chronic diseases. Exactly how age transforms a six pack into a softer stomach, however, is murky.
Now preclinical research by City of Hope®, one of the largest and most advanced cancer research and treatment organizations in the United States and a leading research center for diabetes and other life-threatening illnesses, has uncovered the cellular culprit behind age-related abdominal fat, providing new insights into why ...
Researchers from SYSU and IHEP have developed a unique muon veto detector system for TAO, a satellite experiment of the Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO). This system features a top veto tracker system with remarkable characteristics such as high light yield, distinct signal-background differentiation and high detection efficiency even at high thresholds, provides the TAO experiment with a robust capability to suppress cosmic muon induced fast neutron and radioisotope events which are significant correlated backgrounds for the neutrino signal. This scalable solution establishes a transferable ...