PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Cities face double trouble: Extreme heat and air pollution cause increasing compound weather events

2025-09-02
(Press-News.org) NORMAN, OKLA. – U.S. cities are facing a growing threat that goes beyond hot weather or hazy air. New research from the University of Oklahoma reveals that “compound events” — periods when heat wave conditions coincide with high air pollution levels — are becoming more frequent and intense in urban areas across the United States.

According to the National Weather Service, extreme heat is the deadliest weather phenomenon facing the country, causing more deaths each year than any other weather hazard. Chenghao Wang, Ph.D., a professor in the School of Meteorology and the Department of Geography and Environmental Sustainability at OU, received a NASA Early Career Investigator award last year to study the combination of extreme heat and air pollution in urban environments. Findings for Wang and his Sustainable Urban Futures (SURF) Lab, published in sister studies focusing on separate pollution sources, reveal a country dealing with increasing heat stress and pollution, posing a significant threat to public health and urban sustainability.

“Compound heat and air pollution episodes occur when extreme heat and high levels of pollution happen at the same time. They are an increasing threat to public health, especially for urban populations,” said Wang.

Overall, Wang and his team have found that U.S. cities are facing more frequent and intense overlaps of extreme heat with harmful air pollutants than surrounding rural areas. Results published in Urban Climate focused specifically on compound heat and ozone pollution. The study showed that while urban heat waves were more frequent, intense and longer-lasting than their rural counterparts, ozone levels were higher in rural environments. When heat and ozone events did occur together, 88.8% of cities saw higher cumulative heat and ozone intensities than rural areas.

In the other study, published in Environmental Research, Wang and his team examined 23 years of heat and fine particulate matter pollution data, a span that gives them a broad look at trends that shorter-term studies could miss.

“Fine particulate matter, or PM2.5, is small enough in size that it can penetrate deep into the respiratory system and enter the bloodstream, and exposure is associated with adverse health outcomes such as respiratory infections and cardiovascular diseases,” said Jessica Leffel, an MS student in the School of Meteorology and SURF Lab, and the lead author of this work.

When heat waves and PM2.5 episodes occurred together, nearly 98% of cities experienced more frequent and intense compound events, and more than half faced longer durations.

The spatial patterns closely matched those of PM2.5 episodes, suggesting that air pollution plays a dominant role in driving these overlaps. PM2.5 pollution and compound event days have increased in recent years in the western U.S., driven in part by wildfire smoke.

“Wildfire-related PM2.5 is often excluded from air quality assessments under the EPA’s Exceptional Events Rule, which can hide the true health burden of these episodes,” said Leffel. “Integrating wildfire-related PM2.5 into air quality evaluations could better align policy with public health risks.”

A key driver of these dangerous compound events is the urban heat island effect, a phenomenon where cities are warmer than the surrounding rural areas due to factors such as impervious surfaces, fewer trees and dense building structures that trap heat. While rural regions cool down at night, cities stay hot long after sunset as pavement and buildings continue radiating stored heat.

Equally important, elevated pollution emissions from transportation, industry and energy use in cities exacerbate air quality challenges, creating conditions where heat and pollutants interact to intensify health risks.

Because of such differences in environment, fighting this problem will require specific, regionalized strategies that take into account the local factors surrounding compound events. City-specific changes could include urban trees, green roofs or reflective materials. Still, in rural areas where high amounts of pavement are not a contributing factor in compound events, different types of mitigation strategies and policy protections are necessary.

Earlier work that contributed to this PM2.5 paper was conducted with support from the National Weather Center's Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) program, which pairs undergraduate students with research mentors to tackle pressing questions in meteorology, climate, and environmental sustainability. The NSF-funded program helps train the next generation of scientists to address complex challenges like urban heat and air quality.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Deforestation reduces rainfall by 74% and increases temperatures by 16% in the Amazon during the dry season, study says

2025-09-02
Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon is responsible for approximately 74.5% of the reduction in rainfall and 16.5% of the temperature increase in the biome during the dry season. For the first time, researchers have quantified the impact of vegetation loss and global climate change on the forest. A study led by scientists from the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil provides fundamental results to guide effective mitigation and adaptation strategies. These are the target themes of the United Nations Climate Conference (COP30), which is scheduled ...

Nature Microbiology | Unlocking how bacteria bounce back after antibiotics

2025-09-02
Peking University, September 2, 2025: A groundbreaking study by researchers from Wuhan University, York University (UK), and Peking University has uncovered how Escherichia coli (E. coli) persister bacteria survive antibiotics by protecting their genetic instructions. The work, published in Nature Microbiology, offers new hope for tackling chronic, recurring infections. Persister bacteria, which enter a dormant state to survive antibiotics that target active cells, are linked to over 20% of chronic infections and resist current treatments. Understanding their survival mechanisms could lead to new ways to combat recurring infections. This study utilized E. coli bacteria as a model and ...

BSC creates a computational method that reveals previously hidden connections between diseases

2025-09-02
The human body is a complex and interconnected system, where alterations caused by one disease can promote the onset of others. This tendency for certain diseases to occur together, beyond what would be expected by chance, is called co-occurrence. Thus, although there are diseases with widely known co-occurrence in certain groups of patients, such as Crohn's disease and the development of ulcers, many of the molecular mechanisms that would explain them were, until now, unknown. A study by the Barcelona Supercomputing Center – Centro Nacional de Supercomputación (BSC-CNS) analysed molecular data from more than 4,000 patients and 45 diseases ...

Electrical stimulation reprogrammes immune system to heal the body faster

2025-09-02
Scientists from Trinity College Dublin have discovered that electrically stimulating “macrophages” – one of the immune systems key players – can “reprogramme” them in such a way to reduce inflammation and encourage faster, more effective healing in disease and injury.  This breakthrough uncovers a potentially powerful new therapeutic option, with further work ongoing to delineate the specifics. Macrophages are a type of white blood cell with several high-profile roles in our immune system. They patrol around the body, surveying ...

Penn engineers unveil generative AI model that designs new antibiotics

2025-09-02
What if generative AI could design life-saving antibiotics, not just art and text? In a new Cell Biomaterials paper, Penn researchers introduce AMP-Diffusion, a generative AI tool used to create tens of thousands of new antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) — short strings of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins — with bacteria-killing potential. In animal models, the most potent AMPs performed as well as FDA-approved drugs, without detectable adverse effects.  While past breakthroughs at Penn have shown that AI can successfully sort through mountains of data to identify promising antibiotic candidates, this study adds to a small but growing number ...

Ancient mammoth remains yield the world's oldest host-associated bacterial DNA

2025-09-02
An international team led by researchers at the Centre for Palaeogenetics, has uncovered microbial DNA preserved in woolly and steppe mammoth remains dating back more than one million years. The analyses reveal some of the world's oldest microbial DNA ever recovered, as well as the identification of bacteria that possibly caused disease in mammoths. The findings are published in Cell. Researchers at the Centre for Palaeogenetics, a collaboration between Stockholm University and the Swedish Museum of Natural History, analyzed microbial DNA from 483 mammoth specimens, ...

New research identifies a natural guardian of blood vessel health

2025-09-02
New Research Identifies a Natural Guardian of Blood Vessel Health Heparanase 2 preserves and restores vascular integrity BAR HARBOR, Maine, September 2, 2025  — An international research team led by MDI Biological Laboratory President Hermann Haller, M.D. and postdoctoral researcher Yannic Becker, Ph.D. has discovered that a little-known molecule, heparanase 2 (Hpa2), plays a critical role in maintaining blood vessels’ integrity. Malfunctions in the vasculature are increasingly seen as an underlying driver ...

New ACS study: Late-stage incidence rates continue to increase rapidly as mortality declines slow

2025-09-02
ATLANTA, September 2, 2025 — Today, the American Cancer Society (ACS) released Prostate Cancer Statistics, 2025, a report on current prostate cancer occurrence and outcomes in the United States. According to the study, prostate cancer incidence rates have reversed from a decline of 6.4% per year during 2007 through 2014 to an increase of 3.0% annually during 2014 through 2021, with the steepest increase (4.6%-4.8% per year) for advanced-stage diagnoses. Simultaneously, mortality declines slowed from 3%-4% per year during the 1990s and 2000s to 0.6% per year over the past decade. ...

NFL PLAY 60 and Kids Heart Challenge join forces to help students move more, stress less

2025-09-02
DALLAS, Sept. 2, 2025 — This back-to-school season, the American Heart Association and the National Football League (NFL), in collaboration with its 32 NFL clubs, are taking the physical activity and mental wellness program of NFL PLAY 60™ back into the classroom – this time in connection with the Association’s legacy school programs Kids Heart Challenge™ and American Heart Challenge™. This expanded initiative supports the evidence-based guidance that students who are active learn better, focus more, think more clearly, react to stress more calmy and perform and behave better in the classroom[1], according ...

Kavli and NSF announce new grant awards to advance neurobiology in changing ecosystems

2025-09-02
The Kavli Foundation and the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) have announced the latest recipients of funding under their joint initiative to explore how nervous systems function and evolve in dynamic natural environments. This marks a continued commitment to supporting bold, interdisciplinary research at the intersection of neuroscience, biology, and ecology. Building on the inaugural set of awards announced in 2024, this second round of funding further continues to advance the goals of the Neurobiology in Changing Ecosystems (NiCE) program. NiCE supports research into how nervous systems mediate behavioral ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study suggests link between hepatitis B immunity and lower risk of developing diabetes

Researchers find Medicaid is crucial to access treatment for opioid addiction

New research shows changing winters will hit northern lakes the hardest

Wildfire ‘char’ may help suppress methane

Flexible, skin-mounted haptic interface can seamlessly bridge virtual and real-world experiences

WiFi signals can measure heart rate—no wearables needed

Despite relaxed prescribing rules, opioid addiction treatment still hard to find at pharmacies

California program successfully scales emergency department addiction treatment statewide

Mitochondrial-targeting drug attacks cancer cells from within

Researchers uncover relationship between gut fungi, human genetic variation and disease risk

Fluorine “forever chemical” in medicines not leading to added drug reactions

A tomato line that’s ripe for the picking

Why small business owners are more likely to be right wing

Two studies published in the Journal of Thoracic Oncology reveal new variant of mesothelioma

2024 Outstanding Article Award winner selected (published in MRE volume 39 [2024])

Scientists tune in to the surf’s hidden signals

Cities face double trouble: Extreme heat and air pollution cause increasing compound weather events

Deforestation reduces rainfall by 74% and increases temperatures by 16% in the Amazon during the dry season, study says

Nature Microbiology | Unlocking how bacteria bounce back after antibiotics

BSC creates a computational method that reveals previously hidden connections between diseases

Electrical stimulation reprogrammes immune system to heal the body faster

Penn engineers unveil generative AI model that designs new antibiotics

Ancient mammoth remains yield the world's oldest host-associated bacterial DNA

New research identifies a natural guardian of blood vessel health

New ACS study: Late-stage incidence rates continue to increase rapidly as mortality declines slow

NFL PLAY 60 and Kids Heart Challenge join forces to help students move more, stress less

Kavli and NSF announce new grant awards to advance neurobiology in changing ecosystems

Alzheimer’s erodes brain cells’ control of gene expression, undermining function, cognition

AI-equipped aerial robots help to track and model wildfire smoke

Diana Schendel named Editor-in-Chief of Autism Research

[Press-News.org] Cities face double trouble: Extreme heat and air pollution cause increasing compound weather events