WUSF, in collaboration with the Florida Climate Reporting Network, is bringing you stories on how climate change is affecting you.
-
The South Florida Water Management District is offering grants to pay up to half the cost to develop alternative water supplies that will help meet the growing demand.
-
In his decades-long career, Ron Magill has learned a lot from the animal world, and now he's putting some of those lessons onto paper. The Pride of a Lion is about K’wasi, ZooMiami's first male lion cub and how we can learn from his tale of survival.
-
A massive pump station to retrieve polluted water released from Lake Okeechobee into the headwaters of the Caloosahatchee River is completed — now it will sit idle.
-
Eckerd students complete their second research cruise in the Gulf with a focus on oil spill recoveryMeet five student scientists who were recognized for their studies on the Gulf of Mexico.
-
Eleven restaurants are contributing their oyster shells to the Tampa Bay Watch "Shells for Shorelines" project.
-
Anna Maria Elementary students are drawn in by Guy Harvey Academy of Arts and Sciences.
-
Florida Matters looks back at some of the best conversations we had with newsmakers from our region.
-
Tampa could become the first U.S. city to get a water treatment system with technology that can help filter out forever chemicals known as PFAS.
-
A financial donation will blaze a trail that will allow safer backcountry wayfinding for hikers.
-
The first pip was seen late Friday night, followed on Saturday by a pip in the second egg. As of Sunday morning, video from nest showed one fuzzy little eaglet being tended to by parents and another egg still in the hatch process.
-
The University of Florida team said the four species to watch out for next are alewife, zebra mussels, crab-eating macaques and red shrimp crayfish.
-
Urban fertilizer application and agricultural fertilizer application are currently “being revised behind the scenes.”
-
The Florida Rights of Nature Network has gotten only a fraction of the roughly 900,000 signatures needed to get an constitutional amendment on the 2024 ballot. So it is regrouping and moving its goal to 2026.
-
Florida Matters revisits some favorite episodes from 2023, including conversations about hurricanes and political storms, education, population growth and baseball.