Science that matters

Eawag is one of the world’s leading aquatic research institutes. With its professional diversity, close partnerships with practitioners and an international network, Eawag offers an excellent environment for the study of water as a habitat and resource, for identifying problems at an early stage and for developing widely accepted solutions.

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The latest news from Eawag

The latest news from Eawag

LinkedIn
Researchers to decode Europe’s diversity of life
September 9, 2024

For the protection of biodiversity, it is crucial to know the reference genome for as many species as possible.

LinkedIn
Artificial intelligence facilitates water quality ...
September 4, 2024

Monitoring plankton is an important method of controlling water quality. Researchers show how AI could play a role in this in the future (Text in German).

Art work, Jael Klaus
News
Blue-green biodiversity: recognise, conserve, promote
September 3, 2024

Biodiversity is not a political programme: Only just 1.6 % of all documents searched at federal level make reference to the term. This is one of the many results that the WSL and Eawag institutes have compiled in the joint research initiative ‘Blue-Green Biodiversity’ and which are being presented today at the Special Info Day to an expert audience from administration, politics, research and practice.

Most mosquito repellents contain the active ingredient DEET (Photo: F.A.Z. Purchase Compass).
News
Biological degradation of mosquito repellents only ...
August 22, 2024

Microorganisms in biofilms in rivers can break down harmful substances. Some are also able to degrade biocides, including the insect repellent diethyltoluamide (DEET) - or so it is thought. Researchers at the aquatic research institute Eawag have now discovered that DEET is degraded better when the proportion of treated wastewater in the water is high. They attribute this to specific enzymes that occur primarily where wastewater treatment plants return the water to the aquatic environment. However, the enzymes involved are not straightforward to predict.

Sampling in front of the picturesque mountain panorama of Lake Zug (Photos: Sina Schorn, Juliane Schötz, Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology).
News
Bacteria in lakes fight climate change
August 20, 2024

Methane-oxidizing bacteria could play a greater role than previously thought in preventing the release of climate-damaging methane from lakes.