Jessica Meszaros
Jessica Meszaros is a reporter and host of All Things Consideredfor WGCU News.
She was a multimedia reporter for Miami’s public radio station, WLRN Radio, for more than two years.
In the summer of 2013, Jessica interned for NPR's All Things Considered in Washington D.C. She has a background in newspaper reporting from her summer 2014 internship with the Sun-Sentinel in South Florida.
Jessica graduated from Florida International University with a bachelor’s degree in Journalism and Mass Communication from the Honors College.
Person Page
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Urban fertilizer application and agricultural fertilizer application are currently “being revised behind the scenes.”
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University of Florida scientists want to replicate the properties of 'plant diamond'— an indestructible shell that surrounds pollen — to store carbon. They hope it will become a climate change solution.
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The Suspended Ion Exchange plant in Tampa is expected to be the first in the U.S. and largest in the world. The new technology is designed to removes organic matter from drinking water, and make it easier to filter out forever chemicals, known as PFAS.
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Palm Beach County ranked 4th in the nation for fine particulate pollutants, Broward and Miami-Dade counties were in the top 15, and Hillsborough was 25th.
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Each year, between May and October, threatened and endangered sea turtles create their nests along Pinellas County's beaches.
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One in four people, or 1.9 billion, experienced a five-day heat wave, at minimum, influenced by carbon pollution.
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Florida scientists are determining how cattle grazing impacts plants, green house gas emissions, and carbon stored in the soil, using collars and cell towers.
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Satellite images of red tide blooms in the Gulf of Mexico and modeling from within the water column will then be combined with a foodweb model to estimate mortality rates of different fish species.
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Nutrients from stormwater and reclaimed water are feeding red tide algae blooms, according to findings from a peer-reviewed study out of the University of Florida.
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"Seagrass die-off has happened before in Florida in various estuaries at various times. Seagrass recovers. But this is the first time it's really been simultaneous in all five major estuaries in Florida," said Bill Kearney of the Sun Sentinel.
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"He would be out of town for a week and be fine where he was staying for work, and come home and literally spend the weekend in the hospital," said Kendra Elliott about her fiancé who suffered from mold poisoning.
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Taxpayers and pensioners in Florida may soon feel the financial effects of a ban on ESG investing, which became law this year.