Red tide is caused by an algae called Karenia Brevis. This algae is always present in some concentrations in the Gulf waters.
A new study published by an international team of researchers led by Taro Matsuo, an astrophysicist at Nagoya University in Japan, argues that this evolutionary trend made sense 3 billion years when ...
An undersea wonderland some 80 miles off the New England coast that bursts with a biodiversity so bountiful that it’s dubbed ...
Explore the Great Barrier Reef's stunning revival in 2025. Discover its vibrant marine life and resilience on this Life OVER ...
A new Irish Seaweed Association launches at Trinity College Dublin to promote sustainable seaweed farming and innovation ...
Cleaner, more pure water backscatters light in the blue range, which makes it look blue. One famous example is Crater Lake in ...
Ningaloo Reef is in trouble after a vast underwater heatwave caused a devastating bleaching event. It's becoming very ...
A handsome fictional mathematician once said that life, uh, finds a way – and he’s not wrong. Earth is teeming with organisms ...