Researchers are designing a global real-time monitoring system to help save the world's coral reefs from further decline, primarily due to bleaching caused by global warming.
Dungeness crab, Pacific herring, and red abalone are among the marine species most vulnerable to the changing climate's effect on California's coastal waters, a new study finds. The team seeks to help ...
The study, by Mote Marine Laboratory, connects increased harmful algae blooms with the long-term acidification of Florida’s ...
The Ocean Genome Legacy Center and Seacoast Science Center join forces to unlock the secrets of marine mammal DNA and advance ...
Marine biologists at the University of California Santa Cruz have tagged thousands of northern elephant seals with smart ...
Victoria University of Wellington have discovered a species of sea squirt that is thought to be new to science.
The Great Nicobar development project’s mitigation plan oversimplifies ecological restoration, reducing it to tree-planting ...
A new study led by Prof. Adi Torfstein from the Hebrew University and Prof. Oren Levy from Bar-Ilan University, in ...
New study reveals that coral reefs in the Gulf of Eilat experienced a surprising 3,000-year "shutdown" in growth, from about 4,400 to 1,000 years ago ...
The Baja California peninsula, a region rich in marine biodiversity, dramatic desert landscapes and remote coastal beauty, is ...
Florida Keys coral restoration groups and scientists from the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary planted a heat-resistant ...
Coral reefs trap microplastics due to their mucus. Researchers confirmed that coral mucus acts as an adhesive.
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