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+12 +2
New study finds large whales eat much more than we thought — and are even more important to the environment
“Our results say that if we restore whale populations to pre-whaling levels seen at the beginning of the 20th century, we’ll restore a huge amount of lost function to ocean ecosystems,” researchers said.
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+15 +1
How Dungeness crabs’ complex lifecycle will be affected by climate change
Results show that by the end of this century, lower-oxygen water on the Pacific Northwest coast will pose the biggest threat to Dungeness crabs. And while these crabs start as tiny, free-floating...
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+19 +2
Electric robots are mapping the seafloor, Earth's last frontier
Seatrec and Bedrock Ocean Exploration are two startups taking electric robots to new depths in an attempt to map the ocean floor.
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+19 +2
Something is killing gray whales. Is it a sign of oceans in peril?
Gray whales are dying at alarming rates. A Times investigation of their migrations from Mexico to Alaska offers clues to what is causing this marine mystery.
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+2 +1
Deadly coral disease sweeping Caribbean linked to wastewater from ships
A virulent and fast-moving coral disease that has swept through the Caribbean could be linked to waste or ballast water from ships, according to research. The deadly infection, known as stony coral tissue loss disease (SCTLD), was first identified in Florida in 2014, and has since moved through the region, causing great concern among scientists.
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+21 +4
Football-sized goldfish take over lake after decades of people dumping unwanted pet fish
‘They grow bigger than you think and contribute to poor water quality by mucking up the bottom sediments and uprooting plants,’ warns Minnesota town
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+20 +2
6 Surreal Images of Newly Discovered Deep Sea Creatures
A whale shark, rare corals, and a transparent octopus are just some of the animals researchers found in the depths of the Pacific.
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+17 +3
B.C. fish farms transmit virus to endangered wild Pacific salmon, new study confirms
Fresh research shows piscine orthoreovirus was introduced to southern B.C. from Atlantic salmon eggs roughly 30 years ago, despite assertions from government and industry groups that the virus is 'endemic' to the province
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+10 +1
First wild fishers born in North Cascades in decades
A female fisher was seen with kits, which biologists say is the first indication the North Cascades can support a reproductive population of fishers.
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+25 +4
Swim like a sea lion, splash like a seal: how evolution engineered nature’s underwater acrobats
New research combines cutting-edge engineering with animal behaviour to explain the origins of efficient swimming in nature’s underwater acrobats: seals and sea lions.
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+17 +3
Watching a coral reef die in a warming ocean
The Chagos Archipelago is one of the most remote, seemingly idyllic places on Earth. Coconut-covered sandy beaches with incredible bird life rim tropical islands in the Indian Ocean, hundreds of miles from any continent. Just below the waves, coral reefs stretch for miles along an underwater mountain chain.
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+11 +2
Bottom trawling releases as much carbon as air travel, landmark study finds
Dragging heavy nets across seabed disturbs marine sediments, world’s largest carbon sink, scientists report
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+4 +1
As many corals growing in the Pacific as trees in the Amazon, new study finds
Analysis suggests the risk of extinction of some species may not be as high as previously thought, but researchers warn local depletion still has a devastating impact
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+3 +1
We're Killing One Of The Ocean's Most Important Weapons Against Climate Change
It’s winter in Miami. Many New Englanders come here to escape the snow, although none opt for snorkeling on this windy January morning. We pull off the side of the highway with specific instructions about where to find a particular species of seagrass from Laura Eldredge, manager of the Biscayne Bay Aquatic Preserves.
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+4 +1
Sawfish populations halved as nations fail to enforce conservation laws
Sawfish have lost 59% of their historical distribution and are heading toward complete extinction due to overfishing, a new study says, posing a threat to ocean biodiversity and indicating that policies worldwide to protect the world's largest ray are not being enforced.
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+13 +3
Australian government may use herpes virus to control invasive carp
New figures show just how abundant ecologically destructive carp are in Australia's waterways - now the government is considering using a herpes virus to reduce the population
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+17 +2
How whales help cool the Earth
The world's largest animals are unusually good at taking carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere.
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+24 +4
Inside the ambitious push to protect a third of the world’s ocean
Preserving our pristine seas will boost biodiversity, replenish fishing stocks, and store carbon.
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+23 +3
How Sea Turtles Find Their Way
The air was warm as the skies grew dark over Diego Garcia. As the nearly full moon reached its highest point, a green sea turtle scuttled her way onto the...
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+18 +4
Why Seagrass Could Be the Ocean's Secret Weapon Against Climate Change
A vast, mostly invisible ecosystem crucial to our life on Earth is in trouble, but efforts to save the 'prairies of the sea' are finally coming into focus
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