Elephant seals are being used as nature's artificial intelligence to monitor the health of the oceans -- especially the ...
The Ocean Genome Legacy Center and Seacoast Science Center join forces to unlock the secrets of marine mammal DNA and advance ...
Plastic is the most prevalent marine pollutant, and plastic surfaces are the fastest growing habitat in the ocean.
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 ...
A new study by Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota has revealed a potential link between red tide algal blooms and long-term ...
Over the past 60 years, marine biologists at UC Santa Cruz have monitored the behavior of northern elephant seals that ...
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AZoLifeSciences on MSNSymbiotic bacteria ride along with marine cells in ocean’s upper layerIn new research published this week, a team led by Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) scientists reveals that symbiotic bacteria often accompany single-celled protists in the ocean’s upper layer. Some ...
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TravelPulse on MSNA Global Partnership To Help Secure the Health of the Ocean: One Year InIn one year's time 30 hectares of blue carbon ecosystems have been restored and 12,500 mangrove trees planted.
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PNI Atlantic News on MSNHow the Ocean Ranger disaster prompted Marine Institute to improve ocean safety in CanadaThe tragedy of the Ocean Ranger imparted invaluable lessons to us as mariners, educators, and researchers in the maritime and ...
Computer models reveal how human-driven climate change will dramatically overhaul critical nutrient cycles in the ocean. Researchers report evidence that marine nutrient cycles -- essential for ...
Researchers at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa recently discovered that many species of fungi isolated from Hawai‘i’s ...
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