Severe Cold-Water Bleaching and Mortality of Deep-Water Reef Observed in the Eastern Tropical Pacific Oct. 11, 2024 — New study documents a severe coral bleaching event occurring in a deep coral ...
Taylor Swift coral? The Audubon Aquarium of the Americas now has a new, beautiful coral on exhibit called "Swiftia exserta," ...
reduce your use of plastic - microplastics have become ubiquitous in every environment on Earth and can damage corals and ...
NOAA, the aquarium and dozens of other organizations also work with Secore International, a nonprofit dedicated to reef restoration that provides training on how to do sexual coral propagation.
In time, it helps to create one of nature’s most spectacular ecosystems: a coral reef. Orange, blue, and sparkling-silver fish dart around a seascape of vibrant greens, yellows, pinks ...
An underwater investigation of coral bleaching in the South Pacific By Justin Worland | Photographs by XL Catlin Seaview Survey Richard Vevers has traveled the globe to photograph coral reefs ...
Coral reefs cover less than 0.1% of our ocean, but they are home to 25% of its wildlife and provide livelihoods, food security and protection from tropical storms for an estimated 850 million people ...
This field focuses on understanding the biological and ecological characteristics of coral reefs across the world. CMBC promotes interdisciplinary research and educational approaches to maintain the ...
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas — Nearly 300 individual corals have been rescued from Florida and are temporarily being housed at the Texas State Aquarium until ... Chair for Coral Reef and Ocean Health ...
“This is good news. Hawaii’s coral reefs are already in trouble from climate change, and we can’t let the aquarium industry compound that damage,” said Maxx Phillips, Hawaii director at the Center for ...
Coral reefs are one of the most diverse ecosystems on the planet. What are the abiotic and biotic interactions that structure this diverse ecosystem? Corals are members of the phylum Cnidaria ...
according to Smithsonian-led research Carlyn Kranking The very hungry, spiky custodians gobble up the algae that smother coral reefs ...