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A study of 7000-year-old exposed coral reef fossils reveals how human fishing has transformed Caribbean reef food webs: as ...
A groundbreaking study of 7,000-year-old exposed coral reef fossils reveals how human fishing has transformed Caribbean reef ...
The trouble is, humans like to eat reefs’ best recyclers: the biggest, and biggest bladdered, fish atop the food chain. And unsustainable pursuit of that protein comes at a cost.
A groundbreaking study of 7,000-year-old exposed coral reef fossils reveals how human fishing has transformed Caribbean reef food webs: As sharks declined by 75 percent and fish preferred by ...
"Their presence is highly sensitive to environmental changes. If the coral reefs are damaged or polluted, the population of ...
It might sound like a strange silver lining: as coral reefs decline, the ocean could actually end up absorbing more […] ...
As oil companies push for drilling on the Amazon coast, an underwater war silences the ocean’s most vocal creatures.
This is an ocean planet. And every company—whether it realizes it or not—depends on the biodiversity, food systems, and ...
University of Missouri researchers find Earth's ancient animal reefs were surprisingly sparse compared to their modern ...