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Deep-sea 'hotels' reveal 20 new species hiding in Pacific Ocean twilight zone near Guam
By Liz Kimbrough A transparent goby fish drifted through the darkness, its skeleton visible through paper-thin skin. Nearby, ...
Scientists believe they have discovered at least 20 new species in a deep part of the Pacific Ocean. The discoveries were found after researchers from the California Academy of Sciences retrieved 13 ...
The researchers found that coral reefs across the world could raise sustainable fish production by almost 50 percent. This increase could provide between 20,000 and 162 million extra fish servings per ...
A new study has found that oceanographic connectivity (the movement and exchange of water between different parts of the ocean) is a key influence for fish abundance across the Western Indian Ocean ...
Almost one decade of recorded data retrieved from deep coral reef dives reveals some of the first evidence of that climate change is warming the ocean’s ‘twilight zone’.
The open ocean’s twilight zone, a vast deep ecosystem rich in fish biomass, is poorly understood because it is expensive and challenging for humans to reach its depths 200–1000 meters (660–3,280 feet) ...
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 14 - Life Below Water and SDG 13 - Climate Action. Shanghai Ocean University (SHOU), the Pacific Community (SPC) and the Australian ...
With a human population of 8.3 billion people worldwide and millions facing malnutrition, food security is something to think ...
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