The relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning (BEF) is a topic of considerable interest to scientists and managers because a better understanding of its underlying mechanisms may ...
UC Santa Cruz researchers show how vessel-tracking data mirrored tuna roaming beyond their typical territory due to unusually ...
The ocean is massive and covers most of the surface of our planet. In addition to its size, it’s packed with life, ranging from an astounding diversity of plants, microbes, worms, corals and crabs to ...
An on-demand video of “An Essential Safeguard: Ecosystem-Based Fisheries Management Can Improve Aquaculture Sustainability,” ...
Advanced Inquiry Program (AIP) graduate Bonnie May '23 of Oceanside, California, asks us to consider the three-spined stickleback fish when restoring ecosystems. In ...
Approximately 8,000 small fish were released on Saturday at Glenview’s The Glen at Gallery Park during the Lake Glenview Fish Release Day event. Organizers were prepared to welcome 600 people based on ...
A study published in the Journal of Experimental Biology on July 6 found that drugs such as methamphetamines that make their way into the world’s waterways through human waste can actually cause fish ...
Off the Pacific coast of Costa Rica sits a deep-sea chimera of an ecosystem. Jacó Scar is a methane seep, where the gas escapes from sediment into the seawater, but the seep isn’t cold like the others ...
The first ecosystem model that covers the complete food web of the western Baltic Sea predicts how marine life in the region would react to different fisheries scenarios and additional human-induced ...
IT OUT FOR US. CAN I DRAG YOU DOWN? GET OUT OF THE TREE. GET OUT OF THE TREE! OH, YOU AIN’T GOING NOWHERE. IT’S A DIFFICULT CATCH, BUT DAVID STERN REELS IN A NORTHERN SNAKEHEAD FISH, SO BIG IT’S ...
Lake Sampaloc in the Philippines is experiencing something of a gold rush because of an invasive species. The sight of golden-specked cichlids is increasingly common in the water after the fish — ...
A study published in the Journal of Experimental Biology on July 6 found that drugs such as methamphetamines that make their way into the world’s waterways through human waste can actually cause fish ...