Researchers are designing a global real-time monitoring system to help save the world's coral reefs from further decline, primarily due to bleaching caused by global warming.
Time-lapse video shows how a mushroom coral polyp pulses and inflates, flinging its soft body into micro-hops to slowly move itself to a new location.
When coral feed on larger quantities of zooplankton, it makes them stronger and more likely to be resilient against certain ...
Researchers from James Cook University are looking into measures of past temperature variation to better predict the risk of ...
A new study led by Prof. Adi Torfstein from the Hebrew University and Prof. Oren Levy from Bar-Ilan University, in ...
Florida Keys coral restoration groups and scientists from the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary planted a heat-resistant ...
Coral reefs trap microplastics due to their mucus. Researchers confirmed that coral mucus acts as an adhesive.
Climate change and bleaching events are a concern for our planet’s coral reefs, one of Earth's natural wonders. But now scientists have discovered another danger posed to these beautiful natural ...
When Palacio and her team examined coral reefs after the 2015–2016 heat wave, they found that particular corals called ...
UZELA uses artificial light to attract zooplankton, boosting coral feeding and resilience, offering hope for reef ...
University of Waterloo researchers have pinpointed for the first time how microplastics accumulate in coral reefs, a key step ...
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