
For 18 months it has been a closely guarded secret. Seahorses, the exotic creatures from tropical waters, are alive and well in the Thames estuary.
The fish once thought to pull Neptune
Baby sharks will emerge from their egg cases earlier and weaker as water temperatures rise, according to a new study th...
A quarter of the carbon emissions that are warming the Earth dissolve into oceans, making them more acidic...
The breathtaking Whitsundays oasis is 34km northeast of Mackay in central Queensland, it is 80% national park...
Researchers have found a novel way to identify heat-stressed corals, which could help scientists pinpoint the coral spe...
Coral reefs across the world may disappear by the 2040s, according to a new report...
The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has warned that the Caribbean, among other places, could lose its coral...
Almost five years of studying the deep Atlantic in unprecedented detail has revealed 12 species new to science. The se...
Nature saw its ups and downs in 2020, and Conservation News was there for it all...
April 7, 2008 Posted in News
For 18 months it has been a closely guarded secret. Seahorses, the exotic creatures from tropical waters, are alive and well in the Thames estuary.
The fish once thought to pull Neptune
Baby sharks will emerge from their egg cases earlier and weaker as water temperatures rise, according to a new study that examined the impact of warm...
Daroyen village compared to other Raja Ampat islands is a less populated area situated on a little island of Betew by Ga...
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