A honey mushroom in Oregon is no longer the world’s largest living thing. Guinness World Records updated that title thanks to new research in Shark Bay, Western Australia. A clonal seagrass now holds ...
Shark Bay, in Western Australia is home to a lot of sea grass and happy Dugongs... Credit - Murray Foubister, CC SA 2.0. Shark Bay, in Western Australia is home to a lot of sea grass and happy Dugongs ...
The deep sea has been documented as the largest biome on earth. Typical deep-sea ecosystems such as hydrothermal vents, cold seeps, seamounts, oceanic trenches, and whale falls, shattering the early ...
When Chilean scientist Osvaldo Ulloa led an expedition 8,000 meters under the sea to an area where no human had ever been, his team discovered microscopic organisms that generated more questions than ...
Most forms of life cannot survive extreme environmental conditions, like excessive temperatures. Likewise, the significant majority of species on our planet have a set lifespan and cannot exist past a ...
A rare chemical indicator suggests sponges may have arrived as the first animals on Earth. A sterol core is primarily composed of four fused carbon rings, along with carbon side chains and other ...
A new study shows zooplankton are getting skinny with lack of sea ice. (NOAA) Zooplankton are small organisms — like sea snails, jellyfish, and krill — and they’re crucial to the Bering Sea’s ...
Research achievements of biological discovery, adaptation mechanism, and evolutionary process are closely in line with the developing technologies of submersibles, bioreactors and molecular biological ...
New research from biology professor Xin Sun provides insight into how climate change affects marine greenhouse gas emissions. Sun’s research revealed how nitrous oxide, a greenhouse gas 270 times more ...
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