A new study reveals that more than half of the world's coral reefs are bleached because of ocean warming, with 15% experiencing significant mortality.
“If we can capture the right combinations of shape and complexity, we can design restoration structures that function like ...
Benefits to society from coral reefs, including fisheries, tourism, coastal protection, pharmaceutical discovery and more, ...
Asian artist Mulyana 'shows the consequences of our activities, but it's definitely not all gloom and doom,' says museum curator.
Mongabay News on MSN
Coral bleaching: How warming seas are transforming the world’s reefs
By Rhett Ayers Butler [( In ordinary circumstances coral reefs are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth, built ...
Coral reefs, worth an estimated $9.8 trillion a year to humanity, are in far worse shape than previously realized. A massive ...
Mongabay News on MSN
In Thailand, a coral cryobank tries to buy time for dying reefs
By Neelanjana Rai In a quiet laboratory at Phuket Rajabhat University in southern Thailand, Preeyanuch Thongpoo is attempting ...
Half the world’s coral reefs were hit hard by extreme ocean heat, and an even more severe bleaching crisis is happening right ...
Human activity has lessened the resilience of modern coral reefs by restricting the food-fueled energy flow that moves ...
Fossil fish ear stones reveal that today’s coral reefs have shorter food chains and less diversity than ancient reefs before human impact.
Food chains in the coral reefs of the Caribbean are up to 70% shorter today than in the past, and fish living there have a ...
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