It's spring, the sun is shining and something is about to happen with the plankton in the cold waters of the Arctic Ocean.
Among the myriad creatures that populate our ocean, some stand out as having an outsized impact on the marine ...
[New Paper] Meet Delectopecten thermus, a new species of Glass Scallop from a deep-sea hot vent in Okinawa Trough, Japan! We ...
Scientists in China have conducted a year-long study on six "aquavoltaics" farms hosting sea cucumber aquacultures under the ...
Tasmania. Every year, around 2000 marine mammals die in mass strandings worldwide. But this is not always for natural reasons ...
Projections of our future under climate change paint a picture of extreme weather and acidified oceans, a world many of today ...
The spring bloom has begun, and populations of these tiny plankton are growing explosively beneath the surface. From a boat out on the fjord, Tore Mo-Bjørkelund launches a robot into the sea.
Marine biologists will drop 120 tonnes of rubble onto the sea floor off the coast of south-west Victoria to grow new sponge ...
Sea scallops are part of the bivalve family because the animals inside create their own ... The filter-feeding species eat plankton by catching the tiny creatures on their mucus and then moving ...
Find out more about what happens when we bring art and science together. Discover the new exhibition at our Foundation.
plankton, seagrasses and other forms of sea life interact sheds light on Earth’s carbon cycle. Carbon, a chemical element, is found in all organic matter on Earth, from the plants and animals ...