Risky business: But some fish can adapt We studied five tropical fish species and two temperate species across a 2,000km stretch of Australia's east coast, from the tropics to the cold temperate south ...
“Fish,” said Gisli Palsson, a professor of anthropology at the University of Iceland, “made us rich.” The money Iceland earned from commercial fishing helped the island, which is about the size of ...
Fish don't follow international boundaries or understand economic trade agreements. Different species live in regions all over the globe. If that wasn't complicated enough, they also migrate as they ...
Analysing the breadth of current world-wide data on marine fish changes in recent years, researchers from the University of Glasgow have revealed how fish populations across the Earth’s oceans are ...
Large numbers of fish will disappear from the tropics by 2050, finds a new study that examined the impact of climate change on fish stocks. The study identified ocean hotspots for local fish ...
In the frozen rocks of an island 800 miles from the North Pole, scientists have discovered a group of fossils that clearly mark one of the most crucial events in human evolution: a moment in time some ...
Numerous studies in the Northeast US have shown that adult marine fish distributions are changing, but few studies have looked at the early life stages of those adult fish to see what is happening to ...
SINGAPORE — Last December, a deadly plankton bloom wiped out 34 fish farms off the coast of Singapore, killing most of their stock — about 400,000 fish, including tiger garoupa, sea bass and red ...
Big Fish has reeled in a new headquarters. The mobile gaming company, which was acquired by Kentucky Derby operator Churchill Downs Inc. in 2014 for $885 million, announced Wednesday that it will move ...
Modern international fishing rights are further complicated as oceans warm because of climate change. Fish don't follow international boundaries or understand economic trade agreements. Different ...
When you think about climate change in our oceans, you may picture coral bleaching, melting sea ice, or extreme weather events. But beneath the ocean’s surface, another quiet shift is underway.