Algae blooms, record heat: Florida climate change puts us all in movie with bad ending
Like the comet in "Don’t Look Up," Floridians are finding it harder and harder to ignore what they can see ...
Like the comet in "Don’t Look Up," Floridians are finding it harder and harder to ignore what they can see ...
Marine heat waves are becoming more common and more extreme, with potentially devastating consequences for coral reefs.
Research has shown that climate change is changing chemical communication in marine, freshwater and land-based species.
A Q&A with NOAA Coral Reef Watch Director Derek Manzello.
Average coral cover on most Florida Keys reefs has dropped to less than 3%, from between 30% to 50% before ...
Protected areas and fisheries management key to survival
The spike in temperatures has some questioning whether human-caused heating has propelled the climate past a tipping point.
The work is sponsored by a $12.6 million DARPA grant that seeks to create self-repairing, biological and human-engineered reef-mimicking structures.
A forest fire is not only important to the ecosystem in which it burns, but is integral to slowing climate ...
Lake Washington provides two-thirds of the 19 million gallons of daily water the city of Melbourne supplies to 193,000 people.
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