With a human population of 8.3 billion people worldwide and millions facing malnutrition, food security is something to think ...
The future looks grim for coral reefs. Warmer oceans, overfishing, pollution, and gradually acidifying waters have destroyed more than a third of the world’s shallow tropical coral reefs. Just this ...
Allowing reef fish populations to recover could dramatically increase the global supply of sustainable seafood.
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How the oceans’ coral reefs could be the secret weapon to tackle food insecurity around the world
Overfishing and global warming are depleting food from our oceans, but rebuilding reef life could help provide millions of ...
Overfished coral reefs are producing far less food than they could. Researchers found that letting reef fish populations ...
Scientists reveal overfished reefs could be a lifeline for hungry communities. Restoration matters for both people and nature ...
Sally Keith receives funding from NERC. This research was supported by the Natural Environment Research Council (Rachel L. Gunn, grant number NE/L002604/1), with Rachel L. Gunns studentship through ...
An exhibit on coral reefs and how global climate change threatens them will be the focus of the Aquarium of the Pacific this summer — as it was supposed to be last year. “Coral Reefs: Nature’s ...
This is a big deal. Coral reefs support about a quarter of all marine biodiversity in just 1 percent of the ocean’s space. And so tropical reef fish, among the most vulnerable organisms when it comes ...
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