Coral larvae reduce their metabolism and increase nitrogen uptake to resist bleaching in high temperatures, according to a new study.
On Thursday, as a National Geographic expedition was exploring the waters around the Solomon Islands, its members spotted ...
Coral larvae reduce their metabolism and increase nitrogen uptake to resist bleaching at high temperatures, according to a ...
Research reveals coral larvae adapt to high temperatures by reducing metabolism and increasing nitrogen intake, enhancing ...
Scientists from National Geographic reportedly discovered the world’s largest coral head in the Solomon Islands in October.
Coral larvae reduce their metabolism and increase nitrogen uptake to resist bleaching in high temperatures, according to a ...
Coral larvae assimilate more nitrogen and trade it to their algae symbionts for glucose under elevated temperatures ...
From the surface, “it looked like a shipwreck,” said Molly Timmers, lead scientist of the Pristine Seas expedition. But the ...
Over the past two years, record-breaking ocean temperatures have triggered a wave of coral bleaching events across the world. But while other reefs around the Solomon Islands are showing signs of ...
Severe Cold-Water Bleaching and Mortality of Deep-Water Reef Observed in the Eastern Tropical Pacific Oct. 11, 2024 — New study documents a severe coral bleaching event occurring in a deep coral ...
It’s more than 100 feet long, at least 300 years old and visible from space. The world’s largest coral has just been ...