Coral larvae reduce their metabolism and increase nitrogen uptake to resist bleaching in high temperatures, according to a new study.
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 ...
Armed with scrub brushes, young scuba divers took to the waters of Florida’s Alligator Reef in late July to try to help corals struggling to survive 2023’s extraordinary marine heat wave. They ...
Coral larvae reduce their metabolism and increase nitrogen uptake to resist bleaching in high temperatures, according to a ...
Climate change is decimating the likelihood of survival for a large portion of the world's coral reefs, according to new ...
It’s more than 100 feet long, around 300 years old, made of nearly 1 billion little polyps and visible from space ...
The world's largest coral has been found in the Solomon Islands, a remote nation made up of hundreds of small islands in the ...
The "mega" coral is 112-feet wide, 105-feet long and 18-feet high, making it larger than a blue whale, the world's largest animal.
Researchers have discovered the world's largest coral colony in the southwest Pacific Ocean, in the waters of the Solomon ...
Advertisement While corals can recover from mass bleaching events, long periods of high heat can leave them weak and vulnerable to disease that can ultimately kill them. That’s what scientists ...
Coral larvae assimilate more nitrogen and trade it to their algae symbionts for glucose under elevated temperatures ...