New research suggests oysters may rely on hidden microbes to help build their shells and maintain chemistry as oceans grow more acidic.
The Fishermen’s Forum has always been a place where innovation and new opportunities are discussed, and this year’s edition was no exception.
About 90 minutes later, we got to meet the man responsible, Eric Ripert, who has been executive chef of Le Bernardin in ...
RMIT University engineers in Australia have built a remote-controlled minibot that hoovers up oil spills using an innovative filtering system inspired ...
One of the country's biggest sea urchin suppliers opens its break room daily to anyone who wants to eat uni and other seafood ...
Once abundant in California, the white abalone had all but vanished. Now, thanks to an innovative breeding program, it’s staged a remarkable comeback ...
Pupa U. P. A. Gilbert is in the Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA, and the Chemical Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, ...
The mass mortality event was documented in the Canary Islands Researchers now fear that the pattern observed in the Canary Islands mortality event will also emerge in other regions around the world, ...
A sea turtle’s shell is living bone fused directly to its spine and ribs. It is not a detachable shield or an external case, as certain quirky cartoons have shown. The shell grows with the turtle, ...