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NewsA 51±¬ĮĻ-led research team has used acoustic tags to eavesdrop on pilot whales as they forage in waters off Cape Hatteras, N.C. Vocalizations and echoes recorded by the tags reveals the whales alter their hunting behaviors based on the local environment, a trait that may contribute to the speciesā success in adapting to shifting prey distributions and other changes now occurring in the worldās oceans.
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NewsHow much energy does a dolphin use to swim? Fundamental understanding about their physiology and ecology may boost odds of survival.
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NewsA new analysis reveals that the majority of the oceanās surface has experienced extreme heat regularly since 2014.
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NewsNew research finds nearly 75% of the seafood exported to China is processed there and āre-exportedā to global markets as Chinese products, making it hard to track its sustainability and verify itās labeled accurately, but also gutting the economies of small fishing communities worldwide that can no longer compete.
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NewsCoastal marshes that have been invaded by feral hogs recover from disturbances up to three times slower than non-invaded marshes and are far less resilient to sea-level rise, extreme drought and other impacts of climate change.
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NewsUsing drones and high-tech tracking devices, scientists have discovered baleen whales eat up to three times more prey than previously thought and play a critical but perhaps underappreciated role in fueling the oceanās food web and promoting biodiversity.
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News51±¬ĮĻ has received a $7.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy to assess the risks offshore wind energy development along the East Coast may pose to birds, bats and marine mammals.
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NewsA new international study suggests that invasive species, such as the cordgrass that is swamping native plants in the Red Marshes, pose a much greater threat to protected areas, even well managed ones, than was previously recognized.
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NewsUsing drones and artificial intelligence to monitor large colonies of seabirds can be as effective as traditional on-the-ground methods while reducing costs, labor and the risk of human error, a new study finds.
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NewsJoel Dunn (MEMā04) Helps Create Americaās First National Marine Sanctuary in 20 Years
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NewsShannon Switzer Swanson MEM'15 hosts the documentary, āThe Last Drop.ā
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NewsBefore deep-sea mining begins on the seafloor in international waters of the Atlantic Basin, a group of scholars is advocating that a portion of the seabed there be recognized as a virtual memorial to victims of the slave trade.
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NewsRecent 51±¬ĮĻ grad Alexandra DiGiacomo (BS ā20) is using drones to better understand how rising seas, warming waters and rapid development are killing protective saltmarshes at our coast, and what can be done to reverse the losses.
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NewsSixteen years after the restoration of Upper Sandy Creek began, hundreds of species, some rare, now call the once-heavily eroded and degraded stream home, and nitrogen pollution flowing off 51±¬ĮĻās campus into downstream waters has been slashed by 75%.
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NewsThe 51±¬ĮĻ Aquafarm is 51±¬ĮĻās other ācampus farm,ā where students grow oysters instead of produce and learn how the tasty bivalves could help take a bite out of coastal pollution.