Marine scientists discover an invisible barrier in the North Atlantic that shapes the survival of Arctic species, offering new insights into oceanic migration patterns.
This video uncovers the shocking defense strategy sea cucumbers use when predators get too close. Viewers learn how these animals eject their own internal organs as a distraction. Scientists explain ...
Here are 10 of the most effective predators in the ocean – and you might be surprised which one comes out on top ...
The five oceans could easily be considered the last frontier on the planet. Crucial to the world’s ecosystems, approximately ...
The way Botrynema jellyfish is distributed across the ocean may reveal a previously unknown biogeographic barrier in the ...
By monitoring the movement, health, and environmental conditions of thousands of animals at once, Project ICARUS hopes to ...
MIT researchers traced chemical fossils in ancient rocks back to the ancestors of today’s demosponges. A team of geochemists ...
A harbor seal that was rehabilitated at Marine Mammals of Maine is released back into the Atlantic Ocean at Head Beach in ...
A harbor seal that was rehabilitated at Marine Mammals of Maine is released back into the Atlantic Ocean at Head Beach in ...
For generations, flapper skate was mislabelled as common skate. It was only in 2010 that the common skate was shown, ...
Researchers examined more than 10,000 animal autopsies to figure out how much plastic is too much for ocean wildlife ...