In 1995, divers first noticed a group of bizarre sandy "crop circles" on the seabed around Amami Oshima Island, southwest ...
Delaware Riverkeeper Maya K. van Rossum always knew 45 feet was a stopping point on the way down to 50. As head of the ...
City staff and resident advocates believe that Tortilla Flats — a northern Montrose neighborhood whose people so-named it ...
Technology is creating more data than ever in aquaculture – now the challenge is how to use it, as Robert Outram reports ...
For some fishers in Tanzania’s Kilwa district who were among the first to receive fishing boats under a government-sponsored ...
Lanice spongicola lives on a glass sponge, a deep-sea sponge with a skeleton made of silica, that rises from hard rock. The worm builds a thin mucus tube on the lower part of the sponge and presses ...
Climate change is rapidly altering freshwater ecosystems — raising temperatures, altering flood pulses and oxygen levels — and driving complex, region-specific changes in how fish grow, migrate and ...
On a cool October morning, members of the St. Croix Chippewa Tribe gathered at the Clam Lake boat landing in northern Wisconsin, carrying five-gallon buckets of small, wriggling lake sturgeon. After a ...
HARTFORD, Conn. (WTNH) — Starting on Jan. 1, 2026, inland sportfishing regulations are changing to protect the lone native trout species in Connecticut, according to the Connecticut Department of ...
These three fish are freaks, phantoms and mysteries of the deep. Here’s what we’ve learned from the rare glimpses we’ve had of their lives. The deep sea is one of Earth’s final frontiers. Given its ...
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