| Headline |
Author |
Published |
Section |
C'est Fin Sushi popularity means bad news for tuna, WWF warns |
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07 Jul 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| C'est Fin Sushi popularity means bad news for tuna, WWF warns The popularity of sushi is sending tuna stocks into a downward spiral, says the World Wildlife Fund, warning that Mediterranean and eastern Atlantic bluefin tuna will go extinct if commercial fishers continue hooking them at current rates. "The fishery is running out of control," WWF says in a new report. To keep ... |
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| Topics: Atlantic Ocean, marine life, Mediterranean, news, World Wildlife Fund (all these topics) |
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It's All Happening at the Zooplankton New species of deep-sea zooplankton discovered |
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05 May 2006 |
Daily Grist |
| It's All Happening at the Zooplankton New species of deep-sea zooplankton discovered Scientists have found 10 to 20 new species of zooplankton deep in the Atlantic Ocean, including teeny-tiny shrimp-like creatures, gooey jellyfish-esque plankton, and swimming worms. Zooplankton form the base of many ocean food chains and act as carbon sinks by feeding on carbon-laden plant phytoplankton and then sinking to the ocean depth ... |
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| Topics: Atlantic Ocean, marine life, news (all these topics) |
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Out of Tuna Bluefin tuna, unable to swim inside the lines, at risk of extinction |
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03 May 2005 |
Daily Grist |
| Out of Tuna Bluefin tuna, unable to swim inside the lines, at risk of extinction Apparently western Atlantic bluefin tuna don't understand the concept of fisheries quotas, and may soon face extinction because of it, marine scientists report in the journal Nature. Bluefin tuna can grow up to 10 feet in length and weigh 1,500 lbs., and, due to high demand for sushi, they can fetch as much as $98,000 on the Tokyo fish market ... |
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| Topics: Atlantic Ocean, marine life, news (all these topics) |
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Sea Whirled Gene Study of Sargasso Sea Sample Yields Surprising Results |
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08 Mar 2004 |
Daily Grist |
| Sea Whirled Gene Study of Sargasso Sea Sample Yields Surprising Results Gene sequencing conducted on a small sample of water from the Sargasso Sea near Bermuda has revealed some 1,800 new species and led to questions about our basic knowledge of ocean biology. A group of scientists led by Craig Venter -- the famed gene researcher and developer of a method for accelerating the sequencing of the human genome -- found 800 new genes ... |
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| Topics: Atlantic Ocean, marine life (all these topics) |
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The Bycatcher in the Rye
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24 Jul 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| The Bycatcher in the Rye "Save the whales!" "Save the dolphins!" Those were rallying cries of the environmental movement in the 1980s and '90s, and they culminated in a successful campaign for "dolphin-safe" tuna -- that is, tuna-fishing practices in the Pacific Ocean that wouldn't harm marine mammals. Unfortunately, scientists now say that commercial f ... |
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| Topics: Atlantic Ocean, marine life, oceans, Pacific Ocean, World Wildlife Fund (all these topics) |
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Grim Reefer
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26 Feb 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Grim Reefer Coral reefs are usually associated with the balmy blue waters of the tropics, but the amazing underwater kingdoms exist in cooler climes, too -- at least for now. A new study by French, British, and Norwegian scientists found that 4,500-year-old reefs in the northeastern Atlanti ... |
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| Topics: Atlantic Ocean, commercial and industry organizations, energy, European Union, Greenpeace, international government agencies, marine life, oceans, United Kingdom (all these topics) |
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Go Fish!
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08 Jan 2002 |
Daily Grist |
| Go Fish! Maine's wild Atlantic salmon remain genetically distinct despite more than a century of fish-stocking, aquaculture escapes, and other threats to the species, according to an independent report prepared by the U.S. National Academy of Sciences. The report undermines the claim by Maine Gov. Angus King (I) and others that Maine salmon were genetically diluted and therefore did not merit protection ... |
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| Topics: Atlantic Ocean, fishing, GMOs, Maine, marine life (all these topics) |
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