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- Scientists discover the world’s largest coral - CNN
More than 40% of warm-water reef-building coral species now face extinction, primarily because of climate change, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List of
- Coral Reefs - Guadalupe Mountains National Park (U. S . . .
These serve as a perfect perch for more of the same organisms to build upon, and, year after year, the reef grows up towards the sun and out towards the open ocean The big difference between the Capitan Reef, the barrier reef that formed along the edge of the Delaware Sea, and most of the reefs on Earth today is that this reef was formed
- Wildlife-film. com Feature Pages
Wildlife-film com Feature Page
- Extraordinary diversity of reef corals in the South China Sea
The South China Sea in the Central Indo-Pacific is a large marine region that spans an area of more than 3 million km2 bounded by the coastlines of ten Asian nation states and contains numerous small islands Although it abuts the western border of the Coral Triangle, the designated centre of maximum marine biodiversity, the South China Sea has received much less scientific and conservation
- Over 800 New Marine Species Discovered | Ocean Census
The Largest Global Mission to Discover Ocean Life Reveals Over 800 Newly Discovered Marine Species Over 800 new species discovered; 800+ scientists from 400+ institutions collaborating globally; 10 Expeditions and 8 Discovery Workshops completed with partners such as The; National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), and Schmidt
- The world is in trouble: one million animals and plants face . . .
More than 40% of amphibian species, about 33% of reef-forming corals and more than a third of all marine mammals are threatened And it is humanity that is to blame, as about 75% of environments on land have been significantly altered by human actions, plus roughly 66% of the marine environment
- Corals Are Dying on the Great Barrier Reef - National Geographic
The Australian government's new level-three response will mean increased surveying of the massive Great Barrier Reef system, which covers 133,000 square miles (344,400 square kilometers) and
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