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Hi friends! Reef the fox here with your weekly “Reef’s Report.” Last week, the fox sanctuary in Key Largo turned into a ...
Joe Cavanaugh brings a wealth of experience to the non-profit as he's worked with endangered fish in places like the ...
The Florida Keys coral reef, once lively shades of green, brown and yellow, were completely stone white. The vibrant hues of the reef have been muted by a natural process called coral bleaching.
Some Florida Keys coral reefs are losing their color weeks earlier than normal this summer because of record-high water temperatures, meaning they are under stress and their health is potentially ...
Florida Keys coral reefs are experiencing an alarming loss of color much earlier than usual this summer due to record-high water temperatures, putting them under significant stress and posing a ...
Fish costumes, floating mermaids, and quirky sea instruments make this underwater concert in the Florida Keys a weirdly fun ...
NOAA recently reported that the largest coral bleaching event on record is impacting 84% of the world’s reefs, including the ...
The ocean may be nature’s single greatest gift to humanity. It provides about half of the oxygen we breathe, feeds billions ...
KEY WEST, Fla. – More than 1,000 young corals raised at Tampa’s Florida aquarium are on their way to the Florida Keys, offering a potential lifeline to the imperiled coral reef system.
Montoya-Maya says there was some bleaching on coral reefs in the Florida Keys this summer, but at levels normally seen. “Bleaching will happen every summer until September or October,” he says.
As summer heat warms waters around the Florida Keys, scientists again on alert for more coral bleaching across the beleaguered reef will begin studying a feeding program in nurseries if conditions ...
The coral reefs around the Florida Keys are losing their color early this summer because of record-high water temperatures. Federal scientists say they are already seeing some bleaching in the reefs.