Science
‘Wrong-way’ migrations stop shellfish from escaping ocean warming – Phys.org
Ocean warming is paradoxically driving bottom-dwelling invertebrates—including sea scallops, blue mussels, surfclams and quahogs that are valuable to the shellfish industry—into warmer waters and threatening their survival, a Rutgers-led study shows.

Ocean warming is paradoxically driving bottom-dwelling invertebratesincluding sea scallops, blue mussels, surfclams and quahogs that are valuable to the shellfish industryinto warmer waters and threatening their survival, a Rutgers-led study shows.
In a new study published in the journal Nature Climate Change, researchers identify a cause for the “wrong-way” species migrations: warming-induced changes to their spawning times, resulting in the earlier release of larvae that are pushed into warme…
-
General18 hours ago
Australia loses ODI series to South Africa with defeat in second game in Mackay
-
Noosa News24 hours ago
Fuel tanker driver killed in horror head-on crash near Blackbutt identified as beloved father-of-two
-
Business22 hours ago
Up 20% in 2 days, are Codan shares a buy, hold or sell?
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Palestine protesters forced into last-minute reroute