Researchers have found that reef fish from the Arabian Gulf, the world's hottest sea, exhibit a higher tolerance to temperature fluctuations compared to those from more thermally stable coral reefs.
Warmer ocean temperatures have been linked to smaller fish–but not with these species. By Laura Baisas Published Jul 2, 2024 1:51 PM EDT Get the Popular Science daily newsletter💡 Breakthroughs, ...
A team of researchers have identified unexpected ways coral reef fish living in the warmest waters on earth, in the Arabian Gulf, have adapted to survive extreme temperatures. A team of researchers ...
KPRC 2 has partnered with Moody Gardens for a new documentary, Garden in the Gulf: A Reef Rescue Mission. Chief Meteorologist Anthony Yanez has been working on this project since July 2024 and joined ...
A new study has revealed that corals in the Gulf of Eilat have survived four consecutive and intensifying marine heatwaves, including the world’s most extreme event in 2024, without experiencing mass ...
New study reveals that corals in the Gulf of Aqaba have withstood four consecutive and intensifying marine heatwaves, including the world’s most extreme 2024 event, without suffering mass bleaching — ...
The Arabian Gulf is already known as the hottest sea on Earth during summer, but now UAE scientists are revealing why some summers go off the charts. Their findings could give authorities months of ...
Scientists have long considered the corals in the Gulf of Aqaba in the northern Red Sea to be uniquely resilient to extreme temperatures. For the first time on record, however, the heat wave of 2024 ...