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Intertidal spiders and starfish night vision: Thursday Afternoon Dredging, February 22nd, 2018

Posted on February 22, 2018February 22, 2018 By David Shiffman
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Cuttings (short and sweet): 

  • Follow Jessica Meeuwig, the Director of the UWA Centre for Marine Futures, on twitter.
  • Check out #WowScienceFact, a science communication hashtag game that I started! 
  • Ocean tides could have driven ancient fish to walk. By Alexandra Witze, for Nature News.

Spoils (long reads and deep dives):

  • Webs under water: the bizarre lives of intertidal spiders. By Bhanu Sridharan, for MongaBay
  • A pioneering plan to boost fish stocks shows little success. By Clare Leschin-Hoar, for NPR
  • To save the oceans now, museum maps the species of the past. By Jessica Leber, for OceansDeeply
  • Seabirds eat plastic because it smells like fish to them. By Simon Worral, for National Geographic.
  • Starfish can sea in the dark, and have other amazing abilities! By Colleen Suckling, for Scientific American
  • Fish are moving, but can fishermen adapt to warmer waters? By Erin Priddle, for the Environmental Defense Fund blog.
  • Shadowy criminals are prowling the seas, putting food supplies in danger. By Ted Kemp, for CNBC.
  • Queen conch are dying in the Bahamas despite marine parks. By Maria Salazar, for MongaBay
  • The cuttlefish, master of camouflage, unveils a new trick. By Veronique Greenwood, for the New York Times

 

Please add your own cuttings and spoils in the comments!

If you appreciate my shark research and conservation outreach, please consider supporting me on Patreon! Any amount is appreciated, and supporters get exclusive rewards!

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Related

Tags: bahamas protected areas climate change cuttlefish fish evolution fish stocking illegal fishing intertidal spiders ocean museums ocean warming pirate fishing plastic pollution queen conch range shifts seabirds

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