WHOI in the News
Even the Gulf of Aqaba’s ‘supercorals’ bleached during 2024 heat wave
Mongabay
New Study Highlights the Correlation Between Live Corals and Fishing Yields
Environmental News Network
Underwater Acoustics System Helps Baby Corals Thrive
IEEE Spectrum
Galápagos discovery offers clues to climate impact on deep-sea corals
PRX's The World
Palau’s Rock Islands Harbor Heat-Resistant Corals
ECO Magazine
Hibernating corals and the microbiomes that sustain them
Science Daily
Protecting living corals could help defend the Great Barrier Reef from ocean acidification for decades
Mongabay.com
Reefs with higher numbers of living corals will be more resilient than expected to damage from acidifying seawater, scientists reported recently in Nature Evolution and Ecology.
These corals could survive climate change — and help save the world’s reefs
Nature
Ocean warming threatens to wipe out corals, but scientists are trying to protect naturally resilient reefs and are nursing some others back to health.
New Study Spotlights Role of Microbes Living Next to Corals
Sea Technology
Can Super Reefs Save Corals?
WCAI
Distinct microbes found living next to corals
Science Daily
The Threats Facing Deep-Sea Corals Off New England’s Coast
WCAI - Living Lab
features interview with Tim Shank
March 23, 2017 Corals die as global warming collides with local weather in the South China Sea
Phys.org
pick up of WHOI news release
features Anne Cohen and Tom DeCarlo
Corals: More Resilient Than Many Have Thought
Canada Free Press
mentions WHOI
Corals Could Help Predict the Asian Monsoon
WCAI - Living Lab
featuring interview with Konrad Hughen
Study reveals corals’ influence on reef microbes
Science Daily
pick up of WHOI news release featuring Amy Apprill
Study reveals corals’ influence on reef microbes
Science Magazine
pick up of WHOI news release featuring Amy Apprill
Uranium-dating Through Deep Sea Corals Deposits a Useful Reference on Northern Glacial Retreat
Nature World News
mentions WHOI
A deadly disease is wiping out coral in Florida and the Caribbean
National Geographic
Researchers are racing to stop stony coral tissue loss disease, which is killing some of the region’s oldest and largest corals.