WHOI in the News
Woods Hole scientists exploring what’s inside the ocean’s ‘twilight zone’
CBS News
Where food is scarce, ocean predators find snacks in swirling eddies
Popular Science
Revealing 99% of the ocean floor: WHOI’s submersible Alvin reaches new depths
Cape Cod Times
Greatest Migration on Earth Happens under Darkness Every Day
Scientific American
It Looks Awkward, but This Fish Has a Secret Glow
New York Times
Turning the tide against climate change
The Boston Globe
Call of the deep
Knowable Magazine
Robotic buoys developed to keep Atlantic right whales safe
Associated Press
This robot lives with an Antarctica penguin colony, monitoring their every move
USA Today
Your Take-Out Coffee Cup May Shed Trillions of Plastic ‘Nanoparticles’
HealthDay
A robot lives in this Antarctic penguin colony. It’s trying to save them
CNN
Is This New England’s Oldest Known English Shipwreck?
Smithsonian Magazine
Antarctica’s Conger ice shelf collapses in most significant loss since early 2000s
AccuWeather
Protecting whale superhighways
WBUR
When it comes to sucking up carbon emissions, ‘the ocean has been forgiving.’ That might not last
PBS Newshour
Listen: Scientists Are Recording Ocean Sounds to Spot New Species
The Wall Street Journal
How about 10% of the oil from Deepwater Horizon oil spill was eaten by the sun
SYFY
Warming Trends: Extracting Data From Pictures, Paying Attention to the ‘Twilight Zone,’ and Making Climate Change Movies With Edge
InsideClimate News
Right whales giving birth a cause for excitement, but not enough to save endangered species
USA Today
Rising temperatures a boon for harmful bacteria in Cape Cod’s fresh and salt water
Cape Cod Times
From the toxic scum on ponds and lakes to the nuisance blooms that can shut down vital desalination plants providing water to millions, the Cape Cod region — and the world, is increasingly tuned into the problems presented by Harmful Algal Blooms.
Robot designed by Texas university to explore underwater glacial walls to monitor climate change
Robotics and Automation News
What We Know About Oceans and Climate Change
Columbia SIPA Energy Exchange
Despite threats from fellow fishermen, lobstermen press Mass. to allow ropeless fishing in closed areas
Boston Globe
To protect right whales, some areas along the coast, such as Cape Cod Bay, have since 2015 been closed to lobster fishing between February and May, when large numbers of them feed in those waters.
On Cape Cod, the latest barrage of wind and waves, exacerbated by climate change, turns concern to desperation
The Boston Globe