Anchovy pizza can save fish populations

A Canadian study out of the University of British Columbia states that people should reduce their consumption of tuna, cod, grouper, and salmon (predator fish) and increase their eating of herring, sardines, and anchovies (forage fish).
 

New research supports vast ocean on ancient Mars

According to 2010 research from scientists at the University of Colorado, the planet Mars, long ago in its past, supported an ocean that covered approximately 36% of its surface.  
 

CSIRO scientists hit the waves virtually

Australian scientists at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) have created virtual ocean waves over twenty meters tall in order to test how different types of oil and gas rigs withstand the real monster waves that impact them in the open sea.
 

Oceans have higher capacity to absorb carbon dioxide

According to a British study, the amount of carbon dioxide able to be absorbed into Earth’s oceans is much larger than previously thought.
 

Study predicts seabed response to climate change

Offshore infrastructure connected to oil and gas reserves is potentially at risk from the likely impact of climate change on the Australian seabed, according to the CSIRO following its completion of a five-year study.
 

Did you know that 80% of ocean trash is plastics?

According to the UN Environment Programme, 80% of the trash taken from Earth’s oceans consists of plastics such as shopping bags and drinking bottles. The report calls thin film plastic bags "pointless." In other words, we don't need them anymore: get rid of them with a worldwide ban!
 

Highly credible climate modeling: northeast U.S. at flooding risk

According to a U.S. study of the Gulf Stream and the North Atlantic Current, a dramatic increase in the sea level of the northeast coast of the United States is possible by the end of the twenty-first century. Watch out Boston, New York City, and Washington D.C.
 

High-tech 1/X Toyota car may feel at home in the sea

The 1/X design concept car by the Toyota Motor Corporation may one day use high-technology materials such as environmentally sustainable seaweed for the main material of its body. In the future, Toyota may use ecologically-friendly plant-base materials for all of its cars and trucks.
 

Houston, we have a rubber duckie problem!

NASA is looking for a few good rubber ducks, and they are willing to pay $100 for each lost duck dropped into the waters within a Greenland glacier.
 

DESTROYED: One out of five coral reefs

About 19% of Earth’s coral reefs, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, have been destroyed and the other 81% could follow the same path if humans do not actively (and successfully) reduce carbon dioxide emissions.