A joint research led by Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU) and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) has assembled the 1.64 gigabytes genome of a deep-sea mussel, which is ...
Come October, Phil Cruver plans to be seeding the first-ever offshore mussel farm in the U.S. Eight months later, the CEO of Catalina Sea Ranch hopes to be harvesting the first batch of mussels, which ...
Notably, methanotrophic bacteria—key symbionts in deep-sea mussels—became dominant in the exposed shallow-water mussels. This shift correlated with changes in gene expression related to immune ...
Catalina Sea Ranch has finally grown some mussels. The company’s aquaculture farm a few miles off Los Angeles County’s southern coast harvested its first batch in mid-July. The initial crop was three ...
Marine biologists have investigated new ways of utilizing the Baltic Sea's resources. Over three years, the project has looked at various ways of utilizing macroalgae and microalgae, mussels, common ...
Scientists have assembled the 1.64 gigabytes genome of a deep-sea mussel, which is roughly equivalent to 50 percent of the size of human genome. This is the first decoded genome among all deep-sea ...
That's the number of aquatic non-native species that have made their way into the Great Lakes as of 2023 – at least the ones that scientists have identified. About one-third of the species have ...
We left the dock at San Pedro just as the dawn light broke over a slate grey sky, a glassy black sea. Our craft, the Enterprise, a 72-foot-long World War II-era military grade landing vessel, was ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. One hundred eighty-eight. That's the number of aquatic non-native species that have made their way into the Great Lakes as of 2023 ...
Deep-sea mussels use on-board bacterial "fuel cells" to harness energy from hydrogen spewing out of hydrothermal vents, according to research indicating that the use of this alternative fuel may be ...
A joint research led by Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU) and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) has assembled the 1.64 gigabytes genome of a deep-sea mussel, which is ...