University of Hawaii: Fish Diversity Reduced in World's Hottest Coral Reef
August 01, 2020
August 01, 2020
HONOLULU, Hawaii, Aug. 1 -- The University of Hawaii issued the following news release:
Small, bottom-dwelling reef fishes on the world's hottest coral reefs in the southern Arabian Gulf are much less diverse and abundant than on nearby reefs with less extreme temperatures. That is according to a study published in Nature Communications by an international team of researchers, including Jacob Johansen, an assistant research professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa's . . .
Small, bottom-dwelling reef fishes on the world's hottest coral reefs in the southern Arabian Gulf are much less diverse and abundant than on nearby reefs with less extreme temperatures. That is according to a study published in Nature Communications by an international team of researchers, including Jacob Johansen, an assistant research professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa's . . .