Rutgers: 'Wrong-Way' Migrations Stop Shellfish From Escaping Ocean Warming
September 08, 2020
September 08, 2020
NEW BRUNSWICK, New Jersey, Sept. 8 (TNSRes) -- Rutgers University issued the following news:
Ocean warming is paradoxically driving bottom-dwelling invertebrates - including sea scallops, blue mussels, surfclams and quahogs that are valuable to the shellfish industry - into warmer waters and threatening their survival, a Rutgers-led study shows.
In a new study published in the journal Nature Climate Change, researchers identify a cause for the "wrong-way" spec . . .
Ocean warming is paradoxically driving bottom-dwelling invertebrates - including sea scallops, blue mussels, surfclams and quahogs that are valuable to the shellfish industry - into warmer waters and threatening their survival, a Rutgers-led study shows.
In a new study published in the journal Nature Climate Change, researchers identify a cause for the "wrong-way" spec . . .