Preis Aquaristik has some sort of new epoxy like putty to attach corals. Details are very sketchy at the moment but we will update this page when we receive new information.
Search Results For: ORA
Coral Triangle being helped, $63 million put by international fund
The Coral Triangle which straddles the waters of Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, the Solomon Islands and East Timor, is said to have the most marine life in the world, and most diverse. However, excessive fishing and the…
Crochet Coral Reef is beyond cool
Have you seen the crochet coral reef? As a homage to the coral reef Margaret and Christine Wertheim – who grew up in Queensland – have instigated a project to crochet a woolen reef. Using the techniques of hyperbolic crochet…
Coral seeding happening in the reefs of Palau
Scientists are around the reefs of Palau to investigate the potential of a experimental technique called coral seeding. They will collect the spawn from mass mating events that are supposed to happen so around these regions to promote growth of…
Living Corals Thousands Of Years Old Hold Clues To Past Climate Changes
New research shows that the second most diverse group of hard corals first evolved in the deep sea, and not in shallow waters. Stylasterids, or lace corals, diversified in deep waters before launching at least three successful invasions of shallow…
The State of Deep Coral Ecosystems of the United States
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has released The State of Deep Coral Ecosystems of the United States, providing new insight into the complex and biologically rich habitats found in deeper waters off the U.S. and elsewhere around the…
NOAA Seeks Greater Protections for Threatened Elkhorn and Staghorn Corals
NOAA is proposing to extend most of the prohibitions of the Endangered Species Act – normally applied only to endangered species – to the threatened elkhorn and staghorn corals. NOAA biologists estimate more than 90 percent of elkhorn and staghorn…
Natural Ocean “Thermostat” May Protect Some Coral Reefs
 BOULDER—Natural processes may prevent oceans from warming beyond a certain point, helping protect some coral reefs from the impacts of climate change, new research finds. The study, by scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and Australian…
Oh Shoot: Swimmers’ Sunscreen Killing Off Coral
It looks like our ocean isn’t taking kindly to sunscreen. A new report claims that sunscreen is threatening 10% of all corals in the ocean. What is the cause? “The chemicals cause the viruses to replicate until their algae hosts…
Coral Propagation, Coral Fragging simple summaries
Adam Blundell Discusses coral fragging, a simple summaries article. Be sure to check it out when you get the time!
