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Scientists discovered three new species of sea spiders that live near the ocean floor and feast on bacteria that convert ...
This previously unknown symbiotic relationship helps keep methane—a major greenhouse gas—trapped in the ocean.
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AZ Animals on MSNThese West Coast Sea Spiders are Methane-PoweredNature finds a way. Even in the most inhospitable conditions on Earth, life figures out how to not only survive but flourish.
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Good Good Good on MSNThis deep-sea creature sucks up methane on the ocean floor. It's a new speciesBiology professor Shana Goffredi calls these new curious creatures “extremely adorable” — although arachnophobes may disagree.
The methane seeps are near ports where many of the U.S. research ships dock. The ease of access has set off an exploration stampede, with several new projects in planning stages or already funded.
Methane seeps are vents in the ocean floor teeming with bacteria and other microbes that feed off the gases being released, according to Benjamin Grupe, a biological oceanography graduate student ...
The Lasuen Knoll methane seep off the coast of Southern California as photographed in 2021. Credit: Schmidt Ocean Institute “These seeps host an amazing array of microbial processes that we are still ...
Methane seepage data in combination with other parameters measured by the K-Lander will help in estimating present and future global methane budgets in our oceans" says Bénédicte Ferré, the ...
Methane seeps from near a mound covered with deep-sea mussels at a depth of 4,600 feet in the Atlantic Ocean just south of Norfolk Canyon off Virginia. NOAA Okeanos Explorer Program ...
Previously, researchers had only documented 200 methane seeps off the Pacific Northwest Coast. "Methane is a greenhouse gas," Embley said during a public radio interview with members of the joint ...
The methane seeps are near ports where many of the U.S. research ships dock. The ease of access has set off an exploration stampede, with several new projects in planning stages or already funded.
Every day, methane gas seeps from Pacific Northwest landfills and it's estimated about 30% of today’s global warming is driven by methane. Heather Kuoppamaki, senior environmental engineer at ...
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