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The poisoned paradise: How microplastics found their way to the deepest ocean trench
Scientists discovered human-made microplastics in the hindguts of amphipods from the Challenger Deep, the deepest point on Earth at nearly 11,000 meters depth. This was no accident. The discovery ...
… project activities these days. Chuck described making funnel traps for amphipods. For an entire Tuesday, my home office was a sweat shop as I with the aid of my old Singer sewing machine transformed ...
This is a preview. Log in through your library . Abstract It has been suggested that giant Antarctic marine invertebrates will be particularly vulnerable to declining O₂ levels as our ocean warms in ...
The hyperiid amphipod community of Banderas Bay, a tropical embayment on the central coast of the Mexican Pacific in the Eastern Tropical Pacific region, is studied based on surface zooplankton ...
A large amount of focus has been given to our main experiment this season. While this experiment is very important, I think its unfair that some of our other projects haven’t been given the attention ...
1:58 Bloody attack by tiny creatures leaves Australian teen in hospital An Australian teenager is recovering in hospital after being severely bitten by what researchers believe to be amphipods, a type ...
March 6 (UPI) --Plastics are being ingested by amphipods living in one of the deepest places on Earth, the Pacific Ocean's Mariana Trench. Amphipods, sometimes called hoppers, are tiny shrimp-like ...
Amphipods of the species Gammarus roeselii guard their chosen mates, often carrying them with them for days and defending them against potential rivals. This behavior requires a lot of time and energy ...
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