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Baby starfish offer a glimmer of hope for recovery | Emerging from a recent dive 40 feet below the surface of the Puget Sound, biologist Ben Miner wasn't surprised by what he found: The troubling disease that wiped out millions of starfish up and down the West Coast had spread to this site along the rocky cliffs of Lopez Island. |
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Starfish babies offer glimmer of hope amid mass die-off | In scattered sites along the Pacific Coast, researchers and others have reported seeing hundreds of juvenile sea stars, buoying hopes for a potential comeback from sea star wasting disease that has caused millions of purple, red and orange sea stars to curl up, grow lesions, lose limbs and… |
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New microscope, endless possibilities | Western’s Biology Department saved $50,000 on the purchase of a powerful new microscope that has the ability to capture 3D images of cells. |
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Crowdfunding effort helps buy new microscope | |||
Pink snow and Skullcandy | |||
Scientists say climate change means sicker world for sea life | The shellfish pathogen that hit California’s Channel Islands in the 1980s began to quickly kill one of the tideland’s most important animals — black abalone. |
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²ÝÁñÉçÇø scientists leave for Pacific research cruise | |||
²ÝÁñÉçÇø scientists leave for Pacific research cruise | |||
As climate warms, more outbreaks of disease for sea life | The shellfish pathogen that hit California’s Channel Islands in the 1980s began to quickly kill one of the tideland’s most important animals — black abalone. |
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Mystery of why millions of star fish dissolved into goo off Pacific coast solved | Scientists have cracked the mystery of what has killed millions of sea stars in waters off the Pacific coast, from British Columbia to Mexico. |