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·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥Queen Conch Mobile Lab Debuts in The Bahamas with First Hatch

By | June 17, 2026

·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥Harbor Branch's Queen Conch Mobile Lab in The Bahamas has achieved its first hatch, marking a major step toward restoring this iconic species and producing up to 2,000 juveniles annually.

Pixels Preserve World's Most Endangered Marine Mammal, the Vaquita

By | June 15, 2026

How do you preserve one of the world's rarest animals when so few remain? ·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥researchers have created an unprecedented 3D digital archive of the world's smallest porpoise and most endangered marine mammal.

Acoustic Environment May Shape Which Bird Songs Last

By | June 10, 2026

An ·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥study suggests the environment may help determine which bird songs survive across generations. Songs that travel more clearly through habitats were more likely to be common within populations.

More Jobs, More Local Living: Study Redefines the 15-Minute City

By | June 4, 2026

By analyzing travel patterns, ·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥researchers found that job density is the strongest driver of local travel in "15-minute city" neighborhoods, with more than 86% of internal trips made on foot.

Armed with AI, Study Identifies Prey from Predator Crunching Sounds

By | June 3, 2026

·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥researchers have developed an AI-powered acoustic system that detects shell-crushing feeding by eagle rays, enabling real-time monitoring of predator-prey interactions and coastal ecosystem health.

·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥Experts Available for Comment on 2026 Hurricane Season

By | May 21, 2026

·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥faculty are leading experts on a wide range of hurricane-related issues and are available to discuss topics such as forecasting, flooding, storm impacts, climate resilience and disaster recovery.

·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥Researcher Earns NSF CAREER Award for Air, Water Purification

By | May 6, 2026

An ·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥engineering researcher has received an NSF CAREER award to study why amine-based sorbents degrade, aiming to design longer-lasting materials for capturing carbon dioxide, toxins and "forever chemicals."

·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥Study Reveals How Camels 'Beat the Heat' at the Cellular Level

By | April 30, 2026

·¬ÇÑÖ±²¥researchers have created a new approach to decode how cells adapt to heat, revealing gene interaction patterns under temperature stress using small datasets and a novel measure of gene change magnitude.

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