Overfishing: Oceans Are Dying

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Global warming may cook sea turtle eggs PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 02 February 2010 20:24

Credits: WikipediaSea turtles -- gentle, charismatic denizens of our oceans -- draw snorkeling and scuba diving tourists to coral reefs and keep ecosystems balanced by grazing kelp and algae.

A new study finds that for the world's largest population of sea turtles -- in Australia's northern Great Barrier Reef -- blazing hot sands pose the greatest threat to the animals' breeding success over the long term . The researchers predict that from now until 2030, sea level rise will do the most harm to turtle breeding grounds. However, by 2070, sands in many areas will be so scorching that eggs could not survive... Read Full Article by Jessica Marshall

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