WWF works to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife, collaborating with partners from local to global levels in nearly 100 countries.
WWF works to sustain the natural world for the benefit of people and wildlife, collaborating with partners from local to global levels in nearly 100 countries.
Welcome to Jennifer Walsh's paradise. She's spent every summer for 35+ years in Ocean Grove's Tent City, and this is what it's like.
Plastic pollution plagues our oceans, but seagrass meadows offer a surprising solution. Neptune balls, formed from fibrous ...
There is something so fascinating and mesmerising about standing at a place where two oceans literally come together. You’re looking out at the horizon, and suddenly you realise that there are two ...
A study of over 200,000 records reveals starfish diversity shifts with ocean depth, challenging long-held patterns of marine ...
As temperatures go up, production could plummet by 37% by 2100, disrupting marine ecosystems and leading to worsening dead zones.
New research led by Stanford University and co-authored by Lancaster University explores the industrial impacts on the ocean ...
Poor Maine. Jutting into the ocean in the country's most northeastern corner. Seems quite lonely and empty. (How many times have you even met a native of the Pine Tree State?) Yet that little ...
UNITED KINGDOM’S Special Representative for Nature Ruth Davis has reaffirmed her country’s support for the Philippines on climate and nature, strengthening partnership around nature finance, ...