Dein Suchergebnis zum Thema: NASA

Habitat Requirements – South Florida Aquatic Environments

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/southflorida/habitats/corals/habitat/

Coral reefs occur along coastlines in tropical and subtropical regions wherever environmental conditions are suitable for their development. Factors influencing reef development include: Light Temperature Sedimentation Salinity Light Light levels are critical in maintaining th
Photo courtesy NASA Seawater temperatures can be tolerated

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Earth’s Forecast: Hurricanes and Climate Change – Exhibits

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/exhibits/online/hurricanes-climate-change/

The influence of climate change can already be seen in many extreme weather events, including hurricanes. Earth’s strongest storms are changing, increasing their destructive potential. Researchers continue to study satellite data and model predictions to understand what changes we will see in a futu
Photo courtesy of NASA What’s in a Name?

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Far from family: Red mangroves on Cape Canaveral related to Gulf species – Research News

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/far-from-family-video/

Richard Hodel, a biology doctoral student in the Laboratory of Molecular Systematics & Evolutionary Genetics, explains how a recent Nature Scientific Reports study shows red mangroves in Cape Canaveral, Florida, are more closely related to mangroves on the Gulf Coast, not the Atlantic. Hodel
. in Nature Scientific Reports Photo of shuttle: NASA

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Ocean channel in Bahamas marks genetic divide in Brazilian free-tailed bats – Research News

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/ocean-channel-in-bahamas-marks-genetic-divide-in-brazilian-free-tailed-bats/

Brazilian free-tailed bats are expert flyers, capable of migrating hundreds of miles and regularly traveling more than 30 miles a night. But they pull up short at a narrow ocean channel that cuts across the Bahamas, dividing bat populations that last shared an ancestor hundreds of thousands of years
of Jacques Descloitres, MODIS Rapid Response Team, NASA

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How to take a census of Earth’s biodiversity? One team of researchers has a plan – Research News

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/census-of-earths-biodiversity/

How do you monitor the number and location of Earth’s plants and animals at any given time? It’s a daunting, planet-sized problem, but an international team of researchers has published a proposal for how to do just that. As wildlife faces threats from habitat loss, invasive species, disease and
point than songbird migratory patterns captured via NASA

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