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News Release 15-061

Warmer, lower-oxygen oceans will shift marine habitats

Changes will result in marine animals moving away from equator

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An Atlantic rock crab

Scientists studied Atlantic rock crabs to see how they would fare in a warmer climate.

Credit: Wikimedia Commons


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The carapace of an Atlantic rock crab

The carapace of an Atlantic rock crab; the crabs may need to change locations in a warmer world.

Credit: Wikimedia Commons


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Atlantic cod under a shipwreck off Massachusetts

Atlantic cod, here under a shipwreck off Massachusetts, may soon need to move to cooler waters.

Credit: Wikimedia Commons


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a school of cod fish swimming

Declining cod stocks may be further threatened by ever-warmer waters.

Credit: NOAA


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Common eelpout next to a ruler

Common eelpout, bottom-dwelling fish in northern latitudes, may head yet farther north.

Credit: Wikimedia Commons


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The Awa people of the Brazilian Amazon

The researchers' findings are described in the June 5, 2015, issue of Science magazine. On the cover: The Awa people of the Brazilian Amazon. Some of the Awa have recently contacted the outside world, and such contacts with isolated tribes are on the rise. Anthropologists say that these emerging tribes are threatened by common Western diseases and exploitative outsiders and may face a dangerous future without protection. See pages 1061, 1072, and 1080.

Credit: Domenico Pugliese/Survival International


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