CONSERVATION
A NEW STUDY has identified the areas around the world that represent a high risk of marine plastic exposure for tubenoses – and suggests international collaboration is needed to address the issue.
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A NEW STUDY has identified the areas around the world that represent a high risk of marine plastic exposure for tubenoses – and suggests international collaboration is needed to address the issue.
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Australian Bryozoa Volume 1: Biology, Ecology and Natural History
byPatricia L. CookEbook
Assessments and Conservation of Biological Diversity from Coral Reefs to the Deep Sea: Uncovering Buried Treasures and the Value of the Benthos
byJose Victor LopezEbook
Naturalized Parrots of the World: Distribution, Ecology, and Impacts of the World's Most Colorful Colonizers
byStephen Pruett-JonesEbook
Marine Mammals: Fisheries, Tourism and Management Issues: Fisheries, Tourism and Management Issues
byNicholas GalesEbook
Ecology of Australian Temperate Reefs: The Unique South
byScoresby A. Shepherd