Jason Rosenfeld and Luke Beard have caught plenty of fish, but one catch on Saturday is one they'll remember for a lifetime.
The blobfish is specially adapted to life in the deep ocean, but it looks like a shapeless blob when brought to the surface.
Biologging uses animal sensors to track ocean changes, helping scientists address climate, pollution, and conservation.
The blobfish, once labeled the “world’s ugliest animal,” has defied expectations by winning New Zealand’s Fish of the Year ...
Once dubbed the "world's ugliest animal," the blobfish – scientific name Psychrolutes marcidus – has been named New Zealand's ...
Some researchers have estimated that people consume between 39,000 and 52,000 microplastic particles each year. If we add how much we take in when breathing, that number goes up to 74,000 to 121,000.
New Zealand's Mountains to Sea Conservation Trust announced the Fish of the Year 2025 competition was won by the blobfish, a ...
Sensors attached to animals gather valuable data to track and mitigate the human influence on marine life. A Kobe University ...
Sacramento hides a secret beneath its government-town exterior—a place where mermaids swim overhead, cocktails glow with ...
Researchers from the UAB demonstrate that the way sardines eat, altered due to the reduction in size of plankton, undermines ...
"This image that Wayne has captured serves as a subtle yet poignant reminder of the fragile balance between our oceans and ...
Conservationists say it is a ‘real race against time’ after the plastic nurdles began appearing on beaches from the collision ...