Tasmanian News

King George whiting may be spawning in Tasmania

It's one of the finest eating fish in the sea and research into the movements of King George whiting is suggesting the species may be spawning in Tasmania, writes ABC Northern Tasmania. Read the full story here.

Lazy fish

New research shows that increasing water temperatures may cause large fish to become lethargic, writes Marine Science Today. Read the full article here.

Warmer waters lure fish south

As ocean temperatures rise off Western Australia, sub-tropical fish are swimming south and many are staying there, writes ABC news. Read the interview with research scientist and Redmap WA coordinator Dr Gary Jackson here.

Sea corals improve bone grafts!

Another reason to protect our oceans: they may help us medically!  Science Daily writes: sea coral could soon be used more extensively in bone grafting procedures thanks to new research that has refined the material's properties and made it more compatible with natural bone. Read the full article here.

A silent storm

Global warming is causing a silent storm in the oceans by acidifying waters at a record rate, threatening marine life from coral reefs to fish stocks, writes The Sydney Morning Herald. Read the full article here.

Marine plants fight climate change

It's not all doom and gloom in the oceans! New research shows seagrass, mangroves and salt-marsh ecosystems can adapt to and help mitigate climate change impacts. Defences include being major CO2 sinks, dissipating waves and reducing coastal erosion, according to the University of WA. Read more

Profiles: Tassie fishers

These Tassie fishers tell some great stories about fishing around our island (and the sightings they uploaded on Redmap!).

It's not fishing, it's research!

Next time your partner whines you're going fishing again, feel free to use our excuse: "It's not fishing, it's research!"  Check out Redmap's new 45-sec promo video!

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