Researchers discovered a prehistoric ecosystem filled with giant marine reptiles, revealing an unparalleled level of food web complexity. Predators that dominated the oceans 130 million years ago were ...
Mongabay News on MSN
‘Not good’: Ocean losing its greenness, threatening food webs
The consequences of global warming, caused mainly by burning fossil fuels, are varied and many. Now scientists have ...
The Sustainable Food and Agricultural Systems work stream of the Business 20, a G20 engagement group, has endorsed three ...
Drilling for minerals deep in the ocean could have immense consequences for the tiny animals at the core of the vast marine food web — and ultimately affect fisheries and the food we find on our ...
At the Ministerial Debate on Plant-Based Diplomacy in the North and the South organised by the Danish Plant Based Diplomacy on November 11, 2025, in Belém, Brazil, Ghana’s Minister of State for ...
3don MSN
30,000 fossils uncovered in the Arctic show how oceans came back to life after the ‘Great Dying’
Arctic fossils reveal the oldest known oceanic reptile ecosystem from the Age of Dinosaurs. Over 30,000 specimens show marine ...
Business and Financial Times on MSN
Over 1 million metric tonnes of paddy rice remain unsold
An estimated 1,000,000 metric tonnes of paddy rice valued at GH¢5billion remain unsold in farming communities across the ...
6don MSNOpinion
How to make Africa food secure? G20 group points to trade, resilient supply chains and sustainable farming
The Sustainable Food and Agricultural Systems work stream of the Business 20, a G20 engagement group, has endorsed three ...
Nearly 13% of Australians are exposed to food insecurity, with rural, regional and remote areas disproportionately affected.
Monster Mike Fishing on MSN
Tiny Bait to Big Bites: Monster Mike’s Food Chain Challenge
It starts with the smallest fish… and ends with the biggest predators. Monster Mike takes on the food chain fishing challenge, turning every catch into the bait for the next. It’s raw, unpredictable, ...
An analysis of mining plumes in the Pacific Ocean reveals they kick up particles sized similarly to the more nutritious tidbits that plankton eat.
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