theaatproject:

currentsinbiology:


In changing oceans,…


theaatproject:



currentsinbiology:




In changing oceans, cephalopods are booming



Humans have changed the world’s oceans in ways that have been

devastating to many marine species. But, according to new evidence, it

appears that the change has so far been good for cephalopods, the group

including octopuses, cuttlefish, and squid. The study reported in the

Cell Press journal Current Biology on May 23 shows that cephalopods’ numbers have increased significantly over the last six decades.


“The consistency was the biggest surprise,” says Zoë Doubleday of

Australia’s Environment Institute at the University of Adelaide.

“Cephalopods are notoriously variable, and population abundance can

fluctuate wildly, both within and among species. The fact that we

observed consistent, long-term increases in three diverse groups of

cephalopods, which inhabit everything from rock pools to open oceans, is

remarkable.”




Zoë A. Doubleday, Thomas A.A. Prowse, Alexander Arkhipkin, Graham J.

Pierce, Jayson Semmens, Michael Steer, Stephen C. Leporati, Sílvia

Lourenço, Antoni Quetglas, Warwick Sauer, Bronwyn M. Gillanders. Global proliferation of cephalopods. Current Biology, 2016 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.04.002


 



Cuttlefish (stock image).Credit: © Richard Carey / Fotolia




I for one welcome our octopus overlords




So not all bad news with climate change then…


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currentsinbiology:


In changing oceans,… appeared first on CJMoseley.co.uk.

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Published on May 31, 2016 06:30
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