Articles

  • 5 days ago | lakegenevanews.net | Delger Erdenesanaa

    Secure transaction. Cancel anytime. Have an account? Log In Your account has been registered, and you are now logged in. Check your email for details. An email message containing instructions on how to reset your password has been sent to the email address listed on your account. × × Secure & Encrypted What's your email address? What's your name? Who is this gift for?

  • 1 week ago | japantimes.co.jp | Delger Erdenesanaa

    In recent decades, the oceans have warmed. Marine heat waves, once rare events, have become more common. One particularly intense event known as "the Blob” lasted years and devastated plankton populations, starving millions of fish and seabirds and damaging commercial fishing. Recently, high temperatures have persisted. In January 2024, the share of the ocean surface experiencing a heat wave topped 40%.

  • 1 week ago | buff.ly | Delger Erdenesanaa

    Remote coral atolls in the Caribbean. Habitat for threatened sharks and rays around a Tanzanian island in the Indian Ocean. And 900,000 square kilometers of the Pacific Ocean around French Polynesia. These are some of the millions of acres of water now set aside as part of an international goal to protect 30 percent of the ocean by 2030. More than 20 new marine protected areas were announced at the third United Nations Ocean Conference, which ended on Friday in France.

  • 2 weeks ago | estadao.com.br | Delger Erdenesanaa

    Ondas de calor incomuns ocorreram em todas as principais bacias oceânicas do planeta nos últimos anos. E alguns desses eventos se tornaram tão intensos que os cientistas cunharam um novo termo: superondas de calor marinhas. “Os ecossistemas marinhos onde ocorrem as superondas de calor marinhas nunca experimentaram uma temperatura da superfície do mar tão alta no passado”, disse Boyin Huang, oceanógrafo da Administração Oceânica e Atmosférica Nacional (NOAA), por e-mail.

  • 2 weeks ago | nzherald.co.nz | Delger Erdenesanaa

    Scientists warn these heatwaves could become constant, with significant impacts on ecosystems and fisheries. Photo / Craig Murdoch, National Park Service via the New York Times Unusual heatwaves have occurred in all of the major ocean basins around the planet in recent years. And some of these events have become so intense that scientists have coined a new term: super marine heatwaves.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →

X (formerly Twitter)

Followers
1K
Tweets
635
DMs Open
Yes
Delger Erdenesanaa
Delger Erdenesanaa @_e_delger
26 Aug 24

Life/work update

Ocean Reporting Network (ORN)
Ocean Reporting Network (ORN) @Ocean_ORN

🚨 Announcing the 2024 cohort of @pulitzercenter ORN. 10 Fellows from 8 countries will spend a year investigating deep-sea mining, marine geoengineering, pollution, IUU fishing, and other ocean issues all over the globe. Meet the journalists 🧵👇 https://t.co/0BgN1h5xAo https://t.co/YRatcCeqjs

Delger Erdenesanaa
Delger Erdenesanaa @_e_delger
2 Nov 23

RT @dionnesearcey: We asked all 50 states about their groundwater rules. Their answers reveal dizzying laws full of gaps that make it even…

Delger Erdenesanaa
Delger Erdenesanaa @_e_delger
10 Jul 23

Looking to talk to people who have personal experiences with extreme weather and disasters for a @nytclimate story -- especially in California! Feel free to DM me.