
Matthew Savoca
Articles
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Oct 19, 2024 |
ca.news.yahoo.com | Matthew Savoca
Whales are recovering from near extinction, but industrial fishing around Antarctica competes for their sole food sourceThe Southern Ocean encircling Antarctica is the world’s largest feeding ground for baleen whales – species like humpbacks that filter tiny organisms from seawater for food. In the 20th century, whalers killed roughly 2 million large whales in the Southern Ocean.
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Sep 19, 2024 |
inverse.com | Matthew Savoca
The Southern Ocean encircling Antarctica is the world’s largest feeding ground for baleen whales — species like humpbacks that filter tiny organisms from seawater for food. In the 20th century, whalers killed roughly 2 million large whales in the Southern Ocean. Some populations, like the Antarctic blue whale, were reduced by more than 99 percent and have been struggling to recover, even though most nations ended commercial whaling in the mid-1980s.
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Sep 16, 2024 |
japantoday.com | Matthew Savoca
The Southern Ocean encircling Antarctica is the world’s largest feeding ground for baleen whales – species like humpbacks that filter tiny organisms from seawater for food. In the 20th century, whalers killed roughly 2 million large whales in the Southern Ocean. Some populations, like the Antarctic blue whale, were reduced by more than 99% and have been struggling to recover, even though most nations ended commercial whaling in the mid-1980s.
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Sep 10, 2024 |
tolerance.ca | Matthew Savoca |Research Scientist
By Matthew Savoca, Research scientist, Stanford University The Southern Ocean encircling Antarctica is the world’s largest feeding ground for baleen whales – species like humpbacks that filter tiny organisms from seawater for food. In the 20th century, whalers killed roughly 2 million large whales in the Southern Ocean. Some populations, like the Antarctic…Read complete article© The Conversation -
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Sep 10, 2024 |
idahopress.com | Matthew Savoca
Whales are recovering from near extinction, but industrial fishing around Antarctica competes for their sole food source
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