New York Times coverage today
Front page of the Science section in the New York Times today: Fish Seek Cooler Waters, Leaving Some Fishermen’s Nets Empty, with quotes from Malin.
Front page of the Science section in the New York Times today: Fish Seek Cooler Waters, Leaving Some Fishermen’s Nets Empty, with quotes from Malin.
This bit of nice press just came out on National Geographic online: http://voices.nationalgeographic.com/2016/11/30/marine-scientist-follows-hot-fish-as-they-move-to-cooler-waters/
As part of her postdoc fellowship, Becca is helping kids get down and dirty with fish, climate change, and science. One of our local papers just ran an article about the field trip last week!
Malin talked about climate change, fish, and fisheries to Congressional staffers, federal employees, and others at a briefing on Capital Hill this past Tuesday (6/28). COMPASS organized the event, with more details here.
The Wall Street Journal just ran a feature story on the National Science Foundation grant we have with Eli Fenichel (Yale) and Simon Levin (Princeton): Changing Migration Patterns Upend East Coast Fishing Industry, by Heather Haddon
Doug McCauley’s video about our Science paper last year on the loss of marine wildlife just won 3rd place in the Ocean 180 Video Challenge! As picked by 6th-8th graders around the world. Just announced this week at the Ocean
With a great set of co-authors, including Eli Fenichel at Yale, we just published a paper in Nature Climate Change showing how to measure the impacts of climate change on wealth. Our previous work, including this, has shown how climate
The Pew Charitable Trusts is publicizing OceanAdapt and our data showing fish moving towards higher latitudes and deeper. Check in out here: http://pew.org/1MSouGN!
EarthWise, a 2-minute NPR science show, just ran a piece on climate change and lobster that featured Malin. It’s well-done, though they made a big deal about lobster moving into Canada. This sounds more dire than some research would suggest:
We have a new paper out in Proceedings B, “Fishing, fast growth and climate variability increase the risk of collapse.” Analyzing data from fisheries around the world, we show that patterns in the ocean are nearly the opposite of those