Bottlenose dolphins probably don't have the greatest breath. It's probably pretty fishy. According to a new study, dolphin's ...
Microplastics are invisible but omnipresent.
By Hiroko Tabuchi Scientists have found plastic pollution almost everywhere they have looked. In clouds. On Mount Everest. In Arctic snow. Now, for the first time, tiny plastic particles have been ...
But for the tiny plastic particles floating in the air ... spirometer—a device that measures lung function—above the dolphin’s blowhole to collect samples of the animals’ exhaled breath.
We're kicking off today with a research theme. Scientists at West Virginia University, with help from a $1 million U.S.
A heartbreaking story took place recently in Florida, where beachgoers found a baby whale that had ingested plastic. Would ...
They also coated the rock in plastic resin and took other steps to ... What emerged was the head of a dolphin about 30 centimeters long, which had 4-cm-long ear bones, eye and nose sockets ...
But for the tiny plastic particles floating in the air ... spirometer – a device that measures lung function – above the dolphin’s blowhole to collect samples of the animals’ exhaled ...
Tiny plastic pieces have spread all over the planet – on land, in the air and even in clouds. An estimated 170 trillion bits of microplastic are estimated to be in the oceans alone. Across the globe, ...