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Fear, Behavior, and an Unexpected Ally

How Sharks Help Protect Corals Without Ever Touching Them One of the most fascinating discoveries in modern marine ecology is that sharks don’t have to eat something to control it. A 2025 study published in Communications Biology by researchers from the Australian Institute of Marine Science and the University of […]

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The Architects of Balance

Why Sharks Matter to Coral Reefs Sharks are often framed as symbols of danger, but on coral reef, they are better understood as architects of balance. As apex predators, sharks sit at the top of the reef food web. Their presence helps regulate populations below them, ensuring that no single […]

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More Than Gardeners

How Parrotfish and Corals Support Each Other For a long time, parrotfish were seen and coral’s caretakers, fish that helped reefs recover by controlling algae. But recent research suggests something even more interesting is happening. Parrotfish and corals don’t just coexist. They respond to each other. When a reef is […]

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The Gardeners of the Reef

Why Parrotfish Are Coral’s Quiet Heroes Parrotfish are some of the most joyful fish on a coral reef. They glow in impossible colors, move with confidence, and crunch loudly as they graze. The are also some of the hardest-working animals in the ocean, and, for decades, scientists have known that […]

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Two Reefs, One Ocean: Conservation Strategies in the Philippines and Solomon Islands

Island nations throughout the Indo-Pacific are on the frontlines of climate change, and nowhere is this more visible than in their coral reefs. While the Philippines and the Solomon Islands share stunning marine biodiversity and face common climate threats (rising sea temperatures, ocean acidification, and increasingly severe storms) their responses […]

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