Sensors and Systems
Breaking News
Geoprofessionals spend a quarter of their time managing data and are increasingly turning to AI, reveals new Seequent survey
Rating12345 Mining and civil geoprofessionals rate data management as highly/critically important but...
West Side Tractor Sales Co. Named Newest Trimble Technology Outlet, Serving Customers in Illinois, Indiana and Michigan
Rating12345West Side Tractor Sales to offer and support Trimble...
GISCI Celebrates 207 Newly Certified GIS Professionals
Rating12345Des Plaines, IL (January 27, 2026) – The GIS...

April 18th, 2011
Ocean Warming Detrimental to Inshore fish Species

  • Rating12345

The findings of a study published today in Nature Climate Change indicate negative effects on the growth of a long-lived south-east Australian and New Zealand inshore species – the banded morwong.  Scientific monitoring since 1944 by CSIRO at Maria Island, off the east coast of Tasmania, showed that surface water temperatures in the Tasman Sea have risen by nearly 2°C over the past 60 years. This warming, one of the most rapid in the southern hemisphere oceans, is due to globally increasing sea-surface temperatures and local effects caused by southward extension of the East Australian Current. “Generally, cold-blooded animals respond to warming conditions by increasing growth rates as temperatures rise,” CSIRO marine ecologist Dr Ron Thresher, a co-author of the study with colleagues from the University of Tasmania’s Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, said. Read More