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Harlequinmania

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Everything posted by Harlequinmania

  1. Hi Guys, Just to share some of the photos i have taken during my last trip to Seoul and visited their aquarium, which is one of the best i have seem so far.
  2. How big is your tank ? You need to harvest plenty of chaeto in order to remove your N03 and P04 effectively. if you have the space in your tank, try the algae scubber instead which work the same way as well.
  3. Irwanna hawali shipment tomorrow morning.. Should have plenty of flame, orange peel, multicolor angels, tangs and mystery wrasse
  4. Updated with newly added; 1) Frogspawn and anchor coral branch - $ 40.00 ( Price revsied, take all for 30.00 , about 20 heads various branch left ) Various color and branch 2) Pink brain corals / lobophyllia - $ 30.00 ( Price revsied ) About 8 heads 3) one rock of Red skirting Zoa from GO - $ 25.00 4) Orange Rics - ( one head + one free small head ) - $ 15.00 SOLD reserved by dnslp 5) open brain coral - Red - $ 20.00 reserved by kksg2000 ** Photo for ref. 6) Turbinaria Coral - Green - $ 20.00 ( About plam size big ) 7) 2 X red Cynarina ( 1 M size /1 S size ) - $ 50.00 reserved by keanetom
  5. Rearing juvenile salmon at the relatively high temperature of 16 C causes skeletal deformities in the fish. Researchers investigated both the magnitude and mechanisms of this effect, which occurs when salmon farmers use warmed water to increase fish growth rates. View the full article
  6. Rearing juvenile salmon at the relatively high temperature of 16 C causes skeletal deformities in the fish. Researchers investigated both the magnitude and mechanisms of this effect, which occurs when salmon farmers use warmed water to increase fish growth rates. View the full article
  7. European eel larvae are generally believed to initially follow a westerly drift route into the Gulf Stream, but new research results on bio-physical linkages in the Sargasso Sea point to a shorter route towards Europe. View the full article
  8. A study of the occurrence of fishes in the ocean's deepest reaches -- the hadal zone, below 6000 meters -- has provided evidence that some species of fishes are more numerous at such depths than experts had thought. View the full article
  9. A new analysis of the extinction of woolly mammoths and other large mammals more than 10,000 years ago suggests that they may have fallen victim to the same type of "trophic cascade" of ecosystem disruption that scientists say is being caused today by the global decline of predators such as wolves, cougars and sharks. View the full article
  10. A study of the occurrence of fishes in the ocean's deepest reaches -- the hadal zone, below 6000 meters -- has provided evidence that some species of fishes are more numerous at such depths than experts had thought. View the full article
  11. Issues from March 2009 and forward can be purchased for only $0.99 each by clicking the 'ADD TO CART' button below each issue. They're great for off-line reading and archiving. Get your copy today! View the full article
  12. Lack of sufficient iron may be a significant factor in controlling massive blooms of Emiliania huxleyi, a globally important species of marine algae or phytoplankton, according to researchers. View the full article
  13. Researchers say this year's Gulf of Mexico "dead zone" is expected to be larger than average, continuing a decades-long trend that threatens the health of a $659 million fishery. The 2010 forecast, released by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), calls for a Gulf dead zone of between 6,500 and 7,800 square miles, an area roughly the size of Lake Ontario. View the full article
  14. Scientists have created the first convincing robotic fish that shoals will accept as one of their own. The innovation opens up new possibilities for studying fish behavior and group dynamics, which provides useful information to support freshwater and marine environmental management, to predict fish migration routes and assess the likely impact of human intervention on fish populations. View the full article
  15. International law has failed to protect coral reefs and tropical fish from being decimated by a growing collectors market, but US reforms can lead the way towards making the trade more responsible, ecologically sustainable and humane, according to a group of 18 experts. View the full article
  16. Scientists have created the first convincing robotic fish that shoals will accept as one of their own. The innovation opens up new possibilities for studying fish behavior and group dynamics, which provides useful information to support freshwater and marine environmental management, to predict fish migration routes and assess the likely impact of human intervention on fish populations. View the full article
  17. Healing powers for one of the world's deadliest diseases may lie within sponges, sea worms and other underwater creatures. A scientist is analyzing more than 2,500 samples from marine organisms collected off deep sea near Florida's coast. Some of them could hold the key to developing drugs to fight malaria, a mosquito-borne illness that kills more than 1 million people worldwide annually. View the full article
  18. After 10 years of careful breeding and research, scientists have developed what could be the world's most perfect prawn. View the full article
  19. International law has failed to protect coral reefs and tropical fish from being decimated by a growing collectors market, but US reforms can lead the way towards making the trade more responsible, ecologically sustainable and humane, according to a group of 18 experts. View the full article
  20. Even though freshwater concentrations of mercury are far greater than those found in seawater, it's the saltwater fish like tuna, mackerel and shark that end up posing a more serious health threat to humans who eat them. View the full article
  21. Even though freshwater concentrations of mercury are far greater than those found in seawater, it's the saltwater fish like tuna, mackerel and shark that end up posing a more serious health threat to humans who eat them. View the full article
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