Está atualmente a visualizar o Portugal versão do sítio.
Gostaria de mudar para o seu sítio local?
Última edição


Free Sample Issue
Experimente uma amostra GRATUITA de Wildlife Australia
Experimente uma amostra GRATUITA
Comprar para o Natal?
Clique em Comprar agora e depois em “Dar de presente

Wildlife Australia Magazine Winter 2024 Edição anterior

English
4 Comentários   •  English   •   Leisure Interest (Wildlife)
Only €4,99
How do we prevent ‘deep’ trouble’ in our oceans?

PLENTY has been written, and spoken, and filmed about the problems and challenges facing the Great Barrier Reef.
Coral bleaching, poor water quality from the ‘run-off’ of civilization, persistently high ocean temperatures, floating mountains of microplastics doing untold damage to wildlife – there’s plenty to be concerned about. These are complex problems developing into deeper problems.
A group of expert scuba diving scientific researchers asked those questions another way, deciding they needed to examine the deepest parts of reefs in the Coral Sea. They wanted to see what the baseline might be for finding the depths of the real challenges facing reefs worldwide.
This record-breaking deep-diving scientific expedition – it went deeper, at 152m, than ever before – researched mesophotic coral ecosystems in the Australian Coral Sea territory and the Great Barrier Reef.
The expedition was led by Australian Museum curator of fishes, Dr Yi-Kai Tea, and the California Academy of Sciences USA curator of fishes, Dr Luiz Rocha. In the process, the team caught examples of prehistoric era aquatic life never seen before. This certainly was deep space exploration of another earthly dimension.
It is just one of the inspirational marine wildlife stories in this edition – like the phenomenon of schools of hammerhead sharks annually gathering at popular public surf beaches – and there is plenty to excite wildlife lovers on land as well.
Take the research into Australia’s Age of Monotremes, a mere 100 million years ago.
While Australia has always been unusually blessed with marsupials, recent opalised fossil discoveries reveal that, previously, we were blessed with large warm-blooded egg-laying mammals whose descendants are today’s platypus and echidna.
Yes, Australian Museum’s Professor Tim Flannery’s team discovered an ‘echidnapus’.
It’s wildlife wonderment in this winter edition of Wildlife Australia.
read more read less
Wildlife Australia Preview Pages Wildlife Australia Preview Pages Wildlife Australia Preview Pages Wildlife Australia Preview Pages Wildlife Australia Preview Pages Wildlife Australia Preview Pages Wildlife Australia Preview Pages Wildlife Australia Preview Pages

Wildlife Australia

Winter 2024 How do we prevent ‘deep’ trouble’ in our oceans? PLENTY has been written, and spoken, and filmed about the problems and challenges facing the Great Barrier Reef. Coral bleaching, poor water quality from the ‘run-off’ of civilization, persistently high ocean temperatures, floating mountains of microplastics doing untold damage to wildlife – there’s plenty to be concerned about. These are complex problems developing into deeper problems. A group of expert scuba diving scientific researchers asked those questions another way, deciding they needed to examine the deepest parts of reefs in the Coral Sea. They wanted to see what the baseline might be for finding the depths of the real challenges facing reefs worldwide. This record-breaking deep-diving scientific expedition – it went deeper, at 152m, than ever before – researched mesophotic coral ecosystems in the Australian Coral Sea territory and the Great Barrier Reef. The expedition was led by Australian Museum curator of fishes, Dr Yi-Kai Tea, and the California Academy of Sciences USA curator of fishes, Dr Luiz Rocha. In the process, the team caught examples of prehistoric era aquatic life never seen before. This certainly was deep space exploration of another earthly dimension. It is just one of the inspirational marine wildlife stories in this edition – like the phenomenon of schools of hammerhead sharks annually gathering at popular public surf beaches – and there is plenty to excite wildlife lovers on land as well. Take the research into Australia’s Age of Monotremes, a mere 100 million years ago. While Australia has always been unusually blessed with marsupials, recent opalised fossil discoveries reveal that, previously, we were blessed with large warm-blooded egg-laying mammals whose descendants are today’s platypus and echidna. Yes, Australian Museum’s Professor Tim Flannery’s team discovered an ‘echidnapus’. It’s wildlife wonderment in this winter edition of Wildlife Australia.


SELECCIONAR FORMATO:
Acesso imediato

Ofertas digitais disponíveis:

Edição digital única Winter 2024
 
4,99 / issue
Esta edição e outras edições anteriores não estão incluídas numa Wildlife Australia inscrição. As assinaturas incluem a edição regular mais recente e os novos números lançados durante sua assinatura e começam a partir de €3,75 por edição . Se pretende subscrever, consulte o nosso Opções de assinatura
As poupanças são calculadas com base na compra comparável de edições únicas durante um período de subscrição anual e podem variar em relação aos montantes anunciados. Os cálculos destinam-se apenas a fins ilustrativos. As assinaturas digitais incluem a última edição e todas as edições regulares lançadas durante a sua assinatura, salvo indicação em contrário. O período escolhido será renovado automaticamente, exceto se for cancelado na área A minha conta até 24 horas antes do fim da assinatura atual.

Issue Cover

Wildlife Australia  |  Winter 2024  


How do we prevent ‘deep’ trouble’ in our oceans?

PLENTY has been written, and spoken, and filmed about the problems and challenges facing the Great Barrier Reef.
Coral bleaching, poor water quality from the ‘run-off’ of civilization, persistently high ocean temperatures, floating mountains of microplastics doing untold damage to wildlife – there’s plenty to be concerned about. These are complex problems developing into deeper problems.
A group of expert scuba diving scientific researchers asked those questions another way, deciding they needed to examine the deepest parts of reefs in the Coral Sea. They wanted to see what the baseline might be for finding the depths of the real challenges facing reefs worldwide.
This record-breaking deep-diving scientific expedition – it went deeper, at 152m, than ever before – researched mesophotic coral ecosystems in the Australian Coral Sea territory and the Great Barrier Reef.
The expedition was led by Australian Museum curator of fishes, Dr Yi-Kai Tea, and the California Academy of Sciences USA curator of fishes, Dr Luiz Rocha. In the process, the team caught examples of prehistoric era aquatic life never seen before. This certainly was deep space exploration of another earthly dimension.
It is just one of the inspirational marine wildlife stories in this edition – like the phenomenon of schools of hammerhead sharks annually gathering at popular public surf beaches – and there is plenty to excite wildlife lovers on land as well.
Take the research into Australia’s Age of Monotremes, a mere 100 million years ago.
While Australia has always been unusually blessed with marsupials, recent opalised fossil discoveries reveal that, previously, we were blessed with large warm-blooded egg-laying mammals whose descendants are today’s platypus and echidna.
Yes, Australian Museum’s Professor Tim Flannery’s team discovered an ‘echidnapus’.
It’s wildlife wonderment in this winter edition of Wildlife Australia.
ler mais ler menos
Embrace a wilder life – download Wildlife Australia, the country’s leading nature magazine. Fifty pages of insightful and thought-provoking articles and stunning photographs.
Celebration: Celebrate the essence of Australia – its vast wild landscapes and distinctive wildlife, most found nowhere else in the world
Insights: The articles are written by leading researchers and those whose care for nature comes from deep insights. You won’t find this information by Googling.
Beauty: Immerse yourself in the allure and charm of wildlife with photos by some of Australia’s leading nature photographers.
Understanding: Wildlife Australia is a hub for people who value their relationship with nature and know it is enriched by knowledge. The nature experience can be powerful, but often requires interpretation.
Inspiration: Be inspired by what people are doing to understand and protect nature.
Conservation: Wildlife Australia is a not-for-profit magazine and all profits go to protect nature.

A subscription to Wildlife Australia won't cure arthritis or tonsillitis, but is great for two modern ailments: dislocation from nature and existential malaise. Download the app and see.

Como subscritor, receberá as seguintes vantagens


•  Um desconto no PVP da sua revista
•  A sua revista entregue no seu dispositivo todos os meses
•  Nunca perderá uma edição
•  Está protegido contra aumentos de preços que possam ocorrer no final do ano

Receberá 4 edições durante um ano Wildlife Australia assinatura da revista.

Nota: As edições digitais não incluem os artigos de capa ou os suplementos que se encontram nos exemplares impressos.

Sua compra aqui no Pocketmags.com pode ser lida em qualquer uma das seguintes plataformas.


Pode ler aqui no sítio Web ou descarregar a aplicação para a sua plataforma, mas não se esqueça de iniciar sessão com o seu nome de utilizador e palavra-passe Pocketmags.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
O aplicativo Pocketmags funciona em todos os dispositivos iPad e iPhone com iOS 13.0 ou superior, Android 8.0 ou superior e Fire Tablet (Gen 3) ou superior. Nosso leitor web funciona com qualquer navegador compatível com HTML5, para PC e Mac recomendamos Chrome ou Firefox.

Para iOS, recomendamos qualquer dispositivo que possa executar o iOS mais recente para melhor desempenho e estabilidade. Modelos anteriores com especificações mais baixas de processador e RAM podem apresentar renderização de página mais lenta e travamentos ocasionais de aplicativos que estão fora de nosso controle.
5,0
/5
Com base em 4 Comentários de clientes
5
4
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0
Ver críticas

Artigos desta edição


Segue-se uma seleção de artigos em Wildlife Australia Winter 2024.

Free Sample Issue
Experimente uma amostra GRATUITA de Wildlife Australia
Conversa
X
Suporte Pocketmags