Today’s Solutions: December 11, 2024

Researchers create first-ever

Researchers create first-ever aerial map of Hawaii’s coral reefs

Earlier this month, we wrote a piece about Hawaii’s Hanauma Bay and how its incredible coral reefs are teeming with life thanks to the lockdown. Today, we bring your more good news from Hawaii as a team of scientists have created the first-ever aerial map of the island's precious coral reefs. Read More...

Hawaii’s Hanauma Bay is teem

Hawaii’s Hanauma Bay is teeming with life thanks to the lockdown

15 minutes from Waikiki lies the stunningly beautiful body of water known as Hanauma Bay. It was formed within a volcanic crater and has long been home to a colorful array of marine life. Since Hawaii’s tourism heyday in the 1980s, thousands of tourists have been visiting Hanauma Bay every day, Read More...

Hawaiians build state-of-the-a

Hawaiians build state-of-the-art fence to save rare native birds

While the Hawaiian islands are home to all kinds of life today, that wasn’t always the case. Apparently, not a single land-dwelling called the islands home 1,500 years ago—only winged insects, one variety of bat, and a vast array of birds had the honor of living on the archipelago. Many of Read More...

Astronomers in Hawaii capture

Astronomers in Hawaii capture ‘lucky’ infrared image of Jupiter

One of the beautiful things about living in this day and age is the incredible imagery of outer space that technology allows us to capture. Yesterday, astronomers shared a remarkable new image of Jupiter that was captured in infrared by the Gemini North Telescope in Hawaii. The image shows the Read More...

Check out the most-detailed im

Check out the most-detailed images ever made of the sun's surface

Is it melted caramel, or maybe some popcorn kernels? Actually it's neither-- the picture above shows the molten layer that covers the sun’s surface. This impressive new picture taken by the new Daniel K. Inouye telescope in Hawaii shows us the highest resolution images ever taken of the sun’s Read More...

Spiny sea friends help treat H

Spiny sea friends help treat Hawaii’s smothered coral reefs

For tourists, sea urchins may be an unwanted addition to a Hawaiian vacation, but these spiky little creatures are a welcomed habitat dweller for the islands’ coral reefs. The sea urchins, which are native to Hawaii’s waters, eat invasive smothering algae which threaten the health of the reef Read More...

Damaged seamounts in Hawaii ma

Damaged seamounts in Hawaii make incredible comeback after decades of protection

For decades, overfishing and trawling - dragging the ocean bottom with heavy nets - had been devastating parts of an underwater mountain range in the Pacific Ocean near Hawaii, wrecking deep-sea corals and destroying much of their ecological community. But now, after years of protection, Read More...

Engineering students develop g

Engineering students develop giant vacuum that sucks plastic from the beach

A remote beach on the southern tip of Hawaii’s Big Island is known for its trash: In a typical year, volunteers collect around 20 tons of plastic waste from the area as currents wash up old toothbrushes, plastic bottles and other single-use packaging, and mounds of fishing nets. This spring, a Read More...

‘Supercorals’ offer glimme

‘Supercorals’ offer glimmer of hope for one of world’s most biodiverse ecosystem

Anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions have caused an increase in the global surface temperature of approximately 1°C since pre-industrial times, making ocean water warmer and more acidic. This has led to unprecedented mass coral bleaching events which – combined with growing local pressures – Read More...

Endangered sea turtles are mak

Endangered sea turtles are making a comeback in the Pacific Ocean

Amidst the seemingly endless stream of bad news we hear about the world’s oceans on a daily basis, here’s some good news: According to a new survey of sea life in the Pacific Ocean, endangered green sea turtles are making a lively comeback as populations along dozens of coral reefs in waters Read More...