by Ferris Jabr • Illuminating maps during war, guiding planes to safety, making genes and proteins visible—organisms get their glow on to help humans.
Originally published in May 2016, this fascinating story is as relevant now as it was then. The original story, along with photos, can be found on hakaimagazine.com.
And Then the Sea Glowed a Magnificent Milky Green
Warning! Signs Are Not Enough to Save Beachgoers from Deadly Currents
Bonus Episode: Salt, Sweat, and Grit
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 4 of 4 — Tribal Hatcheries and the Road to Restoration
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 3 of 4 — The Hail Mary Hatcheries
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 2 of 4 — Too Many Pinks in the Pacific
The Paradox of Salmon Hatcheries, Part 1 of 4 — The Hatchery Crutch: How We Got Here
It’s 10 PM. Do You Know Where Your Cat Is?
Surviving the Race to Alaska
How the Shipping Industry Sails through Legal Loopholes
The Queen Conch’s Gambit
Rebroadcast: Slime, Shorebirds, and a Scientific Mystery
Viruses Are Not Always the Villain
Declared Extinct, the Yaghan Rise in the Land of Fire
The Landfill of the Future
Rebroadcast: The Future of Castro’s Crocs
Rebroadcast: A Fish Called Rockweed
Clever Whales and the Violent Fight for Fish on the Line
Catching Crabs in a Suffocating Sea
Will Exporting Farmed Totoaba Fix the Big Mess Pushing the World’s Most Endangered Porpoise to Extinction?
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