When you go to a seafood restaurant in Galveston you might think you're eating Gulf shrimp. You're probably not. Researchers ...
Researchers at Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi have detected fentanyl and other drugs in Gulf of Mexico dolphins. How did ...
Nestled between flanks of longleaf and slash pines, the quaint town is known for its historic architecture, sky-blue ...
The low-oxygen conditions that form in the Gulf each summer kill bottom-living organisms and result in fish and shrimp moving ...
Researchers contracted to test the shrimp served at restaurants in Galveston ... from outside of the country than caught in the Gulf of Mexico. SeaD Consulting, the company that performed DNA ...
Microplastics contaminate edible tissues of Oregon seafood, posing health concerns. Researchers call for further studies, ...
Following a pattern of mislabeling seafood, new genetic testing found that nearly a third of randomly selected Baton Rouge restaurants were advertising imported shrimp as Gulf of Mexico catch.
The researchers initially believed that handling and packaging seafood might introduce microplastics, but the findings varied ...
The study raises concerns about micropollutants that could also potentially affect humans, since dolphins in the gulf eat much of the same shrimp and fish that we do. TAMU-CC calls bottlenose ...