Now showing items 1-12 of 12

    • BFAR confident PH not source of hepa outbreak in Hawaii 

      Miraflor, Madelaine B. (Manila Bulletin, September 5, 2016, on page B7)
      The government is confident that the scallops from the Philippines were not the reason for the outbreak of hepatitis in Hawaii last month in contrast with the report of the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
    • Coral Bleaching 

      Associated Press (AP) (Manila Bulletin, February 5, 2015, on page B8)
      This file photo released by the Hawaii Department of Land and Natural Resources shows coral being studied for bleaching, which is a stress response that causes corals to lose algae and color from their tissue, in Kaneohe ...
    • Half of world's sea turtles have swallowed plastic or other rubbish 

      (Manila Bulletin, September 16, 2015, on page 6)
      Rubbish and debris entering into the marine environment become a more high profile issue after Australian researchers found more than half of the world's sea turtles have swallowed plastic or other rubbish. Research from ...
    • Marcos: PH won't give up West Philippine Sea 

      Quismorio, Ellson (Manila Bulletin, May 27, 2022, on page 1-10)
      President-elect Bongbong Marcos underscored Thursday, May 26 that his administration won’t give up any part of the Philippines’ coastal territory to foreigners, but at the same time noted that it he wants to avoid a war. ...
    • Mass coral bleaching reported in Hawaii 

      Associated Press (AP) (Manila Bulletin, October 2, 2014, on page 7)
      Warm ocean temperatures have caused large expanses of coral to bleach in the pristine reefs northwest of Hawaii's main islands, scientists said Tuesday. Mass bleaching has occurred at Lisianski atoll, about 1,000 miles ...
    • Massive boom hopes to corral Pacific Ocean’s plastic trash 

      Associated Press (AP) (Manila Bulletin, September 13, 2018, on page B-8)
      Engineers set to sea Saturday to deploy a trash collection device to corral plastic litter floating between California and Hawaii in an attempt to clean up the world’s largest garbage patch in the heart of the Pacific ...
    • New 'strawberry' crab species found off Taiwan 

      Associated Press (AP) (Manila Bulletin, January 7, 2010, on page B-8)
      A marine biologist says he has discovered a new crab species off the coast of southern Taiwan that looks like a strawberry with small white bumps on its red shell. National Taiwan Ocean University professor Ho Ping-ho says ...
    • Obama plans to quadruple Hawaii marine protected area 

      (Manila Bulletin, September 1, 2016, on page B8)
      The White House says that President Barack Obama will expand a national monument off the coast of Hawaii, creating the world's largest marine protected area. Obama's proclamation will quadruple in size a monument originally ...
    • Of zorses, wholphins and ligers 

      Carroll, Sean B. (Manila Bulletin, September 25, 2010, on page 10)
      Trainers at Hawaii Sea Life Park were stunned when a 182-kilogram gray bottlenose dolphin gave birth in 1985 to a dark-skinned calf that partly resembled a 909-kilogram false killer whale she shared a tank with. The calf ...
    • Philippines suspends scallops linked to Hawaii outbreak 

      The Associated Press (Manila Bulletin, September 15, 2016, on page 6)
      The Philippine government has suspended distribution of seafood believed to be the cause of a hepatitis A outbreak in Hawaii. De Oro Resources, Inc. must temporarily suspend distribution of its products while the government ...
    • There will be consequences for China's South China Sea militarization- US 

      Reuters (Manila Bulletin, May 5, 2018, on page 4)
      The United States has raised concerns with China about its latest militarization of the South China Sea and there will be near-term and long-term consequences, the White House said on Thursday. US news network CNBC reported ...
    • US ignored rising Sea warnings at radar site 

      (Manila Bulletin, October 20, 2016, on page B9)
      The United States (US) Air Force is spending nearly $1 billion to build a radar installation that will help keep astronauts and satellites safe by tracking pieces of space junk as small as a baseball. That is, if global ...