1 hr 13 min

ORA, ORA, ORA Reef News Network

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Turbo charged coral larva, bacterium delirium & ORA, ORA, ORA. Jeremy and Peter went solar. Jeremy is working on balancing out his big display tanks alkalinity. Peter is enjoying his new fish and see ing a hair algae free system along with some major plans for automation down the road. All this and more on Episode 90 of the Reef News Network!

RNN Listener Coupon Codes:
Marine Depot 10% off your order REEFNEWS
Reef Kinetics - $50 off ReefBot RKLOVESRNN

Upcoming Events:
CT Frag Farmers Market 3/7/20
Greater Niagra Coral Show 3/21 & 3/22/20

Powered By:
Fritz Aquatics: www.fritzaquatics.com
ReefBreeders: www.reefbreeders.com
Reef Kinetics: www.reefkinetics.com

News
Jeremy- Recent severe bleaching events in the Great Barrier Reef have led to widespread death of the corals making up world's largest living structure, but scientists are coming up with some inventive ways to help repair the damage. Researchers at Australia's Southern Cross University are now preparing to put the latest into action, with millions of turbo-charged coral babies being readied to take root in the reef's most degraded areas.
http://bit.ly/RNNnewsJeremy90

Peter- The relationship between bacteria and Corals has recently become a hot topic on Reef2Reef as a result of a research paper recently published in the Nature journal. The study estimates that about 1/3 of all corals worldwide are infected with this newly discovered bacterium which researchers named, Candidatus Aquarickettsia rohweri. The bacterium can be found in a number of corals that we commonly keep in our aquariums including, Acropora, Goniopora, Montipora, Seriatopora and Stylophora species. Additionally, it can also be found in anemones. Researches also discovered the bacterium can be transmitted through coral eating parasitic snails and transported through seawater whereby it can potentially infect corals when tissue damage is present.
http://bit.ly/RNNnewsPeter90

Main Topic:
ORA, ORA, ORA....
Ocean, Reefs and Aquariums Interview.

Outro:
Please like our Facebook and Instagram pages as well as subscribe to the Podcast
Reef News Network: www.reefnewsnetwork.com
Reef News Road Trip: https://bit.ly/2LZfoKd .
Instagram: ReefNewsNetwork
Hashtags to follow #ReefNewsNetwork , #RNN , #RNNnation

Listener Calls:
Go to: www.reefnewsnetwork.com click the tab on the right side of the page to leave us a voicemail.

Reviews/Ratings:
Reviews and Ratings help us reach new heights and continue to produce quality content, let us know how we are doing.

Turbo charged coral larva, bacterium delirium & ORA, ORA, ORA. Jeremy and Peter went solar. Jeremy is working on balancing out his big display tanks alkalinity. Peter is enjoying his new fish and see ing a hair algae free system along with some major plans for automation down the road. All this and more on Episode 90 of the Reef News Network!

RNN Listener Coupon Codes:
Marine Depot 10% off your order REEFNEWS
Reef Kinetics - $50 off ReefBot RKLOVESRNN

Upcoming Events:
CT Frag Farmers Market 3/7/20
Greater Niagra Coral Show 3/21 & 3/22/20

Powered By:
Fritz Aquatics: www.fritzaquatics.com
ReefBreeders: www.reefbreeders.com
Reef Kinetics: www.reefkinetics.com

News
Jeremy- Recent severe bleaching events in the Great Barrier Reef have led to widespread death of the corals making up world's largest living structure, but scientists are coming up with some inventive ways to help repair the damage. Researchers at Australia's Southern Cross University are now preparing to put the latest into action, with millions of turbo-charged coral babies being readied to take root in the reef's most degraded areas.
http://bit.ly/RNNnewsJeremy90

Peter- The relationship between bacteria and Corals has recently become a hot topic on Reef2Reef as a result of a research paper recently published in the Nature journal. The study estimates that about 1/3 of all corals worldwide are infected with this newly discovered bacterium which researchers named, Candidatus Aquarickettsia rohweri. The bacterium can be found in a number of corals that we commonly keep in our aquariums including, Acropora, Goniopora, Montipora, Seriatopora and Stylophora species. Additionally, it can also be found in anemones. Researches also discovered the bacterium can be transmitted through coral eating parasitic snails and transported through seawater whereby it can potentially infect corals when tissue damage is present.
http://bit.ly/RNNnewsPeter90

Main Topic:
ORA, ORA, ORA....
Ocean, Reefs and Aquariums Interview.

Outro:
Please like our Facebook and Instagram pages as well as subscribe to the Podcast
Reef News Network: www.reefnewsnetwork.com
Reef News Road Trip: https://bit.ly/2LZfoKd .
Instagram: ReefNewsNetwork
Hashtags to follow #ReefNewsNetwork , #RNN , #RNNnation

Listener Calls:
Go to: www.reefnewsnetwork.com click the tab on the right side of the page to leave us a voicemail.

Reviews/Ratings:
Reviews and Ratings help us reach new heights and continue to produce quality content, let us know how we are doing.

1 hr 13 min