These sea otters in Alaska are floating amid kelp—an important flora friend to the endangered marine mammals. Sea otters live mostly in the water and use the thick blades of kelp to anchor themselves as they sleep and to keep their buoyant pups from floating away. Just as the kelp helps otters, sea otters help the kelp, too. They ensure the kelp"s survival by eating sea urchins. If sea urchin populations are left unchecked, these spiny vacuum cleaners of the sea destroy kelp forests by munching on holdfasts that tether kelp to the ocean floor. The resulting clear-cut areas, called urchin barrens, are devastating to the overall ecosystem. Kelp forests provide food and safe harbor for hundreds of fish species and other sea creatures. They also remove carbon dioxide from the air, a benefit to us all.
Kelp buddies
Today in History
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The ruins of a Maya superpower
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Weaverbird nests at Kenya’s Samburu National Reserve
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Brotherly cubs
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Smithsonian Secretary Lonnie Bunch on the institution s 175th anniversary
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Gifford Pinchot National Forest
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National Park Week: Wind Cave National Park
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Happy New Years Eve!
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Barracudas at Shark Reef, Ras Mohammed National Park, Sinai Peninsula, Egypt
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Love on ice
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Icelandic horses, Iceland
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Tom Turkey takes Manhattan
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Telašćica Nature Park, Dugi Otok, Croatia
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Endangered Species Act
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A cutting-edge art gallery opens in Paris
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Happy Presidents Day
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Northern hawk-owl
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Can you see the family resemblance?
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A day for our oceans
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It’s Penguin Awareness Day
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Fallow deer, Bradgate Park, Leicestershire, England
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Dance of the egret
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World Teachers Day
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Ministry of Fun Santa School
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Perseid meteor shower over Oregon
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The Grand Départ: Tour de France begins
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The Cordillera de la Sal in the Cordillera Domeyko Range of Chile
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Staring down winter
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Winter solstice
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This park is Superkilen
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These patterns tell a story
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

