Badania nad ocieplaniem morza Bałtyckiego
EN_01625662_0611

TO GO WITH AFP STORY BY Anna KORKMAN
Doctoral researcher Margaret Williamson measures the length of reedbeds at the research area of the Tvarminne station, the largest marine research station in the Baltic Sea located at the entrance to the Gulf of Finland, in Hanko, Finland on June 26, 2024. In the Finnish archipelago scientists studying the rapidly warming Baltic Sea unravel previously unknown climate change links with coastal ecosystems -- that might be key for saving our world's oceans. (Photo by Alessandro RAMPAZZO / AFP)
2024-06-26
ALESSANDRO RAMPAZZO/AFP/East News
AFP
ALESSANDRO RAMPAZZO
AFP_363C2Y2
4,8MB
42cm x 28cm przy 300dpi
2024, 26, AFP, ALESSANDRO, ARCHIPELAGO, AREA, AT, BALTIC, BE, BY, CHANGE, CLIMATE, COASTAL, DOCTORAL, ECOSYSTEMS, ENTRANCE, ENVIRONMENT, FINLAND, FINNISH, FOR, GULF, HANKO, HORIZONTAL, ILLUSTRATION, IN, JUNE, KEY, LARGEST, LENGTH, LINKS, LOCATED, MARGARET, MARINE, MEASURES, MIGHT, OCEANS, OF, ON, OUR, PHOTO, PREVIOUSLY, RAMPAZZO, RAPIDLY, REEDBEDS, RESEARCH, RESEARCHER, S, SAVING, SCIENTISTS, SEA, STATION, STUDYING, THAT, THE, TO, tvarminne, UNKNOWN, UNRAVEL, WARMING, WILLIAMSON, WITH, WORLD, ZOOLOGY,