Our Reporter on the Shape-Shifting Maldives
Low-lying tropical island nations were expected to be early victims of rising seas. But research tells a surprising story.
By Raymond Zhong, Jason Gulley, Karen Hanley and Alexandra Ostasiewicz
Recent and archived work by Jason Gulley for The New York Times
Low-lying tropical island nations were expected to be early victims of rising seas. But research tells a surprising story.
By Raymond Zhong, Jason Gulley, Karen Hanley and Alexandra Ostasiewicz
Low-lying tropical island nations were expected to be early victims of rising seas. But research tells a surprising story: Many islands are stable. Some have even grown.
By Raymond Zhong, Jason Gulley and Jonathan Corum
When a seagrass shortage caused a mass manatee die-off, scientists rushed to save the orphaned young. After three years at a zoo, the manatees are now grown up and going back to the wild. The photographer Jason Gulley explains how ZooTampa rescues manatees, cares for them and eventually releases them back into the wild.
By Jason Gulley, Karen Hanley and Gabriel Blanco
Three orphaned calves were found in Florida. Then they racked up the frequent flyer miles.
By Jason Gulley and Catrin Einhorn
Teams dedicated to ocean restoration are urgently moving samples to tanks on land as a marine heat wave devastates entire reefs.
By Catrin Einhorn and Jason Gulley
The world’s densest collection of freshwater springs is at the center of a slow-motion environmental tragedy.
By Jason Gulley
A group of scientists and adventure athletes are venturing into icy labyrinths to study their relationships with glacial melting and climate change.
By Jason Gulley