EditorialA red urchin, right, with purple urchins during a removal event in Albion Cove in Little River, Calif., July 21, 2018. (Gabriella Angotti-Jones/The New York Times)
EditorialMichael Doall, shellfish specialist at the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at Stony Brook University, with kelp at the SUNY Maritime campus in the Bronx, May 2, 2022. (Johnny Milano/The New York Times)
EditorialFrom Conception To Communication: The Argument For Being Distinct, The Innovation Factory Stage, Advertising Week Europe, Picturehouse Central, London, UK - 17 May 2022
EditorialA portion of the purple sea urchins gathered by the commercial divers Byron Koehler and Gary Trumper off the coast of Albion, Calif., Aug. 24, 2021. (Dexter Hake/The New York Times)
EditorialBlack kelp flies as seen under a microscope. (Maine Department of Environmental Protection, Maine Healthy Beaches Program via The New York Times)
EditorialDasima (dried kelp) and gim (roasted seaweed) add seaside nuance to a creamy asparagus pasta in New York on March 17, 2021. Food Stylist: Monica Pierini. (Linda Xiao/The New York Times)
EditorialBull kelp, Durvillaea antarctica. Handcoloured copperplate stipple engraving from Jussieu's "Dictionary of Natural Science," Florence, Italy, 1837. Engraved by Corsi, drawn by Vauthier, and published by Batelli e Figli.
EditorialLarus pacificus, Print, The Pacific gull (Larus pacificus) is a very large gull, native to the coasts of Australia. It is moderately common between Carnarvon in the west, and Sydney in the east, although it has become scarce in some parts of the south-...
EditorialLarus dominicanus, Print, The kelp gull (Larus dominicanus), also known as the Dominican gull, is a gull which breeds on coasts and islands through much of the Southern Hemisphere. The nominate L. d. dominicanus is the subspecies found around South Ame...
EditorialTangle or cuvie kelp, Laminaria hyperborea (Laminaria cloustonii). Chromolithograph after a botanical illustration from Hermann Adolph Koehler's Medicinal Plants, edited by Gustav Pabst, Koehler, Germany, 1887.
EditorialDead man's rope, Chorda filum 1, and kelp or oarweed, Laminaria digitata 2. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from Friedrich Johann Bertuch's Bilderbuch fur Kinder (Picture Book for Children), Weimar, 1802.
EditorialBull kelp, Durvillaea antarctica. Handcoloured copperplate stipple engraving from Jussieu's "Dictionary of Natural Science," Florence, Italy, 1837. Engraved by Corsi, drawn by Vauthier, and published by Batelli e Figli.